The Boyfriend turned 30...I mean 29...again...this year. Since I work from home now & have the time, I thought I would make him a nice breakfast to enjoy as he opened his presents. I didn't come up with the idea until the night before his birthday so naturally, I didn't have many options in terms of ingredients to choose from. Luckily, my parents had stopped by a few days earlier for my birthday & they brought me some Pai Bao (排包). After a quick rummage around my brain & the fridge...French toast it is!
What is Pai Bao? It is a sweet bread with lots of eggs & butter that is really common in bakeries across Hong Kong. Think of it as Hong Kong-style Brioche. As far as I know, Pai Bao gets its name from its row-like formation and in Cantonese, the noun form of the word 排 is "to be in a row".
I had the idea & I had - I think - the ingredients; but how are French toasts made exactly? I did a bit of Googling & Mr. Alton Brown popped up with a 5-star recipe (from 500+ reviews). As a long time fan of Good Eats, this is the recipe for me.
I had almost everything in the list...
0.5 cup half-and-half
1 egg + 1 yolk
1 tablespoon agave nectar
1/8 teaspoon salt
4 slices of Pai Bao, about 0.5 inch thick
2 tablespoons butter
Who knew you'd need an oven to make French toast...
In a medium bowl, whisk together the half-and-half, eggs, agave, & salt
Soak the bread in the custard for about 30 seconds per side, set aside on a wire rack over a sheet tray
Melt 1 tablespoon of butter in a sauté pan over medium-low heat
Place 2 slices of bread into the pan & cook them until golden brown; about 2 minutes per side
Place the bread on the wire rack & place into a 375F oven for 5 minutes
Repeat the previous 2 steps with the other 2 slices of bread.
Serve the toasts hot with maple syrup, fruits, whipped cream, and/or powdered sugar
Make 2 servings
I thought about waiting until all 4 slices of bread were browned in the pan before sending them into the oven but then I thought better: the butter is going to soak into the bread as it sits there for the next 6 minutes and get gross. Seriously, do it in batches. I learned the hard way that when melting and cooking in butter, the key it to go low & slow. I had the heat up to medium-high & the bread turned out so charred I had to throw a whole chunk of it away. The French toasts in the picture turned out much better because I melted the butter slowly & removed the pan from heat when it bubbled too much. I didn't have any half-and-half around so I substituted with 0.5 tablespoon butter & half a cup of milk. The original recipe calls for day-old or stale bread. I am not sure what the value is in that; maybe it will soak up more of the custard? I thought the Pai Bao was a bit too soft but it might have to do with the fact that they are almost an inch thick. The next time I make this - which won't be very soon because I don't know where to go to get really good Pai Bao - I am going to make a pocket, put some peanut butter & grape jelly inside, & make it a PB&J French toast sandwich.
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