When I was a child, my father made me two things for breakfast according to his mood: Mashed Eggs and Cinnamon Toast.
Mashed Eggs were a Clean Out The Icebox sort of dish...chunks of salami (sometimes Daddy absent-mindedly left the papery covering on)...cheese (often Liederkranz, his favorite, oh so stinky and no longer made in this country, alas)...orange glints of lox (he used cream cheese with the lox, thank heaven, not Liederkranz)...and pickled onions (he sliced up onions, covered them with cider vinegar, kept them in a jar in the fridge)...lots of salt and black pepper. All were beaten together in a soupy mix of eggs, scrambled over slow heat in an astonishing amount of butter in his favorite skillet, then poured (Daddy liked his eggs s*o*f*t*) onto the plate. I never really liked Mashed Eggs, but I was also so charmed and complimented that my father wanted to cook for me, I ate them with a smile.
What brought a genuine smile to my face was Daddy's Cinnamon Toast. It's so simple a concoction, one tends to forget about it--at least, I do, for years at a time. But this morning I was seized by the need to taste it again. I made it in two versions, one with granulated sugar, the other with powdered sugar. As I suspected, I liked the one with powdered sugar best. In the heat of the broiler, some of the little white balls firm up a bit and they are crunchy when you bite them, yum.
I've just Googled recipes for Cinnamon Toast, and I'm surprised to find no one makes it the way my father did. Most recipes want you to mix the cinnamon and sugar. No. The beauty of the toast, I feel, is the snowy (when you use the powdered) sugar under rich reddish brown drifts of cinnamon. When the golden butter bubbles up beneath, your cinnamon toast is not only fragrant but beautiful.
So here is my father's cinnamon toast.
Per serving:
2 large slices good white or wheat* bread
About 2 tablespoons soft butter
About 4 teaspoons confectioner's sugar
Best quality cinnamon from a shaker top
Heat the broiler while you toast the bread as usual...not too dark.
Quickly spread each slice of bread with butter, completely covering the surface.
Use a spoon to sprinkle over the sugar, completely covering the butter.
Shake on cinnamon in drifts over the sugar--be generous.
Place under the broiler--keep an eye on it!--until the butter bubbles and you can smell the cinnamon. Serve at once, especially to a child.
*Rye and sour dough are not recommended, their flavors fight with the cinnamon.
Sunday, January 24, 2010
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