Category Archives: Breakfast and Brunch Dishes

Banana Walnut French Toast

Banana Walnut French Toast at Cafe du Soleil - Photo by Philippe Touitou

Here’s a good breakfast or brunch recipe for the upcoming Labor Day weekend. At Cafe du Soleil we serve this on our fall and winter brunch menu so watch for it in the next few months.

This dish is based on the classic dessert Bananas “Foster” – the only difference being that I omit the vanilla ice cream that’s usually served with it. If you’re feeling decadent, however, go ahead and use it, or pipe on some whipped cream!

Either way you’ll find it to be an easy and delicious way to impress your family or brunch guests.

Enjoy!

Ingredients to serve 4

  • 4 slices of brioche or challah bread (about 2″ thick, cut in 1/2 diagonally)
  • 3 eggs
  • 1/2 cup milk, preferably whole
  • 1/4 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
  • 1/4 teaspoon orange-flavored liqueur (optional)
  • pinch sea salt
  • 1/8 teaspoon ground cinnamon

Bananas and Sauce:

  • 2 tablespoons unsalted butter
  • 1/4 cup brown sugar (preferably dark)
  • 1/2 teaspoon freshly ground nutmeg
  • 1 tablespoon banana liqueur (optional)
  • 2 just ripe bananas, sliced into 1-2″ slices
  • 1/2 cup walnut halves, shelled
  • 1/4 cup dark rum
  • 1/2 teaspoon finely grated orange zest
  • optional garnishes – powdered sugar, berries, fresh mint sprigs

Directions

Preheat oven to 200F.

Whisk the eggs, milk, vanilla, orange liqueur, salt, and cinnamon together in a medium bowl until combined. Pour into a baking dish and soak bread slices for about 2 minutes per side. It’s helpful to press lightly on the bread to help it absorb the egg mixture. If you feel like the bread is getting too soggy remove it from bowl sooner.

Heat a non stick griddle or 10″ saute pan or heavy skillet over medium heat until hot but not smoking. Spray with cooking spray to coat lightly. Add bread slices and brown gently about 5 minutes per side, plus a few minutes standing on end to brown the edges. Place on a cookie sheet and keep warm in the oven while you prepare the sauce.

Wipe skillet clean, then add butter to melt over low heat. Add brown sugar and nutmeg and stir until sugar dissolves. Add banana liqueur (if using) and bring sauce to simmer. Add bananas and walnuts and cook for about 2 minutes, carefully spooning sauce over bananas as they are cooking. Remove bananas from pan to a bowl. Bring sauce to a simmer and carefully add the rum. If the sauce is very hot, the alcohol will flame on its own. Allow flame to subside, then add orange zest and remove from heat (keep warm if not using immediately).

To assemble:

Place 2 pieces French Toast on each plate, divide bananas evenly over bread and spoon sauce over it all. Sprinkle with powdered sugar if desired and garnish with berries and mint.

1 Comment

Filed under Breakfast and Brunch Dishes, French Toast, Holiday Dishes, Uncategorized

Belgian Waffles

Belgian Waffles at Cafe du Soleil - photo by Philippe Touitou

Belgian Waffles at Cafe du Soleil - photo by Philippe Touitou

We serve Belgian Waffles on our breakfast  and brunch menus at Cafe du Soleil.  While they may seem like something best left to restaurants, they are just as simple as making pancakes. In fact many waffle recipes are just pancake batter thrown into the Waffle machine.

Some people claim, though, that a true Belgian Waffle needs to be made with yeast rather than baking powder. But as I mentioned in my pancake posts of March and May 2008 – pancakes can be done with yeast too. So it’s your call which way you want to go. The yeast does give a bread-like flavor which some people may not want.

Either way you’ll have a nice weekend brunch treat – or if you make extras and freeze them you’ll have a quick weekday breakfast ready in minutes.

As a memory trick I like to remember this (and the recipe for pancakes) as 1/1/1 recipes. This refers to the core ingredients which always follow more or less these proportions:

1 cup of flour/1 cup of milk/1 egg

Additional essential ingredients (which can vary somewhat according to taste) go like this:

Leavening: about 1 tsp of baking soda per cup flour, or 1/2 tsp dry yeast

Fat: about 1 oz per cup flour

Sweetening: about 1 tsp per cup flour (or more if you’re not going to eat these with something sweet like maple syrup)

Seasoning: about 1/2 tsp salt per cup flour

There are variations on these amounts, but I’ve looked at tons of recipes and they all more or less stay in the same vicinity of equal amounts by volume of flour and liquid with about 1 egg per cup of flour. This way of looking at these recipes makes them not only easy to memorize (helping you look like a kitchen PRO – remember the title of my blog) but also very easy to multiply.

Belgian Waffles

2 cups Milk (I use half fresh milk and half buttermilk)

2 Eggs (Extra Large)

2 cups All Purpose or Cake Flour

Leavening – 1 tsp Dry Yeast (or 2 tsp Baking Powder)

Sweeteneing – 2 tsp Sugar

Fat – 2 ozs Butter (1/2 stick)

Plus 1 tsp Salt

Method:

Warm the milk to about 100F and add the sugar and yeast (if using baking powder do no not warm milk and add it to the dry ingredients as for pancakes). Melt the butter and add to milk. Lightly beat the eggs in a mixing bowl and add the milk mixture, then the flour. Stir until combined then add the salt.

Cover with plastic wrap and put in refrigerator overnight or leave at room temperature for an hour to let yeast develop.

Optional: For an even lighter waffle texture separate the egg yolks and whites. Add yolks to milk mixture. Beat whites until stiff then fold into batter just before cooking.

Cook as directed by Waffle machine instructions.

Serve with your favorite topping.

Makes about 6 Waffles

 

Bon Appetit!!

3 Comments

Filed under Breakfast and Brunch Dishes, Ratio Recipes

Sorry For the Long Absence – I’m Back with a Pancake Recipe Variation

Hey all,

Sorry for the long absence of posting – I was away on an amazing vacation in Egypt (more on that later when I have time to post some pictures) and I have been really busy with my restaurants and catering.

 

In any event – a quick post that will give you a great new idea for pancakes. I had these at my friends Jenn and Jim’s house in Cairo – it is a Saturday morning tradition for them to make a big pancake breakfast for themselves and their 4 young kids.

Jim is in charge of the cooking duties and he does something very smart – he makes his batter the night before using yeast instead of baking powder. The pancakes from this batter have a lovely spongey texture and a slight yeast flavor, and half of the work is done the night before so all you have to do in the morning is heat up your pan or griddle and cook the pancakes. The batter can be kept overnight in the refrigerator or in a cool place in your kitchen (if you have one) and then brought back to room temperature (or used directly from the fridge) in the morning.

 

The recipe is basically the same ratio as the previous one I posted but I will give it to you again here:

 

Whole Wheat Buttermilk Yeast Pancakes

 

2 cups Milk (I use half fresh milk and half buttermilk)

2 Eggs (Extra Large)

2 cups Flour (I use half whole wheat flour and half white flour)

Leavening – 1 tsp Dry Yeast

Sweeteneing – 2 tsp Sugar

Fat – 2 ozs Butter (1/2 stick)

Plus 1 tsp Salt

Method:

Warm the milk to about 100F and add the sugar and yeast. Melt the butter and add to milk. Lightly beat the eggs in a mixing bowl and add the milk mixture, then the flour. Stir until combined then add the salt.

Cover with plastic wrap and put in refrigerator overnight or leave at room temperature for an hour to let yeast develop.

Cook as you would any other pancakes.

Serve with your favorite topping.

Makes about 12 medium sized pancakes.

1 Comment

Filed under Breakfast and Brunch Dishes, Pancakes, Pastry Basics, Ratio Recipes

Basic Muffin and Pancake Recipes

I made some breakfast muffins the other day and while looking over the recipe I had an Aha!! moment (even after 25 years of cooking professionally I still get those once in a while). I realized that the recipe for muffins that I was reading was almost exactly the same as my recipe for pancakes.

 

I like to base my recipes on a uniform amount of flour so that I can see how different baked goods resemble each other. I usually start with 2 cups of flour (which is a nice friendly amount) and go from there. So if I am trying a new recipe I will often convert it to this amount first. After doing this with the muffin recipe that I wanted to try I saw that the ingredients and technique for a good basic muffin were essentially the same as those for pancakes but with half the liquid, and more butter (depending on your pancake recipe). So I thought I would present these two recipes for you so you can see for yourself.

 

My idea of a good muffin, by the way, is one that is tender, not too sweet, and is light and moist. A good muffin will pack in enough healthy ingredients to give you a good start to the day, in a super-convenient, eat on the run format.  Most commercially made muffins are either cupcakes-minus-the-frosting or dry-as-cardboard low-fat monstrosities that even the tallest grande coffee will have a hard time moistening. And it’s so easy to make your own muffins at home once a week and freeze them so that you have a good nutritious breakfast ready when you want it.

Basic Muffin Recipe: (Yield 12 medium sized muffins) 

Dry Ingredients:

 

2 cups (10 ozs.)  Flour – I use ½ Whole Wheat and ½ All Purpose (for most accurate measuring weigh flour)

3 tsp.  Baking Powder

1 tsp. Salt

Spices as desired

 

 

 

Wet Ingredients:

 

2 Eggs, Extra Large

1 cup (8 ozs.) Milk, Whole or 2%

½ cup (4 ozs.) Vegetable Oil

½ cup (4 ozs.) Sugar

 

Add-Ins:

1 – 2 cups of fresh or dried fruits, nuts, oats, bran, grated vegetables (i.e. carrots, zucchini), chocolate chips, etc. Moisture content of these items varies so you may need to experiment with quantities.

 

Method:

Preheat oven to 350F.

1) Weigh flour, then mix with remaining dry ingredients. Sift these together either with a sifter, or by putting them in the food processor for a few minutes (both techniques will aerate the flour which is the goal here).

2) Whisk eggs and sugar together in a small bowl, then add oil and milk.

3) Add wet ingredients to dry and mix together gently to just combine – do not over-mix batter. Fold in any additional ingredients. Fill muffin cups (sprayed with nonstick spray) with batter.

4) Bake for about 25-30 minutes until a toothpick inserted into center comes out clean.

  

Basic Pancake Recipe: (Yields about 12 Medium Pancakes)

Dry Ingredients:

2 cups (10 ozs.) Flour – All Purpose (or ½ Whole Wheat and ½ All Purpose)

2 tsp.  Baking Powder = 1 tsp. per cup flour

1 tsp. Salt

 

Wet Ingredients:

2 Eggs, Extra Large = 1 egg per cup flour

2 cups (16 ozs.) Milk, Whole or 2% = 1 cup milk per cup flour

4 Tbsp. (2 ozs.) Butter, melted

4 Tbsp. (2 ozs.) Sugar

 

Add-Ins:

1 cup of fresh fruits, chocolate chips, cottage cheese, etc.

Butter or non-stick spray for griddle

 

Method:

1)      Preheat electric griddle or frying pan (I prefer cast iron for even heat).

2)      Prepare batter in same manner as for muffins, blending dry and wet ingredients separately then combining until just mixed.

3)      If possible let batter rest for 30 – 60 minutes. The pancakes will be noticeably fluffier and more tender if you allow this resting time.

4)      Spread a small dab of butter over surface of griddle (or spray with cooking spray) and ladle batter onto griddle. Let cook until bubbles appear throughout the surface, then flip over and cook the other side. Serve with your preferred topping.

 

Now just a few words about why I consider these recipes to be so similar.

 

1)      They use the same method of mixing the batter.

2)      The ingredients are virtually the same but the quantities differ. The main difference is that the muffins use ½ as much liquid resulting in a thicker batter. Some recipes do bake pancake batter in the oven (think baked apple pancakes) but that requires a baking dish to contain the batter.

3)      Muffins use a little more leavening since the batter is thicker.

4)      Muffins sometimes use more fat (in this case oil since we’re trying to be healthy in the morning) since they are baked rather than on a griddle with additional fat, and they use more sugar since they usually aren’t smothered in maple syrup. But remember sugar is always adjustable based on your taste so use less if you want.

4 Comments

Filed under Breakfast and Brunch Dishes, Doughs, Muffins, Pancakes, Pastry Basics, Ratio Recipes