I came across this recipe on Josie's blog, Pink Parsley, a couple weeks ago for a Project Pastry Queen challenge and was intrigued since I love French toast and I had just received The Pastry Queen cookbook in the mail a couple of days earlier. I decided that due to the coincidence, I definitely needed to try the recipe.
My recipe is a little different since I didn't want to take too many different ingredients so I used milk instead of heavy cream or half and half as the recipe calls for and French bread instead of Challah, because they didn't have any at the supermarket when I went. I used whole eggs instead of yolks because I didn't want to waste the egg whites since I wouldn't use them for anything else on vacation. I also didn't bake it like a custard as the recipe suggests because I didn't have a second pan big enough. I also added a little orange juice to my custard mixture just for a little something extra and tossed the bread cubes with cinnamon and sugar before soaking.
Creme Brulee French Toast Casserole
Adapted from The Pastry Queen
1 large loaf of French bread
8 large eggs
2 1/4 cups milk
1 cup plus 4-5 T sugar
1/4 tsp salt
2 T vanilla extract
1/4 cup orange juice
2 tsp cinnamon
3 T unsalted butter
Combine eggs, milk, 1 cup sugar, salt, 1 tsp cinnamon, vanilla, orange juice, and 2 T melted butter in a large bowl. Whisk together until well incorporated. Use remaining butter to heavily butter a 9x13 baking pan. Slice bread into 1/2" thick slices and then cut slices into cubes. Combine remaining cinnamon and 1 T sugar. Add bread cubes to pan and toss with cinnamon sugar mixture. Pour custard mixture over bread cubes, pressing cubes down with a spoon to thoroughly soak bread. Cover with foil and refrigerate at least one hour or overnight.
Preheat the oven to 325 degrees. Bake approximately 40-50 minutes until golden brown and set. Remove from the oven and sprinkle remaining 3-4 T of sugar over the top of the casserole in an even, heavy layer. Set broiler on high and return to oven or use a kitchen torch to caramelize the sugar. The sugar will turn brown and liquefy and then harden as it cools. Serve warm with maple syrup if desired.
Oh wow! WOnderful.
ReplyDeleteThat looks fantastic!
ReplyDeleteDelicious! Looks amazing!
ReplyDeleteThis looks awesome!! The combo of french toast and creme brulee = YUM!!!
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My mouth is watering. I can't wait to try this! But wait... is it breakfast or dessert? :-)
ReplyDeleteThis sounds so perfect. Great Idea! I am loving it. Looks lovely with the caramelised edges!
ReplyDeleteI nominate you for the Sweet Friend Award.
ReplyDeleteEverything you post makes me smile.
Here!
I am starting to starve now! This is really good! I can't wait to start making some.
ReplyDeleteI tried it when it came out in Mormon Times. It is delightful.
ReplyDeleteThis is SOOOOOOOOOO good!!!! I've made it several times and we just LOVE it - thank you for the recipes!
ReplyDeleteCan we freeze this and bake later?
ReplyDeleteI haven't tried freezing and baking later but it works with many bread recipes, cinnamon rolls, scones, etc. so it's worth a shot.
Deletecan you taste the orange juice when it`s cooked? if so can it be replaced with something?? maybe more milk/
ReplyDeleteI think the orange juice definitely adds something extra to the recipe... however, if you want to leave it out, yes just replace it with milk.
DeleteLooks good
ReplyDeleteI served this to my family for brunch during Christmas and it was really good, but I had trouble getting all the sugar to liquefy in the broiler. After it was cooked the surface was very lumpy so the sugar on the high spots burned while the low areas remained covered with sugar crystals. Had to use a torch to try to get at least the majority of them to liquefy.
ReplyDeleteFrom the country I come from , Dominican Republic this is called Pudin de Pan it doesn't have the caramelized sugar like the crème brulle but it has the same ingredients plus a touch of rum.
ReplyDeleteI made this at the cottage this past weekend and it was amazing I didn't have vanilla so I used maple extract instead and it turned out great everyone loved it.
ReplyDeleteAll about the bread you use. Tasty, simple french toast recipe. Will make again for sure.
ReplyDeleteDo you baked covered?
ReplyDeleteLooks amazing!!! And I am French so this will be on my list to make.
ReplyDeleteXo
Isabelle
I went. I used whole eggs instead of yolks because I didn't want to waste the egg whites since I wouldn't use them for anything else on vacation. Anyway this information is very helpful me. I have to say that for the last few of hours i have been hooked by the impressive articles on this website. Keep up the wonderful work and if you want more info about this topic then visit how to make fried french toast
ReplyDelete