Cold Toast

The French are known for their fine cuisine. Their lavish lunches and sumptuous dinners are legendary. But breakfast, or le petit dรฉjeuner, might seem to getย short shrift, to the dismay of travelers coming from places where breakfast is a more elaborate affair.ย I remember as a touristย in France, I felt so French having a baguette or croissant for breakfast, smearing jam and butter on either, enjoying it with a frothy cafรฉ au laitย (that, sadly, I learned wasnโt a bottomless cupโฆ) accompanied byย the tiniestย glass of orange juice that Iโd ever seen. But byย Day #3, I started craving a scrambled eggs and hash browns, and โ mais oui โ a side of crisp bacon.
I was never really a hugeย breakfast eater, though. No steak and eggs for me, orย corned beef hash and huevos rancheros. Usually I saved those for weekend brunch. After a night of being a line cook in a very busy restaurant, breakfast wasย a quick cup of dark coffee and maybeย a half-bagel or some other carb. As the years of eating the diet of a line cook (which is everything you can manage to stuff in your mouth in theย shortest amount of time), to get back into reasonable shape,ย I joined a workout group and the instructor came around one day, and asked each of us what we had for breakfast. Most of us got yelled at for not eating enough, including me.
So now my breakfast consists ofย coffee, juice, and toast, then I have a fruit salad around mid-morning, although I remember Romainโs French father beingย astounded to see meย eating between meals. โCโest formidable!โ he said, watching me eat a bowl of fresh fruit one morning around 10am, as if I was some sort of radical for stuffing my crawย between the prescribed meal times.
Another thing that might raise eyebrows is that I now put an ice cube in myย glass of orange juice, which I had in Portugal and found to beย an extra-refreshing way to wake up. Romain is an anomaly and has taken to ice, too. The French arenโt generally fond of ice, or cool drinks: a reader wrote to me once to tell me her French in-laws microwaved their orange juice in the morning, because it was too cold coming out of the refrigerator.ย That may be changing though; twoย neighbors came over the other day to use my kitchen and when they learned that my refrigerator had an ice maker, they spent theย afternoon refilling their water glasses with it.
And now that the Spritz has become the drink of choice amongst les bobos, the Parisian version of hipsters, whoย seem to be taking more to les glaรงons in the Italian apรฉritif thatโs replaced the mojito in cafรฉs, making ice more acceptable. Even Picard, the French frozen food store sells bags of it,ย which interestingly, theyโre advertising with the tagline, โHow many cubes are you putting in your orange juice?โ I never thought Iโd be a trend-setter in France, especially with my awkward fashion sense which means I am the only man in Paris whoย wears socks with his sneakers.
One thing the French donโt seem to mind cold is toast, as evidenced by this aisle of boxes of toast sold at my localย supermarket. I donโt know who wants to eat bread that could double as a ginger grater, but from the space it takes up, itโs obviously pretty popular.
Perhaps itโs becauseย a number of people have warned me about potential dangers of eating pain chaud, or warm bread, whichย they say will give you a brioche, or a pot-belly. Whichย room temperature bread apparently doesnโt. Which may be one reason why itโs better to eat cold bread. Yetย no oneโs been ever to explain the logic of why warm bread will give you a brioche (pot-belly), but cold doesnโt. So until someone shows meย evidence from a trusted medical or scientific source that says otherwise, I am going to continue to eat warm bread whenever I can.
(Curiously,ย just last week I learned that eating the mie, theย interior, of bread will also make you fat, but the crust wonโt. I couldnโt find any info on that one either.)
Sometimes Romain will get up earlier than me and make the toast, leaving it on my plate until I make my wayย to the table. He doesnโt realizeย the urgency I have for spreading the butter on toast while itโs stillย warm. I insist that whenย I spread salted butter on it, it meltsย into little golden, frothy pools, filling in all the holes and creating shiny rivulets of melted butter. I will vault over whatever is in my way to make sure that my toast is still warm when I spread the butter on it. His wonderful parents make their toast the night before and leave it out on their breakfast tray, so I guess I should be glad heโs not doing that.ย But Iโm a little concerned that itโs only a matter of timeโฆ
The French will sometimesย dip their cold, buttered toast with jam in their morning, which is sort of a roundabout way of warming it up, I guess. But that makes me wonder why itโs interdit to drink coffee with dessert after a meal (itโs enjoyedย after) when buttered toast with jam has the same ingredients โ flour, butter, fruit, sugar โ as dessert, which is usuallyย made with the same combination of ingredients: flour, butter, fruit, and sugar.
But chacun ร son goรปt, as they say, or โto each their own taste,โ and Iโm happy to let everyone enjoy their food the way they want to. Iโve been skirting the issue lately with having a fresh baguette for breakfast, which doesnโt need to get toasted and I donโt need to go on a morning rampage if itโs not warm when the butter hits it. (So Iโm getting a few more minutes of sleep in the morning.) And I donโt have to worry about getting a brioche, although I do have to say, when I sometimes pick up a brioche instead of a baguette, I do prefer that toasted.











