Japanese Pan Pudding (Bread Pudding)

2023年4月10日
Japanese Pan Pudding (Bread Pudding)

In my personal opinion, “pan pudding” sounds so much cuter than “bread pudding”, but is that just me?

I have been making this easy pan pudding for the mornings when I want something sweet and comforting for my soul, but something super simple to make. To add a Japanese kick to it, I like to add kinako powder, which is roasted soybean powder that has a nutty flavor to it (almost like tahini) along with some cinnamon.

For my toppings…

I love to drizzle kuromitsu, a Japanese black sugar syrup that tastes like maple syrup and agave syrup combined because it goes so well with the kinako flavor. I also love sifting some powdered sugar on top because it makes the whole dish look so fancy and a little extra sweetness never hurt anyone, right?

Bread soaking in pan pudding mixture

Using Japanese shokupan for the ultimate pan pudding…

“Shokupan” is a Japanese-style fluffy white bread or what people will often call Japanese milk bread. Using a shokupan will make any pan pudding taste 1000x times better. If you can’t find shokupan near you, just use the fluffiest bread you can find! If you are gluten-free, use whatever bread you have on hand!

Once the bread has soaked up the pan pudding mixture (pre-bake)

Before you bake the pan pudding…

Have fun with it and add whatever fruit or toppings you would like before you bake the pan pudding. I like to add bananas or even berries, but chocolate chips would be good, or even marshmallows! Just make sure you’re baking it in an oven-safe dish! I used mini circular casserole dishes from Daiso, but those mini cocottes would also work as well if you have them.

The SMELL of this pan pudding when you are baking it will make any person in your house hungry and wanting to eat it as soon as it’s done! The bread cubes becomes a custard-y gooey (but a little crispy) bite that will make you wanting to make this over and over again!

ITADAKIMAS!

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Japanese Pan Pudding (Bread Pudding)

Japanese Pan Pudding (Bread Pudding)

A fluffy and moist Japanese-style pan pudding with a nutty kinako flavor, cinnamon and a kuromitsu black sugar syrup drizzle — perfect for a comforting and easy breakfast!
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 15 minutes
Course Breakfast
Cuisine American, Japanese, Japanese Fusion
Servings 2 people

Ingredients
  

  • 1 slice of thick bread (preferably Japanese shokupan or a fluffy brioche)

Pudding mixture:

  • 1 egg
  • 1/2 cup milk of choice
  • 1 tbsp sugar
  • 1/2 tsp cinnamon
  • 1 tsp kinako powder

Optional:

  • 1/2 banana slices
  • kuromitsu syrup — Japanese black sugar syrup ALT: maple syrup or agave syrup

Instructions
 

  • Preheat oven to 220 C or 420 F degrees.
  • Cut the bread into bite-sized cubes.
  • Mix together the pudding mixture ingredients in a bowl.
  • Add the bread cubes and coat each cube with the mixture.
  • Let it sit until all of the the mixture has absorbed into the bread.
  • Split the bread into two heat-safe mini casserole dishes (pour the mixture over the bread if there is any left)
  • (Optional) Add banana slices!
  • Bake for 15 minutes until the top is golden brown.
  • Optional: drizzle kuromitsu syrup and sift powdered syrup on top.
  • Enjoy! Itadakimas!

Notes

This dish is best served fresh out of the oven! 
If you want your pan pudding to be more custard-like, feel free to prep this overnight and bake the first thing in the morning! This allows the bread to soak up the mixture completely and gives you a more gooey, pudding-like pan pudding.
Keyword Baked, banana, Banana bread, bread pudding, Cinnamon, Dairy-free, Easy breakfast, Easy Japanese food, Japan Flavor, Japanese flavors, Japanese fusion, Japanese kinako, kinako, kinako powder, Oven breakfast, Pan Pudding, Shokupan

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