Caramel Toast Pain Perdu , which translates to “lost bread,” is the traditional French version of the American “French Toast.” It is an age-old technique for making use of leftover or stale bread by dipping them in a creamy mixture of milk and eggs and frying them in clarified butter. This recipe has a richer batter than the regular French toast. When cooked, the result is a custard-like texture in the interior and a crispy golden coating. The addition of caramel sauce adds mouthwatering sweetness that kids will love. Pain Perdu with Caramel-Benjamin is almost like dessert for breakfast. It is an easy recipe that is fun to do and as Chef Clement Bruno demonstrates here, kids can make this dish or assist you for a lovely way to start the morning. Chef Bruno uses stale French bread for this recipe. You can also use day- old Italian bread or leftover brioche but not sourdough. Stale bread soaks up more of the milk-egg mixture without crumbling or falling apart, which fresh bread tend to do. Before frying the soaked bread, make sure that the butter in the skillet is sizzling hot to get a crispy outer crust. This recipe makes use of the simplest of ingredients to make the batter: milk, eggs, sugar, and a pinch of salt. The thick slices of day-old bread are dipped on the batter generously covering both sides. Large amounts of butter are used to fry the dipped bread thoroughly. Other versions of Pain perdu add cinnamon or vanilla or both to the batter for more flavors. Others also like to top their pain perdu with fruits, honey, jam, Vegemite, apple sauce, whipped cream, maple syrup, powdered sugar, yogurt, marmalade, cheese, chocolate, or marmalade. Like pancakes or waffle syrup, it can also be served with bacon, beans, or sausages. Ingredients Waffle dough: ½ lb. flour 1.8 oz. sugar 1 ½ tablespoons baking soda 2.8 oz. butter salt 4 egg yolks 4 egg whites