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spring

Lemon Almond Buttermilk Scones

March 9, 2017 by biz.w.harris@gmail.com 1 Comment

I went to a bakery the other day and ordered a scone. It was SUPER dry and crumbly and kind of reminiscent of sawdust. Now, this place makes a mean cupcake, a delish brownie, and rad cinnamon rolls, so I thought maybe these scones had just seen better days.  I mentioned that the scone might be a little dry and ask to buy a newer, fresher one and the lady behind the counter said, “Um, scones are SUPPOSED to be dry. That batch was made today.”

Ok lovelies, just because YOU’VE only ever been served dry, crumbly scones DOES NOT MEAN that’s how they’re supposed to be. Y’all… scones are BISCUITS with delicious stuff mixed in. Do you expect your grandmother’s biscuits to be dry and awful? No. (Well, you may, but then your grandmother must not have this biscuit recipe, then.) Thankfully, John Currence agrees with me in his newest cookbook, Big Bad Breakfast: The most important cookbook of the day. I had a pretty good scone recipe from last spring, but thought I’d try a new one since I’d had this cookbook since Christmas (Thank You, Shirley!) but hadn’t had a chance to try anything from it. And obviously, if John Currence makes it it’s going to be gooooo–oood.

Currence calls for rum-raisin scones and orange juice in his version, but it’s HOT as HADES already down here and so I thought lemon-almond might feel springy and be something I can make for Easter breakfast.

Well, y’all.. They’re great. In fact, they’re so yummy I’ve already had 3…today. Mix in whatever you like: orange zest and cranberries, rosemary and lemon zest, black pepper and bacon… whatever your heart desires. The key, though, is to keep the ratio of liquid to flour mixture the same as the original recipe…if you stray away from lemon juice or orange juice, add in a little milk in it’s place.

What kind of scones are YOU making?


Lemon Almond Buttermilk Scones
 
Save Print
Prep time
25 mins
Cook time
20 mins
Total time
45 mins
 
Author: Biz Harris
Serves: 9-18
What You Need
  • FOR SCONE DOUGH
  • 2½ Cups of All-purpose Flour
  • ¼ Cup white sugar
  • ½ Teaspoon kosher salt
  • 1 Tablespoon Baking Powder
  • ½ Cup Buttermilk
  • 1 egg yolk
  • ½ Cup (1 stick) grated or finely chopped COLD unsalted butter
  • Lemon zest from 1 lemon
  • ¼ Cup almonds, rough chopped
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla
  • Juice of 1 lemon
  • FOR GLAZE:
  • 8 Tablespoons confectioner's sugar
  • Juice of ½ lemon
What to Do
  1. Preheat your oven to 350 and line a baking sheet with parchment paper. (no parchment paper? That's ok. Just butter & flour the baking sheet.
  2. Grate your butter (I've found that the EASIEST way is to grate butter while it's been in the fridge... so not frozen but still cold. Then put it in the freezer to harden. You can also cut frozen butter into tiny pieces. The Cold butter expands as it bakes and causes the dough to rise and be fluffy. Same idea works in biscuits.
  3. Mix the dry ingredients together (flour, sugar, baking powder, salt) in a large bowl. Add in the butter and mix with your hands until it's a course meal, like little pea sized pieces of dough.
  4. Pour in your buttermilk, vanilla, egg yolk, and lemon zest and mix thoroughly with a fork.
  5. Mix in the lemon zest and almond pieces.
  6. Turn the dough out onto a floured surface and press with your hands until it's in a flat square shape about 7"x7" Using a large knife, cut the square into smaller squares (Currence recommends 9) and then cut those squares along the diagonal to make triangles.
  7. Brush the tops with the egg white or melted butter and sprinkle with sugar.
  8. Bake at 350 for 20 minutes or until brown.
  9. MAKE THE GLAZE
  10. Mix the powdered/confectioner's sugar and lemon juice together until you have a thick slurry. Drizzle over the slightly cooled Scones and serve.
3.5.3226

 

Filed Under: Biscuits and Breads, Breakfast and Brunch, spring Tagged With: Buttermilk, John Currence, Mississippi, Oxford, scones

Here we go around The Mulberry Bush… Introducing the Backcountry Thyme Cocktail

May 19, 2016 by biz.w.harris@gmail.com 1 Comment

IMG_2935This week, while we were out at the farm checking on the construction of our gorgeous new home, my daddy walked my toddler back into the woods where I used to play as a child. “My Hideout” I called it… the milk crates I’d used for a picnic table and chairs were still there, over 20 years later. it smelled like moss and wet trees and earth and it transported me back to being 7 and having adventures all around that land.

My son was equally enchanted… I’m imagining so many more play times back in that little clearing in the woods now that the farm will be his to roam and explore.

Another thing I would do as a child in the woods was search for honeysuckle vines and taste the tiny, sweet drop of nectar in the center of the plant.  It’s this one or two perfect, sweet, floral drops of syrup and I would tromp around gathering all the flowers I could so I could drink more than just a teeny taste.

When I realized I still had 3 cups of mulberries leftover  after the cobbler, and the scones, I used them to make some gorgeous, deep purple, tarty-sweet mulberry syrup… and then I wondered, “Ok, now what?”

And what goes better with foraged mulberries than the fleeting, childhood-treasured flavor of honeysuckle? Nothing, I tell you. And then add lemonade and some lemon thyme, and fahgetaboutit. It tastes like a little kid singing a childhood song or catching a firefly in a jar on a summer evening… but with a little of Mississippi’s own Cathead vodka, it’s all grown up.

So, I introduce you to, the Mulberry & Honeysuckle Sister to the Country Thyme Cocktail…

The Backcountry Thyme cocktail

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My dad is pretty much an exclusive scotch drinker, and my fella likes beer, so for both of them to taste my cocktail and say, “Hey, that’s sweet, but it’s REALLY good” was a feat. Even if you’re not into typically sweet drinks, if you’ve got access to mulberries and thyme, it’s worth a sip… especially to set the mood when it gets hot hot hot outside and you’re watching your kiddos catch fireflies out in the yard.  OR use the syrup on pancakes, over the scones or in just plain lemonade.IMG_2946

Here we Go Around- Mulberry, Honeysuckle Vodka, and Lemonade
 
Save Print
Prep time
30 mins
Cook time
2 mins
Total time
32 mins
 
Author: Biz Harris
Serves: 1
What You Need
  • FOR THE MULBERRY SYRUP (You can double the water and sugar but you'll have a less strong syrup.)
  • 3 Cups Mulberries
  • ¼ Cup water
  • ¼ Cup sugar
  • Juice from one lemon
  • FOR THE COCKTAIL
  • 2 Tablespoons Mulberry Syrup
  • 1 Cup lemonade (preferably homemade)
  • 1.5 to 2 Ounces CatHead Honeysuckle Vodka
  • 4 Sprigs Lemon Thyme (also basil works but it changes the flavor and is much bolder.)
  • ½ Cup Ice
  • TO GARNISH
  • 1 sprig Lemon thyme
  • 2-5 whole mulberries
What to Do
  1. FOR THE SYRUP
  2. Combine the berries, sugar, lemon juice and water in a saucepot and bring to a boil.
  3. Once it boils, reduce the heat until the berries are falling apart and the sauce has thickened (10-15 minutes).
  4. Strain the berries out, and then return the liquid to the pot.
  5. Cook on medium heat until the sauce has reduced by at least ⅓. (15 minutes)
  6. FOR THE COCKTAIL
  7. Muddle the Thyme in a cocktail shaker.
  8. In the Cocktail Shaker, combine Ice, syrup, lemonade, and vodka. Shake until frosty.
  9. Pour into a Lowball glass and serve with a sprig of thyme and berries.
  10. You may also serve over ice if you prefer.
  11. NOTE: If you're making your lemonade from scratch, consider infusing the syrup with Lemon Thyme rather than muddling it. (To do this, as the heated water/sugar is cooling, place 5 or so muddled thyme sprigs into the pot with the syrup. Strain when cool. Then you'll have a delicious thyme lemonade.
3.5.3208

 

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Filed Under: Beverages and Cocktails, Foraged, spring Tagged With: Cathead Vodka, cocktails, herbs, Honeysuckle, Mulberry

Wild berry Cobbler.

May 16, 2016 by biz.w.harris@gmail.com 4 Comments

So, I’d been in kind of a cooking rut lately… I’ve been spending so much time thinking about our home that we’re renovating/building out at our family farm that I just hadn’t had much creative energy to expend in the kitchen… There was a lot of “Oh! Wagner! You’re going to have chicken tenders AGAIN tonight! Won’t those be delicious??” and “I think I just want watermelon and coffee for lunch today.” Ugh. Cooking’s not as much fun when there aren’t fun things to cook, you know?IMG_2881

But then, last week, that all changed.  Our new, wonderful forager friend brought me two quarts of mulberries and a quart of dewberries and I basically died and went to berry heaven. I had SO many ideas for using these tart, sweet, perfect little treasures and not enough time to make them. You’ve hopefully already seen (and tried!) the mulberry scones recipe, and then that very same night, my daddy requested a cobbler. That seemed the PERFECT way to use the berries but not overwhelm their natural perfection… so he got his wish. Each of us had a personal sized one piping hot after supper, with OF COURSE, homemade vanilla ice cream.

Don’t have your own forager friend or a mulberry tree in your backyard? No worries. A combo of fresh or frozen blueberries and raspberries will do the trick. Your tummy will thank you.

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Filed Under: dessert, Foraged, spring, toddler-friendly Tagged With: crumble, dewberries, foraging, Mulberries, Pie, spring

Free State Foraging: Mulberry Scones

May 13, 2016 by biz.w.harris@gmail.com 3 Comments

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When I was a little girl, we lived in a little house in Laurel with the BIGGEST mulberry tree in the backyard. In the late spring, I’d gorge myself on the tart-sweet berries and stain my fingers reddish-purple. I also sat down in the ditch behind the house in my clothes and caught crawfish with nets, made up a very short lived and ill-fated “Recycler’s club” with the other neighborhood kids, and got my only two spankings for misbehaving in that yard.  Oh, Memories. 😉

I honestly hadn’t had a mulberry until this week when Joseph Hosey, also known as the Free State Forager, a member of Newt Knight’s #squad in the upcoming Matthew Mcconaughey movie, and founder of wild woods cuisine dropped a quart off by my folks’ house….

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Filed Under: Biscuits and Breads, Breakfast and Brunch, Foraged, spring Tagged With: berries, brunch, Foraged, Mississippi, Mulberries, scones

Thank You Mama Frittata: Fennel Bulb, Ham, Turnips, and Spring Onions

April 26, 2016 by biz.w.harris@gmail.com 6 Comments

IMG_4457

My gorgeous mama, holly and my little guy on “Green Day” an imaginary holiday she planned for him.

So my mama and I have this totally crazy, really special, absolutely maddening-mother-daughter-best friend relationship where she takes care of me and thinks of me basically every moment of her life, and when I try to do the same she’s all like “that’s not how you do it.” 😉 It drives me totally insane, but deep down, the truth is that I know she’s right like 96% of the time. I don’t know how to do it.

But that’s kind of how it’s supposed to be, right? Mamas make sure we leave for college knowing how to wash laundry, and make beds, and then we get married and they make sure we look our absolute most gorgeous, plus make sure we have hand-calligraphied invitations that they spend hours and hours and hours on (did I mention my mama is an award-winning artist and Martha Stewart Magazine featured calligrapher? no? oh…)

When we have children they dredge up all the tips and tricks and memories of how to care for babies from when we were children, and EVEN if pediatricians have changed their minds like ZILLIONS of times about what is right, or healthy, or appropriate since we were little, our mamas somehow STILL know how to do it better than we do.

Or, at least, my mama does.

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Filed Under: Breakfast and Brunch, spring, Vegetarian Main Dishes Tagged With: brunch, eggs, fennel, Fritata, ham, mother's day, mother's day brunch, spring onions, turnips

The Juke Joint Cocktail: Walk Me Down

April 21, 2016 by biz.w.harris@gmail.com Leave a Comment

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My favorite weekend of the year is Juke Joint Festival weekend…where my bestest buds and I can get our dance on to real, live blues music legends ALL day & night long in venues ranging from a theatre with a canopy of real stars to an old Delta commissary full of memorabilia and farm equipment to famous long-time Juke Joints owned by Delta natives with Blues Music pedigrees.

I also get to gamble with friends on baby pig races (they love oreos and will race around a track to get one… but then again, who wouldn’t?) watch Monkeys riding Dogs herding Sheep (true story) and generally sample all the best food and drink the Delta has to offer.

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The winning baby pig at the aforementioned Pig Races

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My friend Griffin wins a Blue Ribbon from the Pig Races

For the past eleven years or so, I’ve only missed 3 or four Juke Joint weekends, and only those for VERY important reasons… I mean, I didn’t even miss the year I had a baby that was a month and half old. I pumped in bathroom stalls and sitting out on a picnic table with a scarf wrapped around me when there WERE no stalls, and called home every hour to check on him… Talk about commitment.

Anyway, this year, since we’ve moved farther south we missed it. All weekend I pouted over my Instagram and Facebook feeds as people posted photos of great bands or delicious food. But rather than JUST pout, I decided to pretend like I was there by putting some great Delta Blues on the record player and mixing up a batch of the unofficial Cocktail of Clarksdale Blues travelers and sponsor of the wildest nights in the world, The Walk Me Down. Click below to read more about this delicious (and dangerous cocktail and find out how to make them yourself).

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Filed Under: Beverages and Cocktails, Delta, lagniappe, spring Tagged With: alcohol, blue curacao, Cocktail, Delta, Ground Zero Blues Club, Juke Joint Festival, Party Drinks, rum, tequila, Walk Me Down

Giving Margaritas a Run for their Money: Frozen Grapefruit Palomas

April 14, 2016 by biz.w.harris@gmail.com Leave a Comment

IMG_2547I went to Las Vegas a few months after my son was born for a conference, and at the recommendation of my cousin Virginia, ended up at Mesa Grill for supper with my friend Sara and some of her friends. We ate and ate and ate, and then did a little drinking and only a teeny bit of gambling on the black jack tables. The food was truly deeeelish, and the gambling was fun, but it was the cocktail that Sara had me order that I most remember. It was pink, and fizzy, and just right for the hottest of hot desert night… The Paloma.

I’ve been making and ordering them pretty much constantly since then since it’s made from one of my favorite spirits, tequila (See my ode to the margarita here) and is pretty much PERFECT for summer weather down here in the deepest south. Grapefruit soda, Tequila, lime… could it be any more delicious?

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Filed Under: Beverages and Cocktails, spring, summer Tagged With: alcohol, Boat Drinks, Cocktail, Frozen drinks, Grapefruit, margarita, Paloma, Pink, tequila, triple sec

Lemon-Thyme Custard on Mini Angel Food Cakes

April 12, 2016 by biz.w.harris@gmail.com Leave a Comment

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I’m getting the chance to cater for an upcoming ladies’ luncheon this week and I’ve been prepping like cray. We’ve got what feel like gallons of poppyseed dressing and dill vinaigrette in the fridge, I’ve made nearly a year’s worth of mini herbed buttermilk biscuits, the angel food cake is R-E-A-D-Y, and STILL have an awful lot to do. On the plus side, we’ve gotten to taste-test a couple of dessert possibilities, and one really stood out as the hands-down-winner-take-all-winner-winner-chicken-dinner winner. Classic, fluffy Angel Food Cake with lemon-thyme boiled custard.

I know, I know, I know… y’all are thinking I should put myself on custard restriction since this is the like the 3rd recipe in a row that involves making it… but I just can’t help myself. It’s so EASY. and so creamy. and so, So, SO good.

This time, rather than using it as my ice cream base, or in my banana pudding, or as the filling for a tart, I just kept it plain and simple. I drizzled it over perfect personal-sized angel food cake popovers after steeping it in lemon zest and lemon-thyme, and it is a SHOWSTOPPER. It’s light, and the lemon and custard flavors just meld beautifully…toss in a strawberry and you’ve basically hit jackpot.

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Filed Under: dessert, spring Tagged With: angel food cake, Boiled custard, dessert, herbs, spring time, strawberries

Teeny Tastes of Spring: Buttermilk Custard Tarts with Herbs & Strawberries

April 7, 2016 by biz.w.harris@gmail.com 1 Comment

IMG_2537My friend Anne and her honey, Jason, blogged about herbs that taste like fruit several years ago, back when I was only just getting my kitchen-legs, and before I’d been able to grow anything at all and keep it alive for more than a couple of days. I was all kinds of amazed. WHAT? There’s something called pineapple sage? And also lemon basil? Orange Thyme?

Its hard to find these down here in my little old town, BUT I did get some Lemon Thyme yesterday and have been trying it in every way imaginable. I started by garnishing a recipe of boiled custard I made with another of my recent ingredient addictions (buttermilk, obvi) and I have to say, I liked the way combining a typically savory herb with a dessert turned out. See what you think.

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Filed Under: dessert, spring Tagged With: basil, Buttermilk, Custard, dessert, herbs, strawberries, sweets, thyme

Green Biscuits and Ham

April 5, 2016 by biz.w.harris@gmail.com Leave a Comment

IMG_2470   We got out in the dirt this weekend and planted our vegetable garden… the weather was dreamy and it felt so productive to get my sweet little seedlings in the ground.

We’ll have about every color cherry tomato, plus some big ole red Big Boys, and some okra and summer squashes. It’s going to be wonderful IF we can keep the silly deer and other fauna out of them. Gardeners out there, any ideas or tried & true ways for how to keep my little vegetable babies safe?

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Filed Under: Biscuits and Breads, Breakfast and Brunch, spring, summer Tagged With: Biscuits, bread, breakfast, brunch, ham, herbs, spring

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