Last February, Lina wanted French toast at 6:30 AM with the bus coming in 20 minutes. The bread was frozen solid. But sitting on the counter was a bag of dinner rolls from two days ago, just starting to go stale. I cut one roll into six pieces, dunked them in my egg mixture, and threw them in the hot buttered pan. They sizzled and puffed up, edges turning deep golden brown while the centers stayed soft. Four minutes later, Lina was eating these mini French toast bites with his hands, dipping each piece in maple syrup.
I’ve been making these mini French toast bites for about two years now every weekend and most Tuesday mornings when Lina asks for them. They’re faster than regular French toast and way easier. Lina actually finishes his whole plate instead of leaving half a soggy slice because he “doesn’t like the middle part.” The small pieces cook all the way through in four minutes. No more burnt edges with gummy centers.
The bite-sized thing makes breakfast more fun too. Lina dips each piece in syrup like it’s some kind of game, and suddenly he’s eating without me having to nag. I can make enough for both of us in under ten minutes. They reheat pretty well if you make extra on Sunday. And here’s the best part you can use any bread that’s getting stale. Dinner rolls, Hawaiian rolls, even hot dog buns. I’ve used them all when I needed to clean out the pantry.
Jump to:
The Bread:
- Dinner rolls
- Brioche rolls
- Hot dog buns
- Challah bread cut into cubes
- Any stale bread sitting in your pantry

The Egg Stuff:
- Eggs
- Milk
- Vanilla extract
- Ground cinnamon
- Pinch of salt
- Sugar
For Cooking:
- Butter
- Maple syrup
- Powdered sugar if you want

How To Make Mini French Toast Step By Step
Prep the Bread:
- Cut dinner rolls into quarters
- If using hot dog buns, cut into 1-inch pieces
- Challah or brioche? Cut into cubes
- You want bite-sized pieces, not too small

Make the Egg Mixture:
- Crack eggs into a bowl
- Add milk
- Splash of vanilla
- Sprinkle of cinnamon
- Whisk it all together with a fork

Cook Them:
- Heat your skillet on medium heat
- Add a big chunk of butter, let it melt and foam
- Dunk bread pieces in egg mixture, let them soak for about 5 seconds
- Don’t oversoak or they get mushy
- Put them in the pan, don’t crowd them
- Cook 2 minutes on first side until golden
- Flip, cook 2 more minutes
- Pull them out when both sides are brown and crispy

Serve:
- Eat with your hands
- Pile them on a plate
- Drizzle with maple syrup
- Dust with powdered sugar if Lina is watching

Smart Swaps for Mini French Toast
Bread Options:
- Dinner rolls → Hamburger buns
- Fresh bread → Day-old bread (better texture)
- White rolls → Whole wheat (Lina hates these but they work)
- Regular → Gluten-free bread cubes
Milk Swaps:
- Whole milk → 2% or skim (just not as rich)
- Regular milk → Almond milk (tastes fine)
- Dairy → Oat milk (my favorite non-dairy option)
- Plain → Heavy cream if you’re going all out
Flavor Changes:
- Cinnamon → Pumpkin pie spice
- Vanilla → Almond extract (use less, it’s strong)
- Plain → Add orange zest
- Regular → Maple extract instead of vanilla
Toppings:
- Simple → Whipped cream (Lina’s favorite)
- Maple syrup → Honey
- Powdered sugar → Regular sugar mixed with cinnamon
- Plain → Fresh berries
Mini French Toast Variations
Cinnamon Roll Style:
- Mix brown sugar and cinnamon together
- Sprinkle on the bites while they’re still hot
- Drizzle with cream cheese glaze
- Lina calls these “the fancy ones”
Berry Stuffed:
- Cut rolls in half instead of quarters
- Smash a few berries between two pieces
- Dip the whole thing in egg mixture
- Cook like normal, berries get jammy inside
Peanut Butter Banana:
- Spread peanut butter on bread before cutting
- Add banana slices
- Dip and cook
- Tastes like a sandwich but better
Savory Version:
- Skip the sugar and cinnamon
- Add garlic powder and black pepper to eggs
- Top with shredded cheese after flipping
- Serve with bacon
Chocolate Chip:
- Press a few chocolate chips into each piece before dipping
- They melt while cooking
- Gets messy but worth it
- Lina requests these every Saturday
Equipment For Mini French Toast
- Large skillet (nonstick makes life easier)
- Mixing bowl
- Fork or whisk
- Spatula
- Knife or scissors
Storing Your Mini French Toast
Counter (Same Day):
- Leave them on a plate covered with foil
- They’re fine for a few hours
- Don’t stack them or the bottoms get soggy
Fridge (3-4 Days):
- Let them cool completely first
- Put in an airtight container with paper towels between layers
- Reheat in the microwave for 20 seconds
- Or throw them back in a pan with butter
Freezer (2 Months):
- Cool completely
- Spread on a baking sheet and freeze for an hour
- Then put in a freezer bag
- Reheat from frozen in the toaster or microwave
Reheating:
- Skillet: Best option, add a little butter and heat 2 minutes
- Microwave: 20-30 seconds (gets them warm but not crispy)
- Toaster oven: 5 minutes at 350°F (brings back the crisp)
My cousin makes mini French toast bites that taste completely different from everyone else’s. Better. People beg her to bring them to every family brunch, and she always shows up with two full trays because she knows they’ll disappear in ten minutes. For three years, I’ve been asking what she does differently. She’d just smile and say “same recipe as you” while I stood there knowing that was a lie. Last Thanksgiving, I caught her in the kitchen making a batch. She was adding something to her egg mixture from a small bottle, and when I asked what it was, she tried to hide it behind the toaster. Too late.
Butter extract. Not vanilla butter extract. She uses vanilla too, but adds about half a teaspoon of butter extract to the egg mixture. Makes the bites taste like they were cooked in twice as much butter without actually using more. The flavor goes all the way through instead of just sitting on the surface.But here’s the real trick she finally told me after I promised not to tell anyone else in the family: she lets her egg mixture sit for ten minutes before dipping the bread.

Top Tip
- The secret to perfect mini French toast bites is getting your pan temperature just right medium heat, not high. If it’s too hot, the outside burns before the egg mixture in the center cooks through. If it’s too low, they absorb too much butter and get greasy instead of crispy. I test my pan by dropping a tiny bit of the egg mixture in first. If it sizzles gently and starts to set within a few seconds, the temperature is perfect.
- I learned this after making about 20 batches that were either burnt on the outside or gummy in the middle. Now I test the pan every single time before I start cooking, even though I use the same stove and same burner. Room temperature affects how fast the pan heats up. How long it’s been sitting on the burner matters. Even humidity seems to change how the bites cook.
- Also, don’t try to cook too many at once. I know it’s tempting to fill the whole pan so you can make breakfast faster, but they need space. If you crowd them, steam builds up between the pieces and they get soggy instead of crispy. I do about 8-10 pieces at a time in my 12-inch skillet, leaving at least half an inch between each one. Takes a few extra minutes, but every single bite comes out with those crispy edges Lina loves.
I’ve made regular French toast and these mini bites back-to-back enough times to know exactly why the smaller version wins. It comes down to surface area and cooking time. Regular thick slices have a lot of bread in the middle that needs to cook through. By the time the center sets, the outside is usually overdone. These bite-sized pieces cook all the way through in the same time it takes the outside to get crispy and golden. Every piece is consistent no burnt edges with raw middles.
The other thing is the egg mixture actually penetrates the bread better with smaller pieces. When you dunk a thick slice of bread in egg, only the outside really soaks it up. The middle stays dry and bready. Cut that same bread into quarters and suddenly the egg mixture reaches almost all the way through because each piece has more exposed surface. You get that custardy texture in every bite instead of just on the outside layer. Plus, stale bread works even better because it’s drier and more porous, so it soaks up the egg without falling apart.
FAQ
What is one common mistake when preparing French toast?
The biggest mistake is soaking the bread too long. With mini French toast bites, you only need about 5 seconds per side in the egg mixture. Any longer and they turn mushy and fall apart in the pan. Regular thick slices need more time, but these small pieces soak through fast.
Why is Mini French Toast considered unhealthy?
Regular French toast gets called unhealthy because of all the sugar, syrup, and butter. But this mini French toast recipe isn’t worse than regular breakfast. You’re using eggs (protein), milk (calcium), and bread. The butter and syrup add calories, but you can control how much you use. We do fresh berries instead of syrup sometimes.
What is the trick to not soggy Mini French Toast?
Use stale or day-old bread it soaks up the egg without getting mushy. Fresh bread holds too much moisture and gets soggy. Also, don’t oversoak your pieces. A quick dip is enough. And make sure your pan is hot enough before adding the bites so they start cooking immediately instead of sitting in liquid.
Is gypsy toast the same as Mini French Toast?
Yeah, basically. Gypsy toast is what some people in the UK call French toast bread dipped in egg and fried. Same concept, different name. Some versions skip the milk or cinnamon, but the method is the same. These mini French toast bites would work with any version of the recipe.
Now you’ve got everything you need to make these mini French toast bites from the right pan temperature to my cousin’s butter extract trick. They’ve completely changed our mornings here. No more burnt regular French toast sitting in the trash. No more fighting with Lina to finish his breakfast before the bus comes. No more standing at the stove flipping giant slices while they get cold on the plate. Just quick, crispy, bite-sized pieces that cook in four minutes and actually get eaten. Lina requests these at least three times a week now, and I don’t mind making them because they’re so much faster than the old way.
Want more breakfast ideas that actually work on busy mornings? Try our Delicious Frittata Recipe that you can make on Sunday night and reheat all week Lina eats it cold sometimes, straight from the fridge. Need something completely different? Our Delicious Scrapple Recipe introduces you to this regional breakfast favorite that’s weirdly good once you get past what’s in it. Or if you’re feeling adventurous on the weekend, check out our Top 7 Tips for Easy Garbage Bread Recipe that turns random leftovers into something Lina and his friends request by name at sleepovers.
Share your mini French toast success! I genuinely love seeing your versions and hearing what bread you used. Someone sent me a picture last month of mini French toast made with leftover cinnamon rolls and I’m still thinking about trying it.
Rate this Mini French Toast and join our breakfast crew! We’re just regular people trying to get food on the table before 7 AM without losing our minds.
Looking for other recipes like this? Try these:
Pairing
These are my favorite dishes to serve with Mini French Toast

Mini French Toast
Quick, crispy, bite-sized Mini French Toast made from stale rolls or bread cubes. Perfect for busy mornings – faster and more kid-friendly than traditional French toast.
Ingredients Â
Equipment
MethodÂ
-
Cut bread into bite-sized pieces: rolls into quarters, hot dog buns into chunks, or cube challah/brioche.
-
Whisk together eggs, milk, vanilla, cinnamon, salt, and optional butter extract. Let the mixture sit for 10 minutes if possible.
-
Heat a skillet over medium heat and melt a chunk of butter until it foams.
-
Dip bread pieces briefly (about 5 seconds) in the egg mixture and place in the skillet without crowding.
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Cook for 2 minutes per side until golden brown and crispy. Serve with maple syrup or powdered sugar.
Nutrition
Notes
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
