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Mango French Toast Recipe – Eggless, Creamy & Easy
by Max Fresh on May 27, 2026
Mango French Toast: A Tropical Twist on a Classic Breakfast
Creamy, custardy, and bursting with summer mango flavourPrep: 5 mins • Cook: 8 mins • Serves: 2 • Course: Breakfast / Dessert
There is something magical about the moment mango season collides with a lazy weekend morning. This Mango French Toast is everything you love about classic French toast — soft, custardy, golden — but reimagined with the sweet, sunshine flavour of ripe mangoes. No eggs, no fuss, just a silky mango-milk soak that turns plain bread slices into the most indulgent breakfast (or dessert!) you will make all summer.Topped with a scoop of vanilla ice cream, juicy mango chunks, blueberries, and crushed pistachios, this is the kind of recipe that turns a regular morning into a celebration. Best of all, it comes together in under 15 minutes.
Why You'll Love This Recipe
Egg-free: Perfect for anyone who skips eggs but still wants that classic French toast texture
Quick & easy: Just one pan and five core ingredients — ready in under 15 minutes.
Seasonal showstopper: The ripe mango puree gives a natural sweetness no syrup can match.
Versatile: Serve it for breakfast, brunch, or as a fancy mango dessert.
Ingredients
Simple pantry staples plus one star ingredient — fresh, ripe mango.
• Bread: 2–4 slices (brioche, milk bread, or thick white bread work best)
• Mango puree: ½ cup (sweet, fresh pulp from ripe Alphonso or Kesar mangoes)
• Condensed milk: 2–3 tablespoons (adjust to taste)
• Regular milk: 1 cup (full-fat for the creamiest result)
• Butter: 1–2 tablespoons (for that golden, caramelised crust)
• Cardamom powder: 2 pinches (the secret warmth that lifts the whole dish)
To Serve
• Your favourite ice cream (vanilla is classic)
• Fresh mango chunks
• A handful of blueberries
• Crushed pistachios for garnish
The Right Pan Makes All the Difference
Because this recipe relies on the milk mixture reducing into a soft caramel coating around the bread, you need a pan that distributes heat evenly and doesn't let anything stick. I love using the MaxFresh Honeycomb Frypan for this — the honeycomb-textured non-stick surface lets the bread brown beautifully without tearing, and the milk reduces into that gorgeous caramelised layer without burning. One pan, no mess, perfect results every single time.
👉 Shop the pan I use: maxfresh.com/products/honeycomb-frypan
Step-by-Step Instructions
1. Mix the mango milk. In a bowl, whisk together the regular milk, condensed milk, mango puree, and a pinch of cardamom powder until smooth and pourable. Taste it — it should be sweet, fragrant, and unmistakably mango.
2. Toast in butter. Melt a generous amount of butter in your skillet or frypan over medium-low heat. Place the dry bread slices directly onto the pan and let them lightly toast for about a minute, soaking up that buttery flavour.
3. Pour the mango mixture. While the bread is still in the pan, slowly pour the mango milk directly over and around the bread slices. Don't worry if it pools — that's the magic.
4. Simmer and absorb. Let the bread cook on low heat. It will instantly start drinking up the liquid. Carefully flip the slices once so both sides soak up the mango milk and turn beautifully soft and coated.
5. Caramelise. Cook for another 1–2 minutes, until the liquid reduces, thickens, and forms a soft, custard-like caramelised coating around each slice. The bottoms should be golden and the tops glossy.
6. Plate and serve. Transfer the toast to a plate, spoon over any extra mango-milk reduction from the pan, top with a scoop of ice cream, fresh mango chunks, blueberries, and a sprinkle of crushed pistachios. Serve immediately while warm.
Chef's Tips for Perfect Mango French Toast
• Use ripe mangoes. Alphonso or Kesar give the best flavour and natural sweetness. If your mango is less sweet, add an extra spoonful of condensed milk.
• Pick the right bread. Slightly stale or day-old brioche, milk bread, or thick white bread soaks up the milk best without falling apart.
• Keep the heat low. Patience is the secret — low heat lets the bread absorb the milk and the sugars caramelise without burning.
• Flip gently. Soaked bread is delicate. Use a wide spatula and turn it in one smooth motion.
• Make it your own. Swap pistachios for almonds, add a drizzle of saffron milk, or finish with a dusting of dried rose petals for a celebratory touch.
Make-Ahead & Storage
Mango French toast is best eaten fresh, while the custardy coating is still soft and the pan-edges are crisp. That said, you can prep the mango-milk mixture up to 24 hours in advance and keep it covered in the fridge — give it a quick whisk before using. Leftover cooked toast can be refrigerated for up to a day and reheated gently in a buttered pan over low heat.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I use canned mango pulp?
Absolutely. Good-quality canned Alphonso pulp works beautifully when mangoes are out of season. Just reduce the condensed milk slightly, as canned pulp is usually already sweetened.
Is this recipe eggless?
Yes — completely egg-free. The condensed milk and mango puree create that custardy texture without needing any eggs.
Can I make it vegan?
Yes. Use thick coconut milk in place of regular milk, sweetened condensed coconut milk, and vegan butter. The mango flavour shines either way.
What's the best pan to use?
A heavy-bottomed non-stick pan is essential — the milk needs to reduce slowly without sticking or burning. I always reach for my MaxFresh Honeycomb Frypan for this recipe.
Final Bite
This Mango French Toast is comfort food with a tropical soul — humble bread transformed into something that tastes like a slow Sunday morning in mango season. Make it once and it's bound to become your favourite way to celebrate ripe summer mangoes.
If you try this recipe, I'd love to hear how it turned out. Tag your creations and share the mango love!
Himachali Siddu Recipe in Stainless Steel Multi Kadai
by Max Fresh on May 21, 2026
Authentic Himachali Siddu Recipe in Stainless Steel Multi Kadai Maxfresh Cookware
Estimated time: 2 hrs 30 mins | Serves: 4 | Cuisine: Himachali | Cooking Tool: Stainless Steel Multi Kadai MaxFresh Cookware
If you're searching for an authentic Himachal Pradesh delicacy that's both healthy and steamed without a drop of oil, this Himachali Siddu recipe is the perfect choice. Made effortlessly in a stainless steel multi kadai, Siddu is a soft, fluffy, yeast-leavened bread stuffed with a flavourful walnut-onion filling — a hill-station favourite that pairs beautifully with desi ghee or coriander chutney.
Using a multi kadai transforms this traditional recipe into a healthy, fuss-free cooking experience. Unlike non-stick or aluminium steamers, stainless steel cookware is non-reactive, food-grade safe, and retains heat evenly — exactly what slow-steamed Siddu demands.
Why Cook Siddu in a Stainless Steel Multi Kadai?
A stainless steel multi kadai is the secret weapon behind perfectly steamed Siddu. Here's why this cookware deserves a permanent spot in your kitchen:
Even steam distribution – the multiple stacked plates of a multi kadai ensure each Siddu cooks uniformly
Healthy & non-toxic – premium stainless steel cookware is free from PFOA, lead, and aluminium leaching
Multi-purpose use – steam idlis, dhoklas, momos, modaks, and Siddu in one multi kadai
Durable & induction-friendly – built to last decades, unlike coated pans
Easy to clean – stainless steel cookware doesn't stain or absorb odours
Ingredients for Himachali Siddu Recipe
For the Dough:
2 cups atta (whole wheat flour)
1 tbsp active dry yeast
Salt to taste
Lukewarm water (for kneading)
For the Filling:
½ cup walnuts
7–8 garlic cloves
1 inch ginger
4–5 green chillies
Fresh coriander (handful)
Fresh pudina/mint (handful)
1 tsp jeera (cumin seeds)
1 tsp sesame seeds (til)
1 medium onion, roughly chopped
Salt to taste
Step-by-Step Himachali Siddu Recipe (Multi Kadai Method)
Step 1: Prepare the Dough In a large bowl, mix 2 cups of atta with 1 tbsp active yeast and salt. Slowly add lukewarm water and knead into a semi-soft dough. Cover and rest for 2 hours until it doubles in size.
Step 2: Make the Filling In a grinder, blitz walnuts, garlic, ginger, green chillies, coriander, pudina, jeera, sesame seeds, and salt to a coarse mix. Transfer to a bowl and add roughly chopped onions. Mix well — the filling should be crunchy, fragrant, and slightly moist.
Step 3: Shape the Siddu Divide the dough into equal balls. Flatten each ball, place a spoonful of filling in the centre, and seal the edges. You can shape them like half-moons, pouches, or pinwheels — whatever suits your style.
Step 4: Steam in Stainless Steel Multi Kadai Grease the plates of your stainless steel multi kadai lightly. Add water to the base, place the stacked plates, and arrange the Siddu pieces leaving space between each. Cover and steam on medium flame for 20 minutes.
Step 5: Serve Hot Once steamed, your Siddu should look puffed and shiny. Serve immediately with desi ghee, mint chutney, or rajma curry.
Pro Tips for Perfect Siddu
Always use lukewarm water — hot water kills the yeast
Don't overcrowd the multi kadai plates; leave room for expansion
A good stainless steel multi kadai retains steam better than aluminium ones
Test doneness with a toothpick — it should come out clean
Why a Multi Kadai is the Best Indian Kitchen Investment
A stainless steel multi kadai isn't just for Siddu. It's a multi-tasking marvel for:
Idli & mini idli steaming
Dhokla & khaman
Patra & muthiya
Momos & modaks
Veggie steaming for healthy meals
Investing in quality stainless steel cookware like a multi kadai future-proofs your kitchen - one durable purchase replaces 5+ specialised utensils.
Final Thoughts
This Himachali Siddu recipe brings the soul of Himachal Pradesh to your kitchen — and pairing it with a quality stainless steel multi kadai elevates both the taste and the cooking experience. Whether you're a home cook or a foodie exploring regional Indian cuisine, stainless steel cookware is the healthiest, most sustainable way to steam, sauté, and simmer.
