Protein French Toast with Cinnamon Maple Drizzle — 36g Protein, Under $2.50

French toast has no business being this high in protein — but here we are. The trick is an egg and cottage cheese batter that coats each slice and cooks into a golden, custardy crust that tastes far more indulgent than anything under $2.50 has the right to taste. Two thick slices of bread, a three-ingredient batter, and four minutes in a pan is all it takes. The cinnamon maple drizzle takes another thirty seconds and makes the whole thing feel like a proper weekend breakfast rather than a macro-tracking exercise. This is one of those recipes that people genuinely do not believe costs less than three dollars.

Protein French Toast with Cinnamon Maple Drizzle

Total Time 12 minutes
Servings: 1 person
Calories: 420

Ingredients
  

  • 2 thick slices of bread brioche, sourdough, or whole wheat all work
  • 2 large eggs
  • 1/3 cup low-fat cottage cheese
  • 1/4 tsp cinnamon
  • 1/4 tsp vanilla extract
  • Pinch of salt
  • Cooking spray or 1/2 tsp butter for the pan
  • For the drizzle: 1 tsp maple syrup or honey mixed with a pinch of cinnamon
  • Optional toppings: sliced banana a dollop of Greek yogurt, or fresh berries

Method
 

  1. Add the eggs, cottage cheese, cinnamon, vanilla extract, and pinch of salt to a blender or use an immersion blender to blitz until completely smooth. If you do not have a blender, whisk very thoroughly — small cottage cheese lumps are fine and will not affect the result.
  2. Pour the batter into a wide shallow bowl or dish.
  3. Heat a non-stick skillet over medium heat and coat with cooking spray or butter.
  4. Dip one slice of bread into the batter, letting it soak for 15–20 seconds per side. The bread should absorb the batter without falling apart.
  5. Place the soaked slice into the hot pan. Repeat with the second slice if space allows.
  6. Cook for 2–3 minutes per side until each slice is deep golden brown and cooked through. Do not rush this — medium heat is key for a custardy interior without burning.
  7. Remove from the pan and plate immediately.
  8. Mix the maple syrup or honey with a pinch of cinnamon and drizzle over the top.
  9. Add any optional toppings and eat straight away.

Notes

Day-old bread works better for French toast than fresh bread because it absorbs the batter more evenly without going soggy. Many grocery stores discount bread that is approaching its best-before date by 30–50% — buy it specifically for this recipe and freeze any leftovers in individual slices. Cottage cheese here acts as a high-protein, low-cost egg extender. A large tub costs around four dollars and covers a full week of breakfasts across multiple recipes.

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