Tender, fluffy, lightly sweetened baked french toast, filled with blueberries and then drizzled with Lemony Maple Syrup was a huge hit in our house this week. To say that I loved this dish doesn’t even begin to express how pleased I was with it. For many years, I was under-whelmed with the baked french toast recipes I’d tried. Often too sweet, too soggy, too dry, or simply not flavorful enough, I stopped trying them years ago. This works so well because the bread is not soaked overnight. It absorbs plenty of moisture while it bakes and doesn’t become soggy in the process.
When I found myself with an abundance of leftover Challah bread in the house, I figured it was time to try baked french toast once again. Oh my word, this is like no other baked french toast I’ve tasted before. With a texture similar to bread pudding, without being a bit soggy, this was everything I’d hoped and then some. The lemon-y maple syrup cuts the typical french toast sweetness and the blueberries add a sweet tartness to the dish.
It’s unusual for me to go crazy over a sweet breakfast. I’m much more of a savory breakfast person these days. This french toast is a wonderfully balanced sweet and barely tart blend of flavors. I found myself eating a second serving and then considering a third before I decided I’d best get the leftovers into the fridge immediately!
Blueberry Lemon Baked French Toast
Ingredients
- 3 eggs
- 1 cup half and half or ½ cup milk, plus ½ cup heavy cream
- 1 teaspoon vanilla
- 1/4 cup light brown sugar
- 1/4 teaspoon kosher salt
- 1 tablespoon lemon zest minced
- 1 cup blueberries
- 1 small loaf Challah sliced into 1" cubes, about 6 cups worth
- 2/3 cup maple syrup
- 3 tablespoons lemon juice
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Grease an 8x10" baking dish with butter. In a large mixing bowl, lightly whisk the eggs. Whisk in the half and half, vanilla, sugar, salt, and lemon zest. Stir in the blueberries and then add the chunks of bread. Toss gently to coat all of the pieces. Transfer the soaked bread and blueberries to the prepared baking dish and stir as needed to distribute the berries somewhat evenly.
- Cover with foil and bake for 20 minutes. Remove the foil and bake an additional 20 minutes, until the top layer of bread is lightly browned and just a little bit toasted. Stir together the maple syrup and lemon juice in a small pitcher or glass measuring cup. Heat in the microwave (or in a small pan on the stove) until warmed through, about 2 minutes.
- Scoop or slice the baked french toast and serve drizzled with the warm syrup. Enjoy!
Notes
ONE YEAR AGO: Oven Baked Crispy Chicken
TWO YEARS AGO: St-Germain Brunch Martini
THREE YEARS AGO: Green Chile Stew with Sausage and Tomatoes
FOUR YEARS AGO: The Ultimate Chocolate Peanut Butter Cake
Pam says
This sounds fantastic!! I've pinned it!
Anna (Hidden Ponies) says
I love that you say this isn't a bit soggy – that fear of sogginess has kept me from ever trying baked french toast recipes. This sounds amazing!
Ashley @ Wishes and Dishes says
I have a breakfast-themed night at my church life group Tuesday and might try this out! Looks amazing!
Anonymous says
Made this for breakfast today with whole wheat bread. It was perfect! Not too soggy, not too dry, and sweet enough to eat without syrup. Everyone ate seconds, even my three year old who doesn't like bread. Next time I will cut back on the sugar and add some diced up cream cheese!
Macie Boughton says
Just what I needed for a special birthday breakfast! The texture is just perfect. Lucky we had Challah and blueberries available :~)
Quilting Addict says
Mary Have you ever tried French/Italian bread for this recipe??
Mary says
I've made this with French bread too! The texture is best with the challah, but I would definitely make it again with a loaf of french bread.
ladybird says
IBluberriesbger buns or Hawaiian bread that so sweet. After my breads cooked with blueberries in with them. I put one lage dolp of 2 lg boxes cooked lemon pudding mixed with one 8oz Sr cream on top.
Then add more bluberries that have been
Frozen. Serve immediately.
Sharon says
I’ve made this a handful of times over the past year and it always turns out delicious.
It’s a very forgiving recipe as the amounts/ kinds of bread/ berries, even # of eggs and type of milk can be varied slightly and still yield delicious results.
Examples:Too much bread: add a bit more milk and/or an extra egg.
Berries ‘on the verge’: stir the whole bunch in.
My family is not crazy about sweets so I skip the sugar and only use the maple syrup topping for the straight-up sweet component.
Total yum!
Mary Younkin says
I’m glad to hear that you’ve been loving the French toast so much, Sharon! I agree; it’s a very flexible recipe.