Thursday, December 27, 2012

Baked French Toast

I hope the holidays have treated you (and your waistline) well.  This year we had my in-laws to our house on Christmas morning, in a new tradition of switching off every other.  As you should know by now, I couldn't let people come to the house and not have some sort of yummy dish to offer them!  I wanted something that would be "treat" like yet not TOO bad on the calories due to our overindulgence from the night before.  Brian and I threw around the idea of pancakes or waffles and then hit on french toast - we were thinking the cinnamon swirl french toast of course.

Being that it was Christmas, however, I didn't want to have to spend all that time flipping bread and not getting to eat with everyone or see all the presents.  So I researched.  My mother makes a french toast bake that people claim is pretty good, I have always avoided it cause it contains cream cheese and I am not the biggest cream cheese fan.  I compiled a bunch of recipes and started adding up the calories.  I could not believe just how calorie intensive most of those recipes were.  I would have spent 3/4 of my DAILY calorie intake on one serving of most of the recipes and the rest would have been well OVER my calorie intake.  I was floored.

By this time I had my heart set on a yummy french toast bake that would allow me enough calories, fat, and carbs to partake in clams casinos and a steak for dinner.  If I could find one I would have to make one - I took parts of recipes and cut back on the incredibly artery clogging ingredients and came up with something that was, in my opinion, reasonable.

Baked French Toast

  • 1/2 c Margarine of Butter, melted
  • 1/2 - 3/4 c Brown Sugar
  • 12 Slices Texas Toast
  • 4 Eggs, beaten
  • 1 1/2 c Milk (I used 1%)
  • 1 t Vanilla
  • 1 T Powdered Sugar
  • Cinnamon and Sugar, mixed*
  • Butter Spray*
  1. Mix the melted butter and brown sugar well.  Spread the mixture onto the bottom of an 11 x 17 baking dish.  
  2. Combine the eggs, milk, powdered sugar, and vanilla - mix well.
  3. Lay 6 slices of texas toast on top of the butter sugar mix. 
  4. Pour half the egg mixture evenly over the toast.
  5. *Lightly sprinkle the soaked toast with cinnamon and sugar
  6. Place the remaining 6 slices of texas toast on top and even pour the remaining egg mixture over those slices.
  7. *Lightly sprinkle the tope with cinnamon and sugar and a light spray of butter.
  8. Cover and place in the refrigerator over night.
  9. The next morning, preheat the oven to 350 F.  Remove the bake from the fridge and set on the counter for about 10 minutes.
  10. Bake, uncovered, for 40-50 minutes.
  11. Sprinkle lightly with powdered sugar.
  12. ENJOY
*These ingredients and steps are not needed - you can omit them, yet they do not add many calories and I think they enhance the final product.

I divided the recipe into 8 servings - which was a fairly good amount.  You could always divide it into 6, however I feel those would have been too much.  Most french toast bakes say to serve with warm syrup, I have to admit that I ate mine without any syrup though I did offer syrup and cool whip to those that would like it.   Without syrup or cool whip, divided into 8 servings the bake comes to about 360 calories per serving.  Not bad at all compared to 1000 - 1700 calories per serving that all the other ones were coming boasting.  (If you want larger servings and decide to go with 6, the calorie count rises to about 485 calories per serving - still much less than the others!!)

The bottom of this bake produces a nice sugary/crunchy base and the toast is a perfect blend of moisture and crispness.  I love french toast - much preferred over pancakes or waffles - and this is a recipe I will definitely be making again.  It is super easy to whip up and very yummy to eat!  It was delicious on Christmas morning, served with ham for that brunch feel!!

Sorry about the lack of pictures - I completely spaced on taking any while I was preparing or eating.  I promise to take some the next time.

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