Who ever said that breakfast has to be boring? Certainly not me! I’m here to introduce you to a breakfast recipe that’s not only delicious but also incredibly fun to make and eat: Log Cabin Toast. This recipe holds a special place in my heart, primarily because it’s one of the first dishes I learned to make as a child. The concept is simple, yet delightful. Toast layered with butter, sprinkled with a heavenly mixture of sugar and cinnamon, then cut and stacked to resemble a miniature log cabin. The excitement of building my breakfast kept me engaged and made me fall in love with cooking at a young age. The Log Cabin Toast is not only a delightful dish but also a great way to introduce children to cooking. It’s an easy recipe that they can handle, and the end result is a tasty treat they’ll be proud to have made. Plus, who can resist the allure of eating a log cabin made of toast? Not me, that’s for sure! In addition to being fun, this recipe is also quite flexible. You can use either white or whole wheat bread, and margarine or butter, depending on your preference. A tip from me, though: don’t skimp on the cinnamon-sugar mixture. It’s what gives the toast its irresistible sweetness and warmth. I absolutely adore this recipe, and I’m sure you and your family will too. Let’s get started on creating your very own edible log cabin!
Ingredients
- 1/4 c. sugar
- 2 tsp. cinnamon
- 2 slices white or whole wheat bread
- soft margarine or butter
Cooking Method
- Mix sugar and cinnamon in custard cup.
- Toast bread.
- Spread with soft margarine.
- Sprinkle with sugar-cinnamon mixture.
- Cut each slice of toast into 4 strips.
- Put them together on plate like stacked logs to make the wall of a log cabin.
- Start from the top and eat all the logs.
Calorie: 250
Total cooking time: 15 minutes
Difficulty level: Easy

The Great Cinnamon-Sugar Log Cabin Construction
Well, folks, it was a typical Tuesday morning when I decided to embark on a culinary journey of epic proportions. I was going to create a masterpiece that would rival the pyramids of Egypt, a structure so magnificent, it would make architects weep. I was going to make… Log Cabin Toast.
The Ingredients: The Building Blocks of Deliciousness
My construction materials were simple, yet effective: 1/4 c. sugar, 2 tsp. cinnamon, 2 slices of white bread (or whole wheat if you’re feeling particularly virtuous), and some soft margarine. You can use butter if you’re feeling rebellious, but I like to live on the edge with margarine. It’s the wild, unpredictable bad boy of spreadables, after all.
The Foundation: Mixing Sugar and Cinnamon
The first step in any construction project is to establish a solid foundation. In this case, my foundation was a sweet and spicy mixture of sugar and cinnamon. I mixed the two together in a custard cup, the sweet granules of sugar mingling with the warm, comforting cinnamon. It was like they were doing a tiny, delicious tango in the cup.
The Walls: Toasting the Bread
Next up, the walls. I took my two slices of bread and sent them on a quick trip to the toaster. They emerged golden brown and crispy, the perfect canvas for my margarine to work its magic on. The bread’s transformation was akin to a caterpillar becoming a butterfly, only much crunchier and less likely to fly away.
The Mortar: Spreading the Margarine
No log cabin can stand without something holding it together. Enter my main guy, margarine. I slathered it onto the toast, watching as it melted into the warm nooks and crannies. The aroma filled my kitchen, a scent that can only be described as “Oh man, I want to eat that right now.”
The Magic Dust: Sprinkling the Sugar-Cinnamon Mixture
Then came the fairy dust, the magic sprinkle, the pièce de résistance: the sugar-cinnamon mixture. I sprinkled it generously over the margarine-slathered toast, creating a masterpiece that would make Michelangelo weep. I’m not saying I’m an artist, but if the shoe fits…
The Construction: Building the Log Cabin
The moment of truth had arrived. It was time to build my log cabin. I cut each slice of toast into four strips and began stacking them on my plate, just like building a wall of a log cabin. I realized this is probably the closest I’ll come to being a structural engineer, and I must say, I was pretty darn good at it.
The Demolition: Eating the Toast
Finally, the best part of the process: demolition. I started from the top, munching my way through the logs. The sweet, spicy, and buttery flavors mingled in my mouth, a symphony of deliciousness that made me question every culinary decision I’d ever made before this moment.
So there you have it, my friends. That’s the tale of how I built a Log Cabin Toast and then promptly demolished it. It was a journey of sugar and cinnamon, white bread and margarine, a story of culinary ambition and delicious destruction. I encourage you all to build your own log cabin toast, and remember, it’s not just breakfast, it’s architecture.