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Spanish · Breakfast

Torrijas with sherry

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Torrijas with sherry

About this recipe

Spanish cooking flows from olive oil, garlic, paprika, and tomato — the matriz of the Mediterranean kitchen — applied across tapas, slow-cooked stews, and the seafood traditions of both coasts. Sherry vinegar and Spanish saffron supply most of the brightness and depth.

As a breakfast dish, Torrijas with sherry is typically quick to cook and forgiving — designed for the constraints of a morning kitchen, where speed and ease matter more than elaboration.

Use the scaler above to set the number of servings you actually want to cook — quantities resize with culinary fractions, units promote sensibly (three teaspoons become a tablespoon), and the result reads like the recipe was written for your table.

Curated by the ScaleRecipe editorial teamReviewed

Recipe data is sourced from TheMealDB's open community database; ScaleRecipe handles the curation, the scaling math, the editorial commentary, and the conversion utilities woven into each page.

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Method

  1. step 1
  2. In a wide, shallow bowl, beat the eggs with the cream, milk, golden caster sugar and sherry. Cut each slice of bread in two and dip them into the egg mix, turning to make sure they get a good coating on either side. Soak bread in egg mixture for 10 mins to absorb the liquid (carefully turn them over from time to time and make sure they don’t get too soggy).
  3. step 2
  4. Heat 1½ tbsp olive oil in a large frying pan and cook the bread for about 3 mins on each side until dark golden and crisp on the edge. Keep the slices warm in a low oven as you cook the rest.
  5. step 3
  6. Divide the torrijas between plates and dust with the icing sugar. Serve with crème fraîche or Greek yogurt on the side.

Cooking notes

Scaling works best when you weigh ingredients rather than measure by volume — small differences in packing can compound at higher multipliers.

For volume-to-weight conversions of any ingredient — flour, sugar, butter, salts — use the ingredient converter. To translate the recipe's oven temperature between °C, °F and gas mark, see the temperature converter.

When you scale this recipe up or down, remember that cooking time does not scale linearly. A doubled cake takes longer, but not twice as long; a doubled soup takes roughly twice as long. The cooking-time guide gives sensible starting estimates by dish geometry.

Scaling notes

Scaling Torrijas with sherry

Torrijas with sherry is written for around four servings as it stands on this page — scaling it up for a party or down for a meal-for-one is the small math problem most home cooks face every week. Here's how this particular dish responds to scaling, what changes linearly, and what doesn't.

Breakfast recipes like Torrijas with sherry are typically small-batch and quick-cooking, so scaling is forgiving but constrained by equipment. Eggs (50 g per large) and small spice quantities (use 1.5× when doubling) are the usual scaling-sensitive elements. Pancake-style dishes scale by total pan time rather than pan size — cook in sequential batches.

This recipe calls for eggs, which are the trickiest ingredient to scale to non-integer multiples. A US "large" egg weighs about 50 g; if a fractional scaling lands on, say, 1.5 eggs, beat one egg and weigh 25 g of the beaten mixture rather than guessing. The same goes for halving recipes — half an egg is 25 g of beaten egg, not a dramatic estimate.

Skip the math entirely — ScaleRecipe's scaler rewrites every ingredient line above with proper culinary fractions and smart unit promotion the moment you change the serving count. Open the scaler →

Beyond the recipe

Substitutions & make-ahead — Torrijas with sherry

Two things home cooks ask about most when they're outside the recipe's exact assumptions: what swaps work for which ingredients, and how the dish behaves when you make it ahead. Both depend on what Torrijas with sherry is doing structurally — here's the practical version.

Substitution ideas

Eggs

For binding (cookies, quick breads, meatballs): 1 large egg ≈ 1 tbsp ground flaxseed + 3 tbsp water, rested 5 minutes until gelled — structurally closest to a real egg. For moisture without structure (cakes, brownies): ¼ cup unsweetened applesauce or mashed banana per egg, accepting some loss of rise.

Heavy cream

For sauces and soups: evaporated milk + 1 tbsp butter per cup approximates the body and richness. For whipping, the solid layer from chilled full-fat canned coconut milk whips into stable peaks (the flavour is coconut-forward; works in tropical desserts, less so in vanilla applications).

Dairy milk

Unsweetened soy milk substitutes 1:1 in custards and baked goods (the protein content matches). Oat milk gives a creamier mouthfeel for soups and coffee drinks. Almond milk works for lighter applications. Skip coconut milk in savoury recipes unless the dish calls for it — the flavour is unmistakable.

For weight-based swaps and arbitrary quantities, the ingredient density converter and the cup-to-grams chart cover most pantry staples.

Make-ahead and storage

Breakfast dishes are typically built for speed and quality, not make-ahead. Torrijas with sherry's components can be prepped the night before — eggs cracked into a covered bowl, vegetables chopped, pancake batter rested overnight (which actually improves tenderness) — but the cooking itself should happen morning-of. Egg-based dishes especially don't reheat well: proteins toughen, water separates, and the result feels like buffet food rather than a fresh meal.

Recipe video

Torrijas with sherry

Go deeper

Where this recipe sits in the wider tradition.

Each guide below is a real essay on the cuisine or the category — pillars, staples, techniques worth learning — paired with a curated grid of recipes filed under it.

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