French toast casserole

French toast casserole | Me & The Moose. Use up your sandwich bread crusts and heels with this no-soak, fast, simple French toast casserole. #meandthemoose #frenchtoast #breakfastrecipes #nosoakfrenchtoast #fastfancyrecipes

Don’t throw out the sandwich bread crusts and heels that your kids won’t eat! Turn them into a simple, fast French toast casserole that’s crunchy, eggy, cinnamon-y, and caramel-y.

Take me to the recipe!

French toast casserole | Me & The Moose. Use up your sandwich bread crusts and heels with this no-soak, fast, simple French toast casserole. #meandthemoose #frenchtoast #breakfastrecipes #nosoakfrenchtoast #fastfancyrecipes

Why don’t kids like bread crusts? Is that universal? I thought it was bullshit until I had kids of my own and one day, the older one disavowed bread crusts FOR NO REASON.

Funnily, my husband was horrified when M started insisting that the crusts be cut off because he was like, “that’s where all the fiber is!” To which I laughed in his face because what?! Bread isn’t an apple.

Anyhoo, this recipe is the perfect way to use up bread scraps. However, this isn’t a good recipe for that rock hard baguette or formerly crusty loaf that you forgot about. This is for the ever-so-slightly tougher outer layer of sandwich bread that you’ve been saving in a bag in the fridge so it didn’t get too stale.

Why do I advocate for using softer, fresher bread? I’ll tell you! Because most French toast casserole recipes require an overnight soak. But I, for one, am way too tired at the end of the day to plan for tomorrow’s breakfast. This recipe requires no waiting, something I am not very good at anyway.

A couple of notes:

  • Amounts: As always, the amounts listed here can be considered guidelines or ratios more than hard and fast rules. If you want the caramel on the bottom to be more like what you’d find in a sticky bun, feel free to increase the butter and sugar! Or if you have more or less than 6 cups of bread, adjust accordingly. This one is very forgiving.

  • Eggs: You want the egg/milk/vanilla/cinnamon mixture to come up about 3/4 of the way to the top of the bread. But pour in the amount listed and squish the bread down gently with your hands. If you can easily see the liquid underneath, you have enough. If you have to push down more firmly to see any liquid or if it just doesn’t feel like enough to you, add more. It’s better to have a little too much liquid than not enough. But DO NOT cover the bread with the egg mixture.

French toast casserole | Me & The Moose. Use up your sandwich bread crusts and heels with this no-soak, fast, simple French toast casserole. #meandthemoose #frenchtoast #breakfastrecipes #nosoakfrenchtoast #fastfancyrecipes

French toast casserole | Me & The Moose. Use up your sandwich bread crusts and heels with this no-soak, fast, simple French toast casserole. #meandthemoose #frenchtoast #breakfastrecipes #nosoakfrenchtoast #fastfancyrecipes

French toast casserole | Me & The Moose. Use up your sandwich bread crusts and heels with this no-soak, fast, simple French toast casserole. #meandthemoose #frenchtoast #breakfastrecipes #nosoakfrenchtoast #fastfancyrecipes

French toast casserole | Me & The Moose. Use up your sandwich bread crusts and heels with this no-soak, fast, simple French toast casserole. #meandthemoose #frenchtoast #breakfastrecipes #nosoakfrenchtoast #fastfancyrecipes

French toast casserole 

 Time: 35 minutes
Yield: 6 large servings

Adapted from https://belleofthekitchen.com/french-toast-casserole/

4 Tbsp butter 
½ cup brown sugar + 1 Tbsp (reserved for later)
6 cups roughly torn bread hunks
2 cup milk 
4 large eggs
2 tsp vanilla extract 
1 tsp cinnamon (or any combination of cinnamon, nutmeg, cardamom, ginger, and cloves)
3 Tbsp coarse sugar (or substitute with granulated)  

Preheat the oven to 425.

In a large ceramic baking dish (though if metal is your only option, melt the butter and sugar in a separate bowl and then add to the baking dish), combine the butter and ½ cup of brown sugar. Microwave on high for 30 seconds or until the butter has just melted. Stir for 1 minute or until the butter and the sugar are mostly combined. Spread the mixture evenly on the bottom of your baking dish.

Top the melted butter and brown sugar with the roughly torn bread cubes. 

In a large measuring cup, combine the milk, eggs, vanilla extract and cinnamon. Whisk until all of the ingredients are incorporated. 

Pour over the bread cubes. Push down gently on the bread to assess how much liquid is in your baking dish. If the liquid doesn’t come up about ¾ of the way to the top of the bread cubes, whisk together another ½ cup of milk and 1 egg and add as much of the mixture as needed to achieve that depth of liquid.  

Combine the remaining 1 Tbsp of brown sugar and the coarse sugar and sprinkle over the top of the casserole. 

Bake for 25-30 minutes or until the middle puffs up and doesn’t jiggle when you gently shake the baking dish.

Pumpkin and persimmon butter

Cooking down some canned pumpkin and a few persimmons with maple syrup and spices will make your house instantly smell like the holidays and spice up even the most basic meals. #meandthemoose #pumpkinrecipes #persimmonrecipes #dessert #fruitbutter

Cooking down some canned pumpkin and a few persimmons with maple syrup and spices will make your house instantly smell like the holidays and spice up even the most basic meals.

Take me to the recipe!

Cooking down some canned pumpkin and a few persimmons with maple syrup and spices will make your house instantly smell like the holidays and spice up even the most basic meals. #meandthemoose #pumpkinrecipes #persimmonrecipes #dessert #fruitbutter

I’m a sucker for persimmons. I can’t help myself when they arrive in the grocery stores. But I never know what to do with them. I love baking with them, but I’m trying to have fewer baked goodies hanging around in preparation for baked-goodies-hanging-around season. And if I’m going to eat them on their own or in a salad, they need to ripen, which, in my frozen kitchen, takes forever and a day.

This is my grand compromise: A cooked down “butter” that’s thick and slightly sweet that pairs with toast, graham crackers, apple slices, pretzels, Dutch babies, regular babies, cornbread, muffins, oatmeal. etc. One could also use this “butter” as a fruity addition to an autumnal cheesecake or mix it with an ice cream or other custard. My favorite way to use it is mixed with mascarpone and a couple of eggs and then baked with a pie shell for a spin on pumpkin pie.

The best part about this concoction is that you don’t need to ripen the persimmons. You heard me. As long as you use fuyu and NOT HACHIYA*, you’re fine with unripened persimmons. Of course, the more you let them ripen, the better they taste, so it does behoove you to wait at least a little while before making this butter.

*Why not Hachiya, you ask? Well, those are the larger, more ovular persimmons and if you don’t wait until they’re almost completely mushy to eat them, the tannins in the fruit make your mouth feel gluey and dry. It’s awful, trust me.

Anyway, whatever you choose to do with it, you’re only 20-30 minutes away from the endless possibilities, so get to it!

Cooking down some canned pumpkin and a few persimmons with maple syrup and spices will make your house instantly smell like the holidays and spice up even the most basic meals. #meandthemoose #pumpkinrecipes #persimmonrecipes #dessert #fruitbutter

Pumpkin persimmon butter

Time: 25 minutes, mostly active
Yield: 2 cups, depending on how much you cook down the mixture 

1 can pumpkin puree
4 fuyu persimmons 
1 Tbsp dark brown sugar (light is also fine)
¼ cup maple syrup
½ tsp cinnamon
¼ tsp ground ginger
1/8th tsp ground cloves
1 tsp vanilla extract or vanilla bean paste
1 large pinch of kosher salt
½ cup water

Peel the persimmons and cut into quarters. 

Add all ingredients to a blender or food processor and blend until smooth. Transfer to a large pot. 

Heat over a medium-low flame until just beginning to bubble. Turn the heat down to low and cook, stirring frequently to prevent burning, until the persimmons totally break down and the mixture has thickened slightly, about 20 minutes.

Cashew and blueberry granola

Cashew and blueberry granola is so fast and easy to make at home. There’s also less sugar and preservatives than in store bought versions AND you can customize the nuts, berries, and other add-ins with whatever you like best! #meandthemoose #granola…

Granola may seem like something that’s easier to buy in a store, but let me set the record straight: Homemade granola is simple, fast, and so much healthier than most of the commercially made stuff. Also, it makes your house smell amazing.

Take me to the recipe!

Cashew and blueberry granola is so fast and easy to make at home. There’s also less sugar and preservatives than in store bought versions AND you can customize the nuts, berries, and other add-ins with whatever you like best! #meandthemoose #granola…

Let’s talk about granola and kids. I love granola because it’s a fun topper for lots of different things: yogurt, apple sauce, purees, pancakes, fruit, ice cream, etc. I like to pretend that it’s nature’s sprinkles. But there may be a chunk of kids who think granola is too crunchy or who don’t like the mix of textures. For them, I would add some mini chocolate chips or chocolate covered sunflower seeds and call it “trail mix.”

But granola is a great way to add some whole grains and make a more balanced snack.

I include millet in my granola and also my granola cups because it’s super crunchy and adds fiber, calcium, and iron, which we always need more of in our diet.

This recipe is my favorite combo of dried fruit and nuts, but feel free to sub in whatever kinds you like best.

Also, I like to toast the nuts separately and add them when eating this granola at home and leave them out for school lunches and snacks.

Cashew and blueberry granola is so fast and easy to make at home. There’s also less sugar and preservatives than in store bought versions AND you can customize the nuts, berries, and other add-ins with whatever you like best! #meandthemoose #granola…
Cashew and blueberry granola is so fast and easy to make at home. There’s also less sugar and preservatives than in store bought versions AND you can customize the nuts, berries, and other add-ins with whatever you like best! #meandthemoose #granola…

A couple of notes:

  • If you have trouble finding millet, you can sub in uncooked quinoa or amaranth. I always have luck finding millet in the bulk sections of our our Whole Foods or any other health food store.

  • When spreading the uncooked granola mix onto your sheet pan, make sure to leave some holes in the middle of the pan. If you spread it as one large mass, the middle will be undercooked while the edges start to burn. With some holes and thinner spots in the middle, you’ll get a more even bake and better chunks in your final product!

  • Be mindful that when the outsides start to brown, the thicker parts may still be a bit undercooked, but that the whole thing will continue to cook and crisp while it cools. Once you see browning on the edges, take it out of the oven and let it cool completely. If there are any undercooked spots, feel free to re-toast them in the oven or a toaster oven for a few minutes before eating. But DON’T toast any fruit that you may add.

Cashew and blueberry granola is so fast and easy to make at home. There’s also less sugar and preservatives than in store bought versions AND you can customize the nuts, berries, and other add-ins with whatever you like best! #meandthemoose #granola…

Cashew and blueberry granola

Yield: about 3-4 cups of granola, depending on how many nuts and berries you add
Time: 25-28 minutes (5 minutes active time, 20-23 minutes baking time)

2 cups old fashioned rolled oats
½ cup millet
2 Tbsp brown sugar
1 tsp cinnamon
2 large pinches of kosher salt
½ cup whole cashews (optional)
2 egg whites, slightly whipped
1 Tbsp olive oil
1 tsp vanilla extract
¼ cup maple syrup
1/3 cup dried blueberries

Preheat the oven to 350. In a large bowl, mix together the oats, millet, brown sugar, cinnamon, and salt. Add the untoasted nuts, if using.

In a large measuring cup, mix together the egg whites, olive oil, and vanilla. Pour over the dry ingredients and mix together thoroughly.

Spread out on the mixture on a large sheet pan, leaving gaps and holes in the middle.

Bake for 20-23 minutes, or until the edges of the pan and any edges next to gaps in the middle start browning.

Let cool completely.

Add the dried blueberries (or other dried fruit) and crunch up the baked granola so that you have some chunks and some smaller bits.

Store in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 3 weeks.



Almond and coconut baked doughnuts

Almond and coconut doughnuts are a healthier treat packed with equal parts nutrition and deliciousness. #meandthemoose #healthybaking #doughnuts #healthydoughnuts #bakeddoughnuts #wholegrains #wholegrainbaking #breakfastrecipes #snackrecipes

A healthier baked doughnut that features whole grains, lower sugar, and my favorite flavor combination: Almond and coconut. YES, PLEASE.

Take me to the recipe!

Almond and coconut doughnuts are a healthier treat packed with equal parts nutrition and deliciousness. #meandthemoose #healthybaking #doughnuts #healthydoughnuts #bakeddoughnuts #wholegrains #wholegrainbaking #breakfastrecipes #snackrecipes

I have bad news and good news: I was diagnosed last week with gestational diabetes. Luckily, I’m in my third trimester and don’t have much longer to go, so what’s a few weeks of monitoring my blood sugar and trying to eat really healthy foods?

I did eat half of one of these doughnuts and it didn’t send my blood sugar soaring (thanks whole grains, coconut sugar, and healthy fats!), so that was another piece of good news. Obviously, if you have diabetes of any kind, you know what works best for your body or are working with your doctor to figure that out, so not everyone will be able to say the same. But I was glad to know that at lease some treats aren’t off the table.

What has made this so hard isn’t the dietary restrictions or even the blood sugar monitoring.

What’s hardest is the added layer of scrutiny over my body when pregnancy already casts a harsh, glaring spotlight. Every routine thing you eat, drink, use on your skin, or take for a headache feels so consequential. And anyone who’s had disordered eating in the past can tell you that it takes a lot of work to STOP feeling like these minor choices are so meaningful.

Ugh. It just feel like I’ve lost myself a little more with this diagnosis. I resigned myself 8 months ago to making all of the changes you have to make when pregnant for the greater, temporary good and I wish it didn’t feel like ever day meant cutting out one more thing that brings me joy.

And now i’ll stop complaining. There are real problems in the world.

But! Lack of a delicious, healthier doughnut option doesn’t have to be one of them!

Almond and coconut doughnuts are a healthier treat packed with equal parts nutrition and deliciousness. #meandthemoose #healthybaking #doughnuts #healthydoughnuts #bakeddoughnuts #wholegrains #wholegrainbaking #breakfastrecipes #snackrecipes

A couple of notes:

  • We’re aiming for a batter that is thicker than pancake batter, but thinner than cookie dough. Depending on how much liquid you get from your banana and egg, you may want to add more flour. Start with an extra Tbsp and keep adding until you’re happy with the density.

  • These doughnuts are okay without the topping, but the extra sugar, almonds, and  coconut really take them to a new place. I really don’t recommend skipping them.  

  • The brown sugar and coconut oil topping makes a pretty dense mixture and a lot of the topping will fall off. BUT, it’s delicious. If you’d like something a bit smoother and more glaze-like, you can swap in 6 Tbsp powdered sugar, enough water to make a thin glaze (start with ½ tsp and add slowly), and a few drops of almond extract.

Almond and coconut doughnuts are a healthier treat packed with equal parts nutrition and deliciousness. #meandthemoose #healthybaking #doughnuts #healthydoughnuts #bakeddoughnuts #wholegrains #wholegrainbaking #breakfastrecipes #snackrecipes

Almond coconut doughnuts

Yield: 10-12 doughnuts
Time: about 35 minutes, mostly active

 ½ large, very ripe banana, thoroughly smooshed
½ cup milk (any type will do!)
3 Tbsp full-fat yogurt (Greek or otherwise)
1 large egg
¾ cup coconut sugar
½ tsp almond extract
3 Tbsp coconut oil, melted
1¼ + 1/4 (if needed) cups Whole Wheat pastry flour (regular whole wheat flour or white whole wheat flour work too, but the texture is slightly denser)
1¼ tsp baking powder
½ tsp salt
½ cup shredded unsweetened coconut 
½ tsp cinnamon
¼ tsp cardamom

Topping:
3 Tbsp coconut oil
3 Tbsp brown sugar
½ cup toasted coconut slivers
½ cup toasted almond slivers
½ tsp cinnamon

Preheat oven to 375.

Grease your doughnuts pans with coconut or other neural oil and set aside

In a large bowl, smush the banana as much as possible. Add the rest of the wet ingredients except the coconut oil and whisk together.

Add 1¼ cups flour, baking powder, salt, shredded coconut, cinnamon, and cardamom. Mix well.

Add the coconut oil and mix well. If the mixture is too runny (if it looks like pancake batter), add the remaining ¼ cup of flour 1 Tbsp at a time and mix again.

Fill each doughnut tin about 2/3 full. 

Cook both pans (if using 2 doughnut pans) in the same oven for 10-12 minutes, or until the doughnuts just spring back when poked lightly with a finger. Rotate and pans after 5 minutes to ensure even baking.

Let cool.

In a separate small bowl, combine the coconut oil (that should still be rather liquid) with the brown sugar and cinnamon and mix. If the mixture seems too liquid and not spreadable, chill it in the refrigerator until slightly more set.

On a baking sheet, combine the coconut flakes and the sliced almonds and let brown in the cooling oven, abut 6 minutes or until you begin to smell the nuts.

Spread a small amount of the sugar and coconut oil mixture on each doughnut and sprinkle the toasted nuts and coconut over the top, pressing lightly to get them to stick.

Coconut and cardamom alfajores

Alfajores made easier with store-bought dulce de leche and a streamlined recipe and method. Save time AND make delicious cookies this year! #meandthemoose #holidaybaking #Christmascookies #alfajores #shortbreadcookies #dulcedeleche #cookierecipes #b…

You may think you don’t need another holiday cookie recipe, but these are subtly spiced, barely sweet, and super easy. Win, win, win!

Take me to the cookies!

Alfajores made easier with store-bought dulce de leche and a streamlined recipe and method. Save time AND make delicious cookies this year! #meandthemoose #holidaybaking #Christmascookies #alfajores #shortbreadcookies #dulcedeleche #cookierecipes #b…

First of all, who’s had Alfajores before? If not, get thee to an Argentinian bakery because they. are. delicious. This South American staple uses dulce de leche in between two soft, cakey, vanilla cookies and is then rolled in shredded coconut.

In the US version, we often swap the softer cookie for a crispier vanilla shortbread, which I prefer. Also, I decided to skip the shredded coconut on the outside and opt for a coconut-flavored shortbread because, while I love the taste of coconut, I don’t always love its texture.

Alfajores made easier with store-bought dulce de leche and a streamlined recipe and method. Save time AND make delicious cookies this year! #meandthemoose #holidaybaking #Christmascookies #alfajores #shortbreadcookies #dulcedeleche #cookierecipes #b…
Alfajores made easier with store-bought dulce de leche and a streamlined recipe and method. Save time AND make delicious cookies this year! #meandthemoose #holidaybaking #Christmascookies #alfajores #shortbreadcookies #dulcedeleche #cookierecipes #b…
Alfajores made easier with store-bought dulce de leche and a streamlined recipe and method. Save time AND make delicious cookies this year! #meandthemoose #holidaybaking #Christmascookies #alfajores #shortbreadcookies #dulcedeleche #cookierecipes #b…

I started with this Coconut Shortbread recipe from Food52, but simplified the method, dialed down the sugar, swapped two egg yolks for one whole egg, and added a tiny bit of cardamom for a warmer, spicier flavor that felt right for the holidays.

You know what else feels right for the holidays? Shortcuts. In this version of the recipe, we use only one bowl and mix up cold fats with the rest of the ingredients in a food processor instead of a mixer.

AND, this part might seem like sacrilege to some, but I used jarred dulce de leche. I know, I know. Bad food blogger, bad! I like this one the most and found it at World Market, but you can also find it online. If you feel like making your own, here are some options:

Smitten Kitchen’s stovetop dulce de leche
Displaced Housewife’s olive oil dulce de leche
Live Well Bake Often’s oven-baked dulce de leche
The Spruce Eats boiled condensed milk dulce de leche

Here we go!

Alfajores made easier with store-bought dulce de leche and a streamlined recipe and method. Save time AND make delicious cookies this year! #meandthemoose #holidaybaking #Christmascookies #alfajores #shortbreadcookies #dulcedeleche #cookierecipes #b…

Coconut and cardamom alfajores

Yield: 24 cutout cookies; 12 sandwiches
Time: 90 minutes (about 30 active)

½ cup (1 stick) butter, cut into ½ inch cubes
6 Tbsp coconut oil (solid)
½ cup cane sugar (can substitute granulated sugar if necessary)
1 tsp vanilla extract
1 egg
2 cups all-purpose flour
¼ cup coconut flour
1/4 tsp cardamom
¼ tsp sea salt
1 15-oz jar of dulce de leche

Cube the butter and add it to a food processor. Add the coconut oil (making sure it’s solid). Run the food processor until the butter and coconut oil have combined and are smooth, about 30 seconds. You may have to scrape down the sides.

Add the sugar, vanilla extract, and egg. Run the machine until the ingredients are well combined. Again, you may have to scrape down the sides.

Add the dry ingredients and pulse just until the dough comes together. I often need to scrape the sides once. The end result of the dough should be a crumbly wet dough that’s in large and small sandy chunks that come together easily when pressed.  The dough should be wetter than a pie dough, but slightly more crumbly than your typical sugar cookie dough.

Divide the dough roughly in half and place one dough chunk on a sheet of parchment paper. Using the paper or your hands to form a ball. Place another piece of parchment on top of the dough ball and roll out to a ¼-inch thick disk. Repeat with the other half of the dough. Chill both dough disks in the refrigerator for 30 minutes.

When the dough has chilled for about 25 minutes, preheat the oven to 325.

Working one disk at a time, remove the top parchment sheet from each half and use it to line a cookie sheet. Cut out as many shapes as possible and gently transfer them. Re-roll the dough to cut out more shapes. For the cookies that will be the base of each sandwich, score gently with a fork. For the top cookie, cut out any shape you like from the middle.

Bake the cutout cookies for 14-17 minutes, turning once during baking to ensure even cooking. The cookies are done when they just begin to brown. Let cool.  

When the cookies are cool, top each bottom portion with 2-3 Tbsp of dulce de leche and top with a cutout cookie.