Jump to Recipe
There’s something about sour cherries baked into soaked bread that feels like it belongs in a mountain hut after a long hike.
This Alpine cherry bread bake uses day-old white bread as the base, layered with pitted cherries, a splash of kirsch, and a simple egg custard that sets into something between a pudding and a clafoutis.
It’s not fussy. No special equipment, no chilling overnight. You soak, layer, and bake.
The top crisps and browns while the inside stays soft and jammy. Sour cherries cut through the richness just enough to keep every bite interesting.

Why You’ll Love This Recipe
- Uses stale bread – no waste, better texture
- Sour cherries balance the rich custard naturally
- Ready from scratch in under 50 minutes
- Works warm or at room temperature the next day
Ingredient Notes
- day-old white bread: Stale bread absorbs the custard without turning to mush. Brioche or challah works here too and adds extra richness.
- sour cherries: Jarred or canned sour cherries in light syrup are ideal. Drain them well before using. Fresh sweet cherries work but add a squeeze of lemon to compensate.
- kirsch: Cherry brandy deepens the fruit flavor without overpowering. Swap with a tablespoon of vanilla extract plus a teaspoon of lemon juice if you want a non-alcoholic version.
- whole milk: Full-fat milk gives the custard the right body. A mix of half milk and half cream makes it richer, closer to a bread-and-butter pudding.
- brown sugar: Gives the top a caramel note and helps it color well. Caster sugar works but won’t develop the same depth.
- eggs: Three large eggs set the custard firmly enough to slice. Don’t reduce to two or the center stays too wet.

Alpine Cherry Bread Bake with Kirsch and Brown Sugar
Ingredients
Method
- Heat the oven to 180 C / 355 F. Butter a 22 x 28 cm baking dish generously.
- Spread the drained sour cherries in an even layer over paper towels and pat dry. Toss them with the kirsch and set aside.
- Whisk the eggs, milk, cream, brown sugar, vanilla extract, and cinnamon together in a large bowl until the sugar dissolves and the mixture is smooth.
- Cut the bread slices in half on the diagonal. Arrange half the bread in a single layer in the buttered dish, overlapping slightly.
- Scatter half the kirsch-soaked cherries evenly over the bread layer.
- Add a second layer of bread slices over the cherries, pressing them down gently.
- Pour the custard mixture slowly and evenly over the whole dish. Press the top bread layer down firmly with the back of a spoon so it begins to absorb the liquid.
- Scatter the remaining cherries over the top. Dot with the remaining butter and sprinkle with the extra tablespoon of brown sugar.
- Let the dish rest at room temperature for 10 minutes so the bread soaks through fully.
- Bake for 30 to 35 minutes until the top is deep golden and the custard is set at the center. A knife inserted in the middle should come out clean with no liquid custard.
- Rest for 5 minutes before serving. Dust with icing sugar if you like and serve with creme fraiche or ice cream.
Notes

Tips for Success
- Drain jarred cherries on paper towels for 10 minutes to prevent a soggy base.
- Press the bread slices firmly into the dish after pouring the custard so they absorb evenly.
- Let the assembled dish rest 10 minutes before baking so the bread soaks through completely.
- Tent with foil at the 25-minute mark if the top is browning faster than the custard sets.
- Test doneness by pressing the center lightly – it should spring back, not feel liquid under the crust.
Variations
- Swap kirsch for Amaretto and add a handful of flaked almonds over the top before baking.
- Use frozen dark cherries thawed and drained for a more intense color and a slightly tarter flavor.
- Replace half the white bread with sliced rye bread for an earthier, more Alpine-style base.
Storage and Reheating
Store leftovers covered in the fridge for up to 3 days. The custard firms up overnight and the flavor actually improves.
Reheat individual portions in a 160 C / 320 F oven for 10 minutes or microwave on medium power for 90 seconds. Avoid high heat or the custard turns rubbery.
This bake doesn’t freeze well. The bread structure breaks down and the custard weeps on thawing.
Serving Suggestions
Serve warm with a spoon of cold creme fraiche or a scoop of vanilla ice cream. The contrast between the hot bake and the cold cream is the point.
A dusting of icing sugar just before the table looks clean and adds a faint sweetness without extra richness. Skip the syrup – the cherries do enough.
For breakfast the next morning, a cold slice with strong coffee is genuinely good. It’s dense and satisfying in a way that works outside of dessert.

FAQ
Why is my Alpine cherry bread bake still wet in the middle after the baking time?
The most common cause is bread that didn’t soak long enough before going into the oven. Give the assembled dish a full 10-minute rest after pouring the custard. If it’s still wet at the end of baking, cover with foil and add 8 to 10 more minutes.
Can I use fresh cherries instead of jarred sour cherries in this bread bake?
Fresh sweet cherries work, but pit them and toss with a teaspoon of lemon juice to add tartness. Avoid using frozen cherries straight from the bag – thaw and drain them first or the excess liquid makes the base soggy.
Can I assemble the Alpine cherry bread bake the night before and bake it in the morning?
Yes, and it actually helps. Assemble everything, cover the dish tightly, and refrigerate overnight. Pull it out 20 minutes before baking to take the chill off, then bake as directed.
What goes well with Alpine cherry bread bake at the table besides ice cream?
Creme fraiche is the classic pairing – the tang cuts the sweetness well. A small pour of warm cherry compote on the side also works if you want to lean further into the cherry flavor, much like the approach used in an Italian amarena cherry semifreddo.
Is this Alpine cherry bread bake gluten free?
Not as written, but it adapts easily. Use a sturdy gluten-free white bread and check that your kirsch is certified gluten free. The custard and cherries are naturally gluten free.
What’s the difference between an Alpine cherry bread bake and a classic French clafoutis?
Clafoutis uses no bread – it’s a thin batter poured over cherries and baked until barely set, closer to a pancake, while desserts like this sit alongside other sweet recipes that start with bread. This Alpine version uses soaked bread for a denser, more filling result that holds up to slicing.

