I dislike opening something that I may not use the balance of before it goes to waste so it was important to me to know what I was going to make with the open can of pumpkin. So this recipe ends up getting you a bonus. You open a can of pumpkin to make the French Toast and then turn around and use the rest of the pumpkin for a yummy snack--no storing the pumpkin to hopefully use later and tossing out if you didn't use it in time. (I'll try to post the recipe for Pumpkin Snack Cake by tomorrow--it's up now.)
I probably wouldn't try making this with regular bread slices. French bread that is a day or two old--or as I had, a loaf I had stuck in the freezer when I had gotten it from the day old shelf at a great price. If the bread is too soft it will absorb too much of the liquid and turn out soggy.
Only do a quick dip on both sides--just touch the surface quickly as you don't want to soak the bread in the batter.
Pumpkin French Toast
4 large eggs
1/4 of 15 ounce can of canned pure pumpkin puree
1/2 cup plain or vanilla yogurt (non-fat or light)
1/2 cup milk (skim is fine)
2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
1/2 to 1 teaspoon ground nutmeg (to taste)
2 tablespoons sugar
16 (3/4-inch thick) slices of day-old French bread (about one loaf)
In a flat-bottom or wide-bottom bowl, whisk together eggs, pumpkin, yogurt, milk, cinnamon, nutmeg and sugar.
Heat skillet to medium-heat, wipe lightly with canola oil.
Quickly dip bread on both sides into the egg mixture.
Place on hot skillet and cook 2-3 minutes on each side or until lightly browned; preferrably flipping only once.
Repeat with remaining bread.
Serve immediately with syrup.
4-8 servings--depending on appetites (=2-4 slices per serving)
Notes:*Use French bread that is a day or two old. If the bread is too soft it will absorb too much of the liquid and turn out soggy.
*Only do a quick dip on both sides--just touch the surface quickly as you don't want to soak the bread in the batter.
*Use your liquid measuring cup to eye-ball 1/2 cup of yogurt and then add milk until the total volume is 1 cup
*Nutmeg can be a strong spice for some people so I usually start on the lower side--the original would have equalled the 1 teaspoon of nutmeg.
*You can cut the recipe in half if this is too much. Or store the batter for a couple days and make the rest another day. Maybe even better yet, make the full amount and cook them all and refrigerate leftovers in a plastic bag and gently reheat individual slices in the microwave for quick breakfasts or snacks later in the week.
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