How To Make Herbed Croûtons

I love croûtons, but not those pre-made rock-like nuggets covered with artificial flavors and colors that you find in the grocery store. I’ve done plain garlic croûtons once before, to go with the pizza soup. (And yes, garlic croûtons are “plain” croûtons. If you’re not going to at least use garlic you might as well put some toast on your salad.)

This time I did garlic and herbs. But no salt. Nearly everything needs some salt, but these do okay without it.

Ingredients

garlic bread (see below)
butter
olive oil
parsley, dried flakes
basil, dried flakes

Directions

This fall I plan to start baking my own bread. I haven’t started yet because a) I’m not generally a baker, and b) it’s hot out. If I’m going to be experimenting with the oven, I’d rather do it when I won’t mind having it on half the day. But once I get fast at it, I don’t ever want to buy another pre-made bread that has corn syrup in it. Check yours, if you buy bread. Odds are it’s in there.

Until then, I really like the bread they have at my grocery store. Check out these ingredients.

I can live with that. Their sourdough is great, but for today’s croûtons I got the garlic. Good texture, chunks of garlic throughout the loaf. Really nice.

To start, trim the crust off the bread. I like to stand it on end and trim from top to bottom all the way around, sort of like how you’d peel a cucumber without a vegetable peeler.

Once it’s crustless, cut the bread into bite-sized cubes and melt some butter in a pan, with an equal amount of olive oil.

How much butter? That really depends on how much bread you’re doing. This was about two tablespoons of butter, and two tablespoons of olive oil. Add the bread cubes.

So how big is “bite-sized” anyway? For soup, I like nice big chunks. For salad I like them smaller. Smaller ones get more crunchy, bigger ones can be crispy outside and soft inside.

Toss the bread around to make sure it gets a good coat of butter/olive oil all the way around. If it all gets soaked up and lots of the bread is still dry, push the bread to one side and melt some more butter and olive oil.

Add enough of the herbs to make sure each piece of bread has several bits of the herbs. But you don’t want green croûtons. (Unless you do. But that would be strange.)

Once all the bread has a nice coating of butter, olive oil and herbs, transfer to a baking pan, large enough that the bread is all in one layer.

Bake at 400° for about 10 minutes, turning the cubes once with tongs at about 8 minutes. Remove when they are golden all the way around.

And that’s it.


Let’s see, creamy Italian dressing, bacon bits, and now herbed croûtons. What ever could this be leading up to?

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Herbed Croutons

Herbed Croutons

Ingredients

  • garlic bread
  • butter
  • olive oil
  • parsley, dried flakes
  • basil, dried flakes

Instructions

These work best of you start with a bread that already has some flavor in it. Something with garlic baked in, not brushed on after it's baked.

Cut the crust off the bread and cut it into bite-sized cubes. Melt some butter in a pan, enough to cover the bottom of the pan, and add an equal amount of olive oil. Add some of the herbs.

Toss the bread in the butter and oil, working in batches. Each piece of bread should have a coating of butter/oil and herbs.

Transfer the coated bread to a baking sheet. Bake at 400° for about 10 minutes, turning the cubes once with tongs at about 8 minutes. Remove when they are golden all the way around.