Kirbie's Cravings

Brick Toast

a slice of brick toast drizzled with chocolate on a white plate

Sometimes my recipes come from ideas that pop into my mind suddenly. Sometimes they are inspired by something I ate and want to re-create. Sometimes they arise out of frustration that a restaurant can’t seem to get right what should be very simple.

Can you guess what inspired the brick toast making?

Brick toast is a popular snack served at most Taiwanese Tapioca/Boba Tea Cafes. It’s pretty easy to make, but it’s actually quite hard to find a good version.
brick toast drizzled with chocolate on a white plate with a plain brick toast in the backgroun
Recently, I had a very poor version at Tea Station and a version I thought was too buttery at Up 2 You Cafe, so I decided to make my own.
plain brick toast sliced into small pieces
There’s quite a few variations you can make. Each one starts with a butter base. But you can make a sweet cream butter, a butter custard, condensed milk, honey butter, etc. You can also top with various sauces like chocolate or Nutella.

My favorites are the condensed milk and the sweet butter, though the condensed milk one burns easily.
a package of thick-sliced bread
For the toast, I purchase the “extra thick” slices (not to be confused with just the “thick slices” which aren’t as thick) of toast baked and sold at Nijiya, a Japanese Supermarket. Thick toast slices can often be found at Chinese bakeries as well. I know some people will use Texas Style toast, but I don’t think it is thick enough. Also if you can find some unsliced toast, that works too.
process photo showing a slice of thick-cut bread taosted and cut into small squares
Next, you’ll need a toaster oven. You need to remove the tray and toast the bread directly on the wire rack so that both sides will be toasted.

Some places serve brick toast uncut, but I think it’s best to cut it before the toasting, so that the toast doesn’t get smashed down afterwards when you’re trying to slice it into smaller pieces.
brick toast garnished with melted chocolate
Brick toast is a great afternoon snack. It goes well with tea, coffee, etc. I think I would be happy eating brick toast everyday. It’s one of my favorite things.plain brick toast with a white coffee cup in the background

Taiwanese Style Brick Toast

Servings: 4
Course: Breakfast
Cuisine: Taiwanese
Brick toast is a popular snack served at most Taiwanese Tapioca and Boba Tea Cafes. There are many ways to serve it and here I'm sharing my favorite variations.

Ingredients

  • 4 extra-thick slices of toast

Sweet Butter Cream

  • 1/4 cup butter
  • 1/4 cup sugar

Condensed Milk

  • 1/4 cup butter
  • 1/4 cup condensed milk

Custard

  • 1/4 cup sugar
  • 1/4 cup milk powder
  • 1/2 egg yolk
  • 1/4 cup butter (see note)

Instructions

  • Whichever butter spread you prefer, whisk all ingredients together until mixed and the butter is light and creamy. 
  • Spread generously on 4 slices of thick toast. Slice toast into small squares with a sharp knife but don't cut all the way through. Place on wire rack in the toaster oven. Set to toast setting, medium. Watch toast while it is cooking to make sure it doesn't burn.
  • Top with chocolate sauce or Nutella if desired.

Notes

For the custard version, you can also use condensed milk instead of butter.

The nutrition information provided are only estimates based on an online nutritional calculator. I am not a certified nutritionist. Please consult a professional nutritionist or doctor for accurate information and any dietary restrictions and concerns you may have.

Did you make this recipe?I'd love to see it! Mention @KirbieCravings and tag #kirbiecravings!

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16 comments on “Brick Toast”

  1. We made brick toast this past weekend using milk bread from Pangea. You can get a “slice” about 2 1/2-3 inches thick for 80 cent. It had the perfect flavor and texture for brick toast.

  2. omg you have a recipe for brick toast. words cannot describe how happy i am to find this gem.

  3. thank you for posting this! i’ve been trying to make honey brick toast at home, and it’s definitely a work in progress. i like the cherry blossom bread from nijiya and it has the best density and texture. have you tried using the milk bread from pangea bakery with your recipe?

  4. Oh my goodness… I’ve been looking for a recipe like this for a longggg time. Thank you so much!

  5. Omg love these! I spend much of my teenage years eating this with bubble tea. Yum.

  6. Lady, you are crazy. The honey toast at Up2You is the most delicious thing in the whole world! 😉 Their bread is somehow better and crispier, and while I have a high butter tolerance, I really don’t think it’s too buttery. It is glorious.

    • Well everyone has different tastes and preferences. Also it could have just been that the person who made mine made it too buttery. Mine was soaked in butter. You could see the oil all throughout the entire toast/bread when I had it at Up2You. I still think it’s a cute cafe. I just would prefer to make my own brick toast.

  7. interesting! i hadn’t heard of brick toast before. sounds like a yummy snack!

  8. Mm, I love brick toast. BTW totally unrelated – I was at RakiRaki last night and saw that the crepes place is now offering snow fluff ice. Have you tried it yet?

    • Hi Jinxi. No I have not tried it yet. Also didn’t see it when I was there just last weekend, though I did see that they had a shaved ice machine in the back. I’ll have to go back and check!