I started with this recipe from Taste of Home, and then "enhanced" it...here's my version for what seems to work for a single loaf of bread:
Vanilla French Toast
- 1 loaf Pepperidge Farm Farmhouse Hearty White bread
- 8 large eggs
- 1 cup heavy cream
- 1 cup 2% milk
- 4 Tbs sugar
- 4 tsp vanilla (I'm using fruitier Tahitian vanilla for this)
- 2 tsp salt
- 8 drops orange oil
- 2 tsp cinnamon
- Mix all ingredients except the bread.
- Lightly spray griddle with non-stick spray, and set to med-high heat.
- Dip bread into batter only just before you'll be putting it on the griddle, and only soak each side maybe 10 seconds at first - you don't want to over saturate, but you don't want it dry either.
- Fry the French toast until desired doneness - don't be afraid to get it nice and brown since freezing can sometimes reduce flavor intensity a little.
- Cool fully on rack, then layer with parchment paper in bags, and load up the freezer! (I can easily fit three slices in a quart freezer bag)
- When you want to eat, pull from freezer, stick in toaster (hope it fits!), and give it a round or two if fully frozen.
Notes:
- Our loaf came with 14 slices and 2 heels. I don't do heels - feed those to someone in your house who likes them.
- I found dumping all the ingredients in a 4 cup Pyrex measuring cup (start with the dairy, since you're measuring it) and hitting it with the immersion blender worked wonders. Granted, I was figuring this as I went, so I actually did it in two half batches - but I think the 4 cup Pyrex should work.
- I'm serious about trying the Tahitian vanilla. I love Madagascan vanilla as well, but Tahitian is sweeter and fruitier - excellent for this kind of recipe. I got it pretty cheap at Home Goods actually!
- No, the orange oil isn't required. If you DO try it, go VERY light....a little goes a loooong ways. I'm also trying a little eggnog-flavored oil this time around - a freebie sampler from Williams Sonoma around the holidays.
- I attribute the extra rich golden color of our French toast to the farm fresh eggs I've been getting from Breakneck Acres near us. Try to find a local farmer with pasture raised/free range eggs - it makes a world of difference!
- Yes Sharon, this is a really long recipe. ;-)
1 comment:
Oh I was so ready to make a comment then I saw my shout out at the end. But here's my comment: Jeph, what the hell? This looks like an ACTUAL RECIPE. I don't know what the world is coming to!!!!
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