Skip to main content

French Toast Casserole

2.0

(1)

A ceramic casserole dish filled with linear slices of baked French toast casserole.
Photo by Chelsie Craig, Food Styling by Kate Buckens

This overnight French toast casserole recipe is the ultimate hands-off entertaining brunch dish. Set it up the night before Christmas, Mother’s Day, or anytime you have guests coming over and all you’ll have to do in the morning is brush it with butter and bake.

This version is all about creating a rich, custardy bread pudding experience balanced by textural pops of crunchy demerara sugar. To get there, we recommend using challah, brioche, or Pullman over more crusty French bread or sourdough bread. Cutting the loaf into wide slices (instead of tearing it into 1-inch cubes) and toasting them on a baking pan until golden and crispy first helps ensure the final baked French toast casserole won’t completely fall apart. For the custard, we went with cinnamon, cardamom, and orange zest for warmth and brightness, but if you prefer your egg mixture with vanilla extract and cinnamon for more cinnamon roll vibes, that also works here. To make sure the bread has time to absorb the egg and milk mixture, cover the casserole dish tightly with plastic wrap and refrigerate it for at least two hours. (If you’re short on time, this classic French toast recipe comes together quickly.)

As the French toast bakes, set out tangy crème fraîche and maple syrup to serve alongside—though powdered sugar or toasted pecans would also go nicely. If you’re hosting a large party, try adding another breakfast casserole (like this cheesy egg bake with sausage) to the menu, or go with any of these crowd-pleasing breakfast recipes instead.

Read More
Cinnamon bun fans, our time has come.
A shortbread base made with cheddar cheese provides a salty contrast against a chewy caramel in this playful cookie bar that pays homage to Chicago mix popcorn.
Red-skinned pears and dulce de leche (store-bought or homemade) are the keys to this stunning yet simple dessert.
This breakfast-for-a-crowd crams everything good about babka into a hearty casserole: sweet custard, cinnamon, chocolate, and tender slices of bread.
A riff on the New York classic black-and-white cookie, featuring refreshing peppermint extract and a sprinkle of festive crushed candy canes.
An oven-baked take on the Atlanta classic.
Perfectly cooked eggs dive into a creamy, spiced, tomato-tinged sauce.
Studded with golden raisins and a crown of almonds, this yeasted Alsatian sweet bread is an ideal holiday loaf.