The Autumn Equinox is here and I’m excited. Even though there still may be hot days ahead, the Autumn Equinox signals a shift in power between day and night. The Equinox is a time of balance, a time when the hours of day and night are relatively equal. After the Autumn Equinox, the long days and short nights will slowly be overtaken by shorter days and longer nights. As a creature of the night, I’m looking forward to a return to the dark half of the year.
One of the things I love doing in cool weather is curling up with a good book. The one I’m reading now is The Mystery Writers of America Cookbook, edited by Kate White. It is a collection of over 100 recipes from mystery writers. Each recipe is accompanied by fascinating facts about the author and their murderous works.
My recipe below is adapted from Margaret Maron’s recipe for Granny Knott’s Baked Toast which is a French toast recipe which gestates overnight before being baked and devoured the next day. I’ve added autumnal gingerbread spices to the recipe and serve it with an optional scoop of ice cream and a drizzle of maple syrup.
Gingerbread French Toast
“An I had but one penny in the world, thou shouldst have it to buy gingerbread,” wrote William Shakespeare in Love’s Labour’s Lost. This delicious and warming bread is definitely worth a penny or two.
Ingredients
1/4 cup dark brown sugar
75g (1/3 cup) unsalted butter
2 tablespoons treacle*
1/2 teaspoon ground ginger
1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon ground cloves
brioche loaf**
2 eggs
1 + 1/2 cups milk
for serving
vanilla ice cream (try experimenting with different ice cream flavours)
maple syrup
Instructions
Sprinkle the sugar over the base of a 20cm x 20cm (8 x 8 inch) baking pan.
Melt the butter in a small saucepan.
Add the treacle, ginger, cinnamon and cloves and stir until combined.
Pour into prepared pan.
Cut brioche into enough 1.5cm (1/2 inch) slices to fit snugly into the baking pan.
Place the slices in the pan.
Beat the eggs in a bowl.
Add the milk and beat until combined.
Pour over the bread.
Cover and refrigerate overnight.
The next day, preheat oven to 180C / 350F.
While the oven is warming, remove pan from fridge.
Carefully pour any unabsorbed liquid into a bowl, making sure you don’t disturb the bread.
Spoon over the top of the bread.
Bake for 30 – 35 minutes or until the top is browned.
Serve with a dollop of ice cream and a drizzle of maple syrup.
*you can substitute molasses for the treacle.
**you can use any heavy bread like sourdough or wholemeal.
That looks delicious! And very autumn-ish. It’s still chilly here, though, so it would be a good recipe for me to try now too. I’ve never made an “overnight” French toast 🙂
I love the idea of mystery writers contributing recipes, how unique!
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I love quirky cookbooks! I’ve got a few Cozy Mystery cookbooks and a Literary Tea Party one. I’m hoping to share recipes from them in the coming months.
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Great! I will look forward to a Literary Tea Party! 🙂
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I thought that would be the one you liked 🙂
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Yes of course! I would invite the Mad Hatter and Alice 🙂
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She does have ideas for an Alice Mad Hatter Party! I’m looking forward to blogging about this book. The only problem is choosing which recipes to showcase – they all look so delicious 🙂
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Ooh, I can’t wait for that one… perhaps a potion labeled “Drink Me”, or a cake labeled “Eat Me”. Or a mushroom! 🙂
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The book does have a Drink Me Tea and a Stuffed Mushroom recipe but I’ll take you Eat Me Cake thanks!
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Ha! I knew it! 🙂
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I also love the shorter days and the cooler weather. It is my favorite time of year. The book you are reading sounds quite interesting and your Gingerbread French Toast is mouth watering.
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I can’t tell you how delicious that French Toast is. You’ll have to try it!
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Yum!
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It is really delicious 🙂
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Don’t your books get sticky though? 🙂
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Not if I’m really careful! 🙂
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