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Irish Toast for 30

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Loyalist Dave

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So on Sunday I fed 30 folks Irish Toast, at Mount Vernon, before the public arrived and it was time to go to work with interaction and demonstrations. True, Mt. Vernon never saw hostilities during the AWI, but they host a weekend event where folks can come and see the venue AND get some information of what General Washington was up against when he commanded Continental Line troops.

So I'm sharing this as it works for any large gathering, especially if you're cooking over grills or a fire. Not necessarily authentic, but it does get the job done quickly, and gets calories into folks going to have a strenuous day. It's also good for church breakfasts, AND if you suddenly find you need to feed a lot of folks breakfast in the field and you're scrounging for kitchen gear, this recipe doesn't use measuring tools.

Large Party Irish Toast (two slices per person)
3 Dozen Eggs
2 12-ounce cans, evaporated milk
12 ounces water
one small container (1 ounce) cinnamon
one small bottle ( 2 ounces) vanilla
2 lbs. butter
4 ounces Irish Whiskey
4 loaves of Texas Toast

don't forget to buy some Syrup

One empty gallon water jug with good lid, and with flat sides
One very large steel skillet with a long handle, and...,
a long handled spatula (distance from the heat from the fire is a good thing)
Plus...,
a disposable, aluminum baking pan liner
a large tray to serve the Irish Toast

PREP: you will need a bowl, a whisk, a funnel, and a freezer with room for the gallon jug.

Break the eggs in groups of 1/2 dozen into the bowl and whisk into scrambled eggs, then pour this using the funnel, into the clean, empty jug. Continue until all the eggs are scrambled and in the jug. Add the two cans of evaporated milk. Use one of the empty cans of milk to measure out 12 ounces of water, and add that to the jug. Then add the vanilla and cinnamon. Add the four ounces of Irish Whiskey. Tightly cap the jug, shake very hard for about 30 seconds.

IF you're going to freeze the batter, DON'T add the whiskey until it's time to cook...it makes the batter tougher to freeze. If you do freeze the batter, you can do so if you are going to keep it in camp in a cooler for a day or two. (There should be enough room in the jug for expansion when freezing. :wink: ) The batter will keep in the cooler, probably with little or no ice until the second day.

My "military KP frying pan" will easily hold 5 pieces of toast lying flat, so it's pretty big...
To cook, with the lid on tight, shake the jug as the cinnamon will tend to gather at the bottom. Then pour some batter into the disposable, aluminum baking pan liner. Melt 1/4 of a stick of butter into the hot skillet (you only need to add butter every other batch of toast in the skillet), and then quickly dunk each side of the Texas toast, and immediately place them in the skillet for as many pieces as your skillet will hold. Texas Toast is 2x the thickness of normal sandwich bread...., so you cook in half the time, but it fills the lads' tummies as though they ate four pieces of home style French bread. :wink: Continue until your serving platter or what have you is full, and then crack open the syrup bottles and serve the guests. You continue to cook more Irish Toast as they eat.

Just Irish Toast and nothing else?
We also dumped 6 packets of Walmart "maple" sausage links into a copper pot with water, and brought that to a rolling boil for about 10 minutes, then covered it and set it aside, before we started the toast. The sausage links continued to cook as the toast was made.

We also served boiled coffee, and orange Gatorade (it was hot out).

So breakfast for 30 people, since we bought in bulk from Walmat and Costco, cost $2.21, not including gasoline, so figure a whopping $2.40 per person full cost.

:hmm:

Cleanup? Toss the batter-pan, toss the jug with leftover batter, toss any extra toast, clean the skillet & spatula, and put the remaining butter back into the cooler. Leftover whiskey belongs to the cook!

LD

PS..., the unit chef on hand (no really he's actually a chef) was injured, so I ended up doing the cooking, suggested I might skip a step and use "Fireball" or another cinnamon flavored whiskey and eliminate any cinnamon clumping, and not "misuse" the Irish whiskey...., :thumbsup:
 
Would I be correct in presuming that "Irish Toast" is simply "French toast" with the addition of Irish whiskey to the "dip"??
(I tried using the "usual suspects" in WorldWideWeird search engines & got the words to Irish drinking toasts but not even one recipe.)

yours, satx
 
satx78247 said:
Would I be correct in presuming that "Irish Toast" is simply "French toast" with the addition of Irish whiskey to the "dip"??
(I tried using the "usual suspects" in WorldWideWeird search engines & got the words to Irish drinking toasts but not even one recipe.)

yours, satx

Can't slip anything past you..... :haha:
 
Taco Bell add : we introduce the Omphaioto lettuce, cheese and seasoned ground beef, wrapped in a tortilla. Never have these three ingredients been mixed in such a way. It’s not a taco, it’s not a burrito.... it’s an Omphaioto!!! :haha:
George Washington never ate a pizza, but he had eaten calozone, he just called it a meat pie :wink:
 
Ya know, you guys. Ya had me jumping around with the butter, and the buttermilk. I'm half Irish. Like I needed an excuse to pull out the Jamison's for breakfast. Ya just couldn't leave it alone. Irish toast with bangers and mash.
Look out woman, I'm cookin' this morning! :stir:
 
:haha: :haha: :haha:

Years ago, I read the label on a bottle of vanilla extract...80 Proof, and as expensive as single malt scotch! So I started experimenting with whiskey in my pancakes (scratch).

Recipe calls for 1/2 tsp. I use a 1 tsp. measure and pour till the overflow suits my taste. Rye works the best. I call it my secret ingredient.
Everyone loves my pancakes. :grin:

Richard/Grumpa
 
Grumpa said:
So I started experimenting with whiskey in my pancakes (scratch).

Richard/Grumpa

Good lord man.....everyone knows you're supposed to put beer in them pancakes...Porter or brown ale is best....The C02 adds to the fluffiness and the malt adds to the sweetness...The alcohol adds to the happiness.... :grin:
 
Would I be correct in presuming that "Irish Toast" is simply "French toast" with the addition of Irish whiskey to the "dip"??

"dip"?

No, the whiskey goes in the batter.

Hence the reason the chef wanted me to save the "good Irish" (for drinking instead) and use something like Fireball whiskey in the batter, and omit the actual cinnamon, since the cinnamon clumps.

LD
 
What my cookbook called "the dip" is the self-same mixture that you call "batter", i.e., milk, egg, spices, vanilla, etc. & that the bread is dipped into prior to cooking.

yours, satx
 
You can dip something in batter or you can batter it.
The flour can be mixed into the wet ingredients or you can dip the item in the wet (usually egg) and then roll or dust with flour.

Neither is the case with French toast....

Sprinkling the cinnamon on after dipping eliminates clumping issues.
 
You can whip eggs with sugar cinnamon nutmeg vanilla then add crushed pork rinds. Let them stand in the batter for about ten minutes. Scoop them with a laddle and fry the pancakes on your griddle, I bet it wouldn’t be bad with you adult beverage of choice.
 
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