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The best, easiest breakfast to make that everyone loves. My brioche French toast recipe is seriously simple and incredibly delicious. You can make it for a crowd, or make it serve two.

Brioche French toast for two on plate with fresh berries and syrup being poured on top.

Why I love this Simple French Toast Recipe

I have little Saturday morning routine, and it definitely involves this French toast for two. Iโ€™m a bit of a strict Mama when it comes to sugar and screen-time during the week week, so I like to let loose on Saturday mornings. We make French toast with sugary custard and sugary maple syrup on top, and then we eat it on the couch while watching cartoons. Camille thinks itโ€™s the greatest way to wake up, and sheโ€™s not wrong.

Over the years, Iโ€™ve perfected my French toast for two game. For me, it started in college with leftover sandwich bread, it migrated into a whole wheat bread situation, and now, weโ€™ve come full circle. Brioche bread makes the best French toast.

After years of experimenting, I am confident in this.

Macro close-up shot of berry-covered brioche French toast on plate.
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Homemade French Toast ingredients

Sliced bread, eggs, syrup, cinnamon and milk on grey counter.
  • Eggs. We need large eggs for the custard part of this dish.
  • Milk. My first choice for baking is whole milk, because the 3.5% fat content makes for a richer custard. You can use 2%, but please donโ€™t use anything less. Skim milk does not make a great custard.
  • Sugar. Granulated white sugar here; brown sugar may increase the chance of burning in the skillet from the extra molasses.
  • Cinnamon.
  • Vanilla. In my opinion, real pure vanilla extract is the key component to a good French toast.
  • Butter. We will cook the bread in the butter slow, but you may need extra for serving.
  • Brioche. If you cannot find sliced brioche bread, buy a loaf and slice it into 1/2-inch slices.
  • For serving: maple syrup, extra butter, powdered sugar, or fruit. Toppings are entirely your choice.

Instructions

White casserole dish with eggs, cinnamon and milk being poured in.
Hand whisking custard together in rectangular dish.

In a shallow dish, add the eggs, milk, sugar, cinnamon and vanilla extract.

Whisk the custard mixture together very well.

Two slices of bread soaking in yellow egg custard.
Brioche French toast bread slices stacked on rectangular white plate.

Meanwhile, in a large skillet over medium-high heat, melt the butter. When itโ€™s sizzling, dunk each slice of bread quickly in the egg mixture, and then place in the skillet. Cook the slices of bread on each side until golden brown.

Divide between two plates and serve with extra butter, maple syrup, and fresh fruit.

What is the Best Bread for French Toast?

I wonโ€™t deny that other breads are perfectly fine in this recipe. However, if your bakery sells a loaf of brioche grab it! Itโ€™s one of the only breads, in my opinion, that keeps very well in the freezer. My favorite thing to find is a sliced loaf of brioche.

If youโ€™re looking for ways to use up leftover brioche bread, a tomato sandwich is the perfect vehicle. See also: lightly toasted with butter and bacon and lettuce, the BLT. Brioche bread is so wonderful because itโ€™s an enriched dough, which means itโ€™s made with eggs. The eggs in the dough give it a tender texture like cotton, and a rich flavor. Itโ€™s what white bread wants to taste like.

Ways to serve this Homemade French Toast for Two

The only mandatory component (besides maple syrup, of course) is salted butter. Salted butter is a revelation on my pancakes for two, and this French toast for two, too! Beyond that, I like a fresh fruit, usually bananas or blueberries, but my daughter loves strawberries.

I made you a little how-to video for this recipe, because I wanted you to see both the amount of time I dunk the bread in the custard (spoiler alert: not very long), and exactly how the butter should look before you start cooking. French toast should hit a hot cast iron skillet and start to sear and puff up immediately. Bread sitting in butter that isnโ€™t hot enough will soak up the butter and become soggy.

Stack of brioche French toast with berries and syrup pouring over the top.

How to store the Best French Toast

Freezing this Brioche French Toast Recipe

I hope that you love this recipe so much that you want to double or triple it to serve later in the week. You can definitely do that! After you cook the French toast in the skillet, move it to a wire rack to cool for a few minutes. Place the slices on a sheet pan lined with something non-stick, like parchment paper or a silicone mat, and then freeze. Once the individual slices of French toast are frozen (usually 6-8 hours), then you can stack them in a freeze bag for longer storage. This is called individually quick freezing something so that it can be stored together later.

I freeze slices of this to make a weekday breakfast special for Camille, and she loves having her โ€˜Saturday breakfastโ€™ on a random Tuesday.

I hope this French toast for two recipe changes your weekend routine into one that becomes a family tradition, like it has for us.

Macro shot of stacked bread slices covered in maple syrup, berries and butter slices.

Basic Brioche French Toast Recipe FAQs

How do you make French toast not soggy on the inside?

The way to avoid total sogginess in French toast is to quickly dip the bread and immediately put it in the pan. Cook it over low heat so that the outside slowly browns while the inside cooks through. If you want it truly crisp, you should place the cooked slices in the oven and heat through.

Should French toast be cooked on high or low heat?

Because weโ€™re cooking a custard mixture, it is always best to cook it over low heat. This prevents eggs from curdling in the custard, and also helps ensure the outside is golden brown while the inside is fully cooked. If you cook it on high, the outside might burn before the inside cooks.

Why do you put milk in French toast?

Milk is a key component of the custard for French toast. If youโ€™re not dipping it in eggs + milk, youโ€™re just dipping it in eggs. The milk provides a smooth base to be soaked up by the bread.

More Favorites from Dessert for Two

Yield: 4

Basic & Simple French Toast Recipe

Brioche French toast for two on plate with fresh berries and syrup being poured on top.

Small batch French Toast for Two.

Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
Total Time 30 minutes

Ingredients

  • 4 large eggs
  • 1/ 1/2 cups whole milk
  • 1/4 cup granulated sugar
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 2 tablespoons butter, plus extra for serving
  • 8 slices brioche bread
  • 1/2 cup maple syrup, for serving
  • fresh fruit, for serving

Instructions

  1. In a shallow pie dish (or 9x13 inch pan), whisk together the eggs, milk, sugar, cinnamon and
    vanilla extract. Whisk very well.
  2. Meanwhile, in a large skillet over medium-high heat, melt the butter.
  3. When it's sizzling, dunk each slice of bread quickly in the egg mixture, and then place in the skillet.
  4. Cook the slices of bread on each side until golden brown. Divide between plates and serve with extra butter, maple syrup, and fresh fruit.

Notes

To serve two: reduce the recipe to 2 large eggs, 3/4 cup whole milk, 2 tablespoons granulated sugar, 1/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon, 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract, 1 tablespoon butter, plus extra for serving, and 4 slices brioche bread.

Nutrition Information:

Yield:

4

Serving Size:

1

Amount Per Serving: Calories: 852Total Fat: 37gSaturated Fat: 21gTrans Fat: 1gUnsaturated Fat: 14gCholesterol: 401mgSodium: 713mgCarbohydrates: 110gFiber: 3gSugar: 54gProtein: 20g

Did you make this recipe?

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About Christina Lane

Christina Lane is the author of 5 cookbooks all about cooking and baking for two. She has scaled down hundreds of recipes into smaller servings so you can enjoy your favorite dishes without the leftovers! Valentine's Day is her favorite holiday.

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34 Comments

  1. Deborah says:

    I was happy to get this recipe in my inbox last month and find that it is the way I have been making French toast for years. The only thing I do differently is use French bread, but everything else is the same. I think itโ€™s the vanilla and cinnamon in the recipe that turn an ordinary recipe into something special. So good!

  2. Deborah says:

    I was happy to see this recipe in my inbox last month, as it is the way I have been making French toast for years, so I know itโ€™s a good one. The only thing I do differently is use French bread instead of brioche, but everything else is the same. I think itโ€™s the cinnamon and vanilla that take an ordinary recipe and turn it into something special. So good!

  3. Deborah says:

    This is the best French toast recipe ever! I use French bread instead of brioche, but follow the rest of the recipe exactly. The cinnamon and vanilla take this over the top and youโ€™ll never make โ€œplainโ€ French toast again. So good!!!

  4. sandra prater says:

    what a wonderful breakfast! best french toast ever! thank you! i had always used french bread but what a difference the brioche makes. and your custard mix too- delicious! truly enjoyable! thank you chef!

  5. Deborah says:

    This is the way I have made French Toast for years, so I know this recipe is a winner. The only thing I do differently is use French bread instead of brioche. Any bread will work, really โ€“ brioche, French bread, challah, Pepperidge Farm, etc. Itโ€™s the cinnamon and vanilla that take ordinary French toast over the top and make it taste this good โ€“ yum!

  6. Deborah says:

    I donโ€™t know whatโ€™s going on here, but my comment doesnโ€™t post, doesnโ€™t post, doesnโ€™t post and, when I rewrite it, ALL of them show up โ€“ arrgghhhh! Christina, please pick one and post it to this delicious recipe. Thank you for your help!

  7. Sarah says:

    Great recipe, works really well and the brioche delicious. Iโ€™m interested in freezing the toasts as you say but Iโ€™m curious how you recommend to reheat them?