How to make garlic and herb skillet croutons

Homemade croutons are easy, economical, and delicious.

Garlic and herb skillet croutons made from sesame bread.

The Garden of Eating

May 11, 2012

My big brother and I developed a taste for croutons at a tender age. Crunchy, salty, garlicky, herby – what's not to like? We'd eat them straight from the bag. While I still find the store-bought kind fairly addictive, I've since been exposed to something even tastier and undoubtedly a bit healthier – the homemade kind! 

So when my husband pointed out that the nice loaf of sesame seed-covered Italian bread I'd bought a week ago was still sitting out on the counter in its paper bag and had gone completely stale, it seemed like a good opportunity to make some of these hand-cut beauties.

The process is quite simple and fairly quick. Consider this your recipe since this is not really the kind of thing you need exact measurements and proportions for.

In Kentucky, the oldest Black independent library is still making history

Slice up stale bread
You can use any kind of bread as long as it is stale (or you make it stale by toasting it in the oven or toaster.) Start by chopping the stale bread into 1-inch cubes.

Add chopped fresh herbs
Then chop up a couple cloves of garlic and whatever fresh herbs you plan to add – parsley, basil, oregano and thyme are all lovely options. Rosemary would be nice, too but it has a more assertive flavor that may not pair well with everything.

Sautée in a skillet
Heat a couple teaspoons of olive oil in a big skillet and sautée the garlic over medium heat until fragrant (but don't burn it!) then add the herbs, a generous amount of sea salt, many grinds of black pepper and the bread cubes. Toss well to coat and sautée for a couple minutes, stirring often.

If you'd like your croutons even a bit crisper and drier than they get in the skillet, you can broil them briefly (and I do mean briefly – depending on your broiler, 30 seconds might be plenty of time – it's very easy to burn things to a crisp under the broiler), turning once to ensure even browning and prevent charring. Or you could also turn them out onto a baking sheet and bake them for 15 or so minutes, too (but I'm not going to recommend this approach because then you'd have one more thing to wash and I am lazy).

These definitely make a salad special and help turn it into a real meal. I used some of mine in this salad of the first baby arugula and spinach from our garden, shredded carrot, sliced cucumber, dried currants, and hard boiled egg with a citrusy vinaigrette. Delicious!

A majority of Americans no longer trust the Supreme Court. Can it rebuild?

Related post on The Garden of Eating: Chopped Summer Salad