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Lucy Mercer

Lucy Mercer
Location
Atlanta, Georgia, USA
Birthday
December 31
Bio
I cook, I write, I carpool. You may also find my words at A Cook and Her Books. Email acookandherbooks@gmail.com. Thanks for visiting!

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OCTOBER 10, 2010 6:52PM

Bostock: The French toast with the funny name

Rate: 11 Flag

 

pumpkin at home

 

 I’m a half-hearted gardener at best - each spring, I clear out the weeds from the flower bed by the driveway and hand the girls seed packets and let them go to town. This year, we planted zinnias and daisies for the bright flowers, pumpkins and watermelons for the kid-pleasing factor. They all combined to yield a crazy quilt of blooms and vines in the garden. We faithfully watered through the summer, and in August, the vines got serious and shot out like Audrey II, taking over the garden bed and sending forth  blooms. I wondered if pumpkin blossoms could be stuffed like squash blossoms, with goat cheese, then battered and fried.

In September, a fruit formed, and here she is, our own little pumpkin buddy:

pumpkin

 Pumpkin is the flavor of fall and I use it to flavor Bostock, the French toast with the funny name. Using Francis Lam’s formula, I infused Challah slices with maple syrup, slathered them with seasoned pumpkin butter, broiled them and topped them with snappy crystallized ginger.

I didn't harvest our homegrown fruit for this treat, instead using canned pumpkin.

 

pumpkin and maple

 

Pumpkin Butter

This makes quite a large amount. You may halve this quantity, or make the whole and freeze it until Christmas - a jar of pumpkin butter is a coveted gift.

1 cup apple cider or apple juice

1 ½ teaspoons ginger

1 ½ teaspoons cinnamon

¼ teaspoon cloves

1 tablespoon orange zest

2 tablespoons orange juice

1 ¼ cup sugar

Pinch salt

2 (15 oz.) cans pumpkin puree

1. In a saucepan over medium heat, combine apple cider, flavorings and sugar. Stir and let come to a boil. Lower heat and stir in pumpkin puree. Let cool. Place in plastic container and keep in refrigerator.

Maple Glaze

½ cup maple syrup

½ cup water

½ teaspoon vanilla

Pinch salt

1. In a saucepan over medium heat, combine all ingredients. Bring to a boil, then remove from heat and let cool.

pumpkin bostock

Pumpkin Bostock with Maple & Ginger
Makes 6 sevings


1 recipe Maple Glaze

½ cup Pumpkin Butter

6 slices Challah bread, 1 ½ inches thick, stale or left at room temperature for a couple hours

1 tablespoon crystallized ginger, finely chopped

1. Preheat oven to 350°. Prepare a sheet pan with foil and a nonstick grid, if you have one. Dip bread slices in maple glaze and squeeze out extra liquid. Place on grid-covered baking sheet.

2. Spread each toast with pumpkin butter. Bake at 350° for 15 minutes. Your kitchen will be unbelievably fragrant at this point.

3. Remove toasts from ovens and sprinkle with chopped crystallized ginger. Serve with hot, black coffee.

Text & images © 2010, Lucy Mercer.

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Comments

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Hi Lucy, I can believe the kitchen will be fragrant with all that goodness going on. It's seasonal as all get-out, too, as we'uns say. I hope you carved a face before making the pumpkin butter. :) Rated
I had never ever heard of this before but wow these recipes sound wonderful! Pumpkin butter just yummm
Looks lovely! I will probably try making the pumpkin butter. I love the rest, but am a lazy breakfast cook. If my husband doesn't bake or buy it, I don't eat it. I love to make lunch and dinner though. I may copy and forward this to him as a hint. hmmm...
Lucy, I am very impressed by your pumpkin and any gardening efforts. I love this October take on bostock, and will also accept any remnant pumpkin butter your have produced :) Yum!
Hi Lucy, did you ever find out " if pumpkin blossoms could be stuffed like squash blossoms, with goat cheese, then battered and fried "? The blossom in the photo looks rather large.

Interesting recipe - a new twist toast. ~r
I've been learning so much about bostock this week. Pumpkin and ginger are fall in a mouthful. Now, I have to see what your evil twin cooked up.
So rich and delicious but so simple to make. And vegan too! Does the ginger give it a nice crunch?
Slathering here, okay?
omigod this looks so good...
Oh my! sharing this!
Oh yum....thank you for posting this!
Yum! I'm glad you didn't harvest the pumpkin -- he looks so decorative, and anyway, I've found that there really aren't any benefits to using fresh pumpkin as opposed to canned, especially when you add in all the work it takes to butcher a pumpkin!
This sounds so yummy. I love french toast and I love anything pumpkin, so combining the two just sounds divine. I love your first photo, too.