Crème brûlée French toast hits that sweet spot between breakfast and dessert: crisp caramelized sugar on top, a soft custardy center underneath, and just enough vanilla warmth to keep every bite from tasting one-note. The first crack through the sugar shell is the part people remember. The second is how fast the plate disappears.
The trick is using thick slices of brioche or challah so the bread can soak up the custard without falling apart. A mix of heavy cream and whole milk gives the French toast that rich, almost baked-custard texture, while the eggs set the slices just enough to hold their shape in the skillet. The sugar topping goes on after cooking, which keeps it glassy and crisp instead of dissolving into the bread.
Below, I’ll walk through the part that matters most: getting the custard level right, keeping the center soft without turning soggy, and burning the sugar just enough for that crackling top.
The custard soaked in perfectly, and the sugar top actually cracked instead of just melting into the bread. I used brioche and it turned out rich without being soggy.
Save this crème brûlée French toast for the morning you want a crackling sugar top and a custardy center with barely any extra effort.
The Sugar Top Goes Right On at the End, and That Changes Everything
Most French toast goes soft from top to bottom because all the sweetness is built into the custard. This version works differently. The bread is cooked first, then the sugar is caramelized on the surface, which gives you that brittle brûlée layer without soaking the crust into syrup. That order matters more than any fancy technique.
If the bread is too thin, the custard overwhelms it before the skillet can set the outside. If the heat is too low, the slices dry out before they color. Thick brioche or challah holds up because it has enough structure to stay plush in the center while the outside takes on a deep golden crust.
The other thing people miss is speed. Once the sugar hits the hot toast, it needs direct heat immediately. Let it sit too long and it turns wet instead of glassy.
What the Bread and Custard Are Each Doing Here
- Brioche or challah — These breads are rich, sturdy, and a little airy, which means they soak up the custard without collapsing. Day-old bread works even better than fresh because it absorbs more evenly. If you only have sandwich bread, use thick slices and shorten the soak time.
- Heavy cream and whole milk — The cream gives the custard its lush texture, while the milk keeps it from feeling heavy or greasy. You can swap in half-and-half in a pinch, but the finished toast won’t taste quite as silky. Skim milk won’t give the same result.
- Eggs — These are what turn the soak into a set, custardy interior instead of a wet center. Whisk them completely into the dairy so the coating cooks evenly. If you see streaks of egg white in the mixture, keep whisking.
- Sugar and brown sugar topping — The white sugar gives the glassy crack, and the brown sugar adds a deeper caramel note. Mixing them together helps the topping burn evenly. Pack it on lightly; too much sugar turns into a thick, sticky layer instead of a crisp shell.
- Butter — Butter in the skillet encourages browning and keeps the French toast from sticking. Use enough to coat the pan, but not so much that the slices fry in pools of fat.
Keeping the Custard Soft Before the Sugar Cracks
Whisk the custard until it looks completely smooth
Combine the eggs, cream, milk, vanilla, cinnamon, and nutmeg in a shallow dish and whisk until the mixture looks unified, not streaky. That even base is what gives each slice the same texture. If you rush this part, one slice can taste eggier than the next. Shallow dishes help because they let the bread lie flat instead of bending in the custard.
Soak long enough to coat, not so long that the bread falls apart
Dip each slice and let it soak on both sides until it feels saturated but still holds its shape. Thick bread needs a little time, but it should not be left swimming in the custard. The common mistake here is turning the bread into a sponge that collapses in the skillet. If it starts to sag when you lift it, it has been in too long.
Cook hot enough to brown before the center overcooks
Melt the butter over medium-high heat and add the soaked bread in batches. You want a steady sizzle as soon as it hits the pan. Cook for 2 to 3 minutes per side until the exterior is golden and the center still feels soft when pressed. If the pan is too cool, the toast dries out before it colors; if it is too hot, the outside scorches while the inside stays raw.
Brûlée the topping fast and serve right away
Mix the sugars and sprinkle them over the cooked toast in a thin layer. Use a culinary torch or slide the slices under a broiler just long enough for the sugar to melt, bubble, and harden into a crackling shell. Watch closely, because the line between caramelized and burnt is only a few seconds. Serve immediately with maple syrup, powdered sugar, and berries while the top is still crisp.
How to Adapt This for a Bigger Brunch or a Simpler Plate
Dairy-free version with a lighter custard
Use full-fat oat milk or almond milk plus a spoonful of dairy-free creamer in place of the cream and milk. The texture will be a little less rich, but the custard still sets nicely if you keep the heat moderate. Skip this swap if you want the deepest crème brûlée feel, because the dairy is doing a lot of the luxury work here.
Gluten-free bread that still holds together
Use a sturdy gluten-free brioche-style loaf if you can find one, and let it dry out a little before dipping. Softer gluten-free breads can tear when soaked, so shorter dipping and a gentler flip help keep the slices intact. The result is still rich, though the texture will be more delicate than classic brioche.
Make it less sweet without losing the brûlée top
Keep the custard as written, then cut the topping amount slightly or serve with fewer berries and a lighter drizzle of maple syrup. The caramel crust still gives you that dramatic finish, but the plate tastes more breakfast than dessert. Don’t reduce the sugar in the topping too much, or it won’t form the brittle shell.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store the cooked French toast without the sugar topping for up to 2 days. The custard interior stays good, but the crust softens.
- Freezer: Freeze the cooked slices before brûléeing for up to 1 month. Wrap them well so they don’t pick up freezer odor, and add the sugar topping after reheating.
- Reheating: Warm in a 325°F oven until heated through, then add the sugar and caramelize at the very end. Microwaving makes the bread rubbery and ruins the texture you worked for.
Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Crème Brûlée French Toast
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Whisk together the eggs, heavy cream, whole milk, vanilla extract, cinnamon, and nutmeg in a shallow dish until smooth.
- Melt the butter in a large skillet over medium-high heat.
- Dip each bread slice into the egg mixture, coating both sides well.
- Cook the bread in batches for 2-3 minutes per side, until golden and custard-like inside.
- Arrange the cooked French toast on serving plates.
- Mix together the sugar and brown sugar, then sprinkle a portion over each toast.
- Using a culinary torch or under a broiler, caramelize the sugar topping on each toast until it crackles.
- Serve immediately with maple syrup, powdered sugar, and fresh berries.


