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Biscuits and Breads

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

Sister’s Banana Bread

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

Everybody down south knows about Sister Shubert… her orange rolls, cinnamon rolls, and yeast rolls are in EVERY grocery freezer in EVERY town and have been served by just about everybody at some point or another. My college roommate spoke about her in VERY reverent and hushed tones. 😉 I knew she was a big deal down here, but what I didn’t know is that Sister is an honest-to-goodness actual lady and that she is generous, and thoughtful, and all around lovely.

I came to know this because my Aunt, Uncle, and Grandmother lived in her hometown of Andalusia, Alabama for many years. My aunt couldn’t say enough wonderful things about Sister (actually, truly what she’s called), and when my grandmother died, rather than just bringing a regular casserole or fruit salad, she shipped us The. Biggest. Box. of frozen baked goods you’ve ever seen. I’m pretty sure that box alone fed my family for a month.

Anyway, she’s so generous that she also shares her recipes for yeast rolls, cinnamon rolls, and other breads in two (1) (2) pretty wonderful cookbooks. (The REAL recipes y’all. They WORK!)

Finally, after living in our new house for two months, my cookbooks got unpacked the other day. This meant I could FINALLY get my hands on them. I could hardly stand it I wanted to cook something so bad. Thankfully, we had a big bunch of frozen bananas that were WAY past their prime, so I pulled out Sister’s cookbook and tried her version of banana bread. It was a hit with my little person (and everyone else for that matter) AND it gave him a chance to stir, stir, stir. I modified the recipe a TEENY bit,  (no nuts, butter rather than shortening) but you could do it her way and it would still be divine! Let me know if you make it!

Sister's Banana Bread
 
Save Print
Prep time
20 mins
Cook time
1 hour
Total time
1 hour 20 mins
 
Author: Biz Harris
Serves: 2 loaves
What You Need
  • 2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • ½ teaspoon salt
  • ½ cup butter
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 2 large eggs
  • 1½ cups mashed overripe bananas
  • ½ teaspoon vanilla
What to Do
  1. Preheat your oven to 325ºF.
  2. Butter ad flour two 8x4 inch loaf pans so you're ready when the batter is ready.
  3. Combine flour, baking soda and salt; set aside.
  4. Beat the butter using an electric mixer until its creamy; gradually add sugar until totally incorporated and fluffy.
  5. Add the eggs, one at a time, beating them in just until yellow disappears after each addition.
  6. Add the banana puree' and vanilla; beat until blended.
  7. Gradually add the dry flour mixture, (1/2 cup by ½ cup works well) beating just until blended
  8. Pour batter into the pans.
  9. Bake for 1 hour or until you can put a toothpick in the middle and it comes out clean.
  10. Cool in pans on wire racks 10 minutes
3.5.3226

 

Filed Under: Biscuits and Breads, Southern Hospitality, toddler-friendly Tagged With: Alabama, Banana bread, bread, breakfast

Wild Persimmon & Bourbon Breakfast Bread

November 18, 2016 by biz.w.harris@gmail.com 3 Comments

img_4379
Wild Persimmons: Bourbon Breakfast Bread
 
Save Print
Prep time
30 mins
Cook time
30 mins
Total time
1 hour
 
The most time consuming part of this process is getting the persimmon pulp, but I assure you, the flavor is like NOTHING else and it's even more exciting because it grows wild and is connected to native peoples and early european settlers.
Author: Biz Harris
Recipe type: Breakfast or Dessert
Serves: 4 loaves
What You Need
  • FOR THE BREAD:
  • 2 cups sifted cake flour
  • ½ teaspoons salt
  • 2 teaspoon baking soda
  • ½ teaspoon ground nutmeg
  • ½ teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • 2 cups sugar
  • ½ cup melted unsalted butter or vegetable oil
  • 2 large eggs, at room temperature, lightly beaten
  • 1 Tablespoon Bourbon
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla
  • 2 cups persimmon puree (about 3 cups of wild persimmons)
  • FOR THE FROSTING:
  • 1 cup unsalted butter, softened
  • 18 oz package cream cheese
  • 2½ teaspoons vanilla extract
  • 1 tsp bourbon
  • 4 to 5 cups confectioners’ sugar
What to Do
  1. FOR THE BREAD:
  2. First things first: you have to get the persimmon puree'. A note about wild persimmons... you know they're ripe if they've fallen off the tree or are SUPER wrinkly and soft... like a deflated helium balloon. Once they're at that stage, and you've got a food mill, the you can use it to separate the skin and the seeds from the pulp. If not, then peel the skin away from the pulp and squeeze it into a wire strainer over a bowl. Using the back of a spoon, push the pulp through the strainer and into the bowl, leaving the large seeds. The pulp can be frozen for use later.
  3. Preheat your oven to 350 degrees.
  4. Prepare your bread or cake pans by coating the insides with butter and lightly flouring the inside.
  5. Mix all of the dry ingredients/spices except the sugar (flour, baking powder, soda, salt, nutmeg, cinnamon) together in a separate medium sized bowl. You may wish to sift this so they are combined consistently.
  6. Then, in a large mixing bowl, combine the puree', the butter or oil, and the sugar until it is entirely incorporated.
  7. Mix in the eggs, the vanilla, and the bourbon.
  8. Cup by cup, mix in the dry ingredients into the puree' mixture. Fold in until just mixed together.
  9. Pour the batter into 2-8" round cake pans, or 2- 9" bread pans, or 4-5" bread pans and bake until a toothpick can be inserted and comes out clean. (somewhere about 20-30 minutes depending on the size of your pan).
  10. FOR THE FROSTING:
  11. Using an electric mixer with the paddle attachment, beat the butter on medium speed until its all creamy.
  12. Add cream cheese and vanilla and bourbon, and beat until it's totally incorporated.
  13. Gradually increase the speed and beat until the cheese and butter mixture fluffy, scraping down the sides of bowl if you need to.
  14. Add in the powdered sugar one cup at a time, scraping down if you need to until everything is fully incorporated.
  15. PUTTING IT TOGETHER:
  16. Once the cake has cooled, frost it, slice it and serve it with a cup of coffee. it is even good at room temperature or straight from the fridge.
3.5.3226

How perfect are persimmons? The gorgeous, peachy-oranged fleshed fruit that ripen into wrinkly, sweet pulp are not only the most lovely subjects for still life paintings ever, but also have been used in foods from puddings to beer for generations (read more about its history at American Food Roots). Until my friend Joseph brought me some that he’d found in the woods I’d never tried one and didn’t know that they’d played a large role in the diets of native people in our part of the world AND my southern ancestors. But now I know why.

When I saw the perfect little rosy “sugar plums” I couldn’t resist biting into one….but boy did I regret it. The skin of wild persimmons, dispyros virginiania (small, peachy fruit with smooth skin that’s a bit smaller than a golf ball and has several large, hard seeds) is VERY, VERY bitter and made my mouth feel like I’d covered it in a dry, awful tasting powder. But the inside flesh was soft, very sweet, and super fragrant.

In fact, when I just got a taste of the flesh I was in love. It was divine! And so different! Eventually I’d like to make a beer or vinegar using this lovely little fruit, but to start, I made something I felt pretty comfortable with… persimmon bread loosely based on James Beard’s version but with the added ah-mazingness that is cream cheese buttercream. I also made another batch and shaped it into a cake, which was brown like pumpernickle bread but was something like carrot cake. It really was PERFECT for breakfast, and super easy. If you’ve got folks staying over for Thanksgiving, then this is a nice change from the ubiquitous holiday sweet rolls for breakfast, especially since it makes use of local wild fruit you can find in the woods AND harkens back to the earliest settler’s food.

…

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Filed Under: Biscuits and Breads, fall, winter Tagged With: baked, Bourbon, bread, breakfast, brunch, Foraged, Fruit, Persimmons, wild

Old Fashioned Blueberry Doughnuts

August 11, 2016 by biz.w.harris@gmail.com 2 Comments

IMG_3553Once upon a time Shirley, my mother in law, baked amazing cakes and other delicious treats as a side hustle from her home, and now she just makes them for people she loves and on special occasions. Dubs had a gorgeous coconut cake for his first birthday, the Christmas cookie spread is INCREDIBLE at their house, (plus homemade beignets are a Christmas morning tradition!) and Saturday morning banana bread or sour dough bread toast is a thing that you just don’t want to miss.

…

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Filed Under: Biscuits and Breads, Breakfast and Brunch, summer, toddler-friendly Tagged With: Blueberries, Buttermilk, Donuts, Doughnuts

If the Gods ate Pizza, this was it. Fig, Honey, Basil, Bacon Balsamic Heaven

July 26, 2016 by biz.w.harris@gmail.com 2 Comments

IMG_3112

So I don’t know about where ya’ll are from, but down here in South Mississippi Figs are in their prime. Honestly, because their season is so short and because everyone I know has to contend with the birds for the pleasure of eating them, I treasure them.

I’ve been buying them at every farm stand I can, and since my aunts, cousins, and neighbors know my mama and I love them so much, they’ve been bringing them by if they have extra to share. Isn’t that some of the most fun of growing/finding/making your own food? Sharing it??

I’ve been disappointed my tomatoes haven’t produced as much as I’d expected since once of my greatest joys over the past few summers has been doling them out to friends and leaving extras on neighbors doorsteps… next year, we’ll be back in business.

This pizza was so good I made it TWICE in a day. Once as a sweeter breakfast pizza and then later as a more savory appetizer for some of my mama’s old friends who were coming over. I mean, what says “you’re special to us and we are so glad to see you” more than figs, honey, balsamic vinegar, fresh basil, and bacon?

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Filed Under: Appetizers, Biscuits and Breads, summer Tagged With: bacon, basil, Figs, honey, pizza

The easiest Pizza Dough alive, plus a rad chantrelle/bacon topping

July 19, 2016 by biz.w.harris@gmail.com Leave a Comment

IMG_3194Ok lovelies, its time for me to share a secret with you.

 

I have the easiest, fastest, most delicious pizza dough recipe and I’ve been keeping it from you. I know. It’s terrible and mean and horrible that I haven’t already shared this because it’s so darn amazing. And to top it off, I made pizza this weekend with fresh chantrelle mushrooms, bacon, ricotta cheese and arugula. Do you hate me?

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Filed Under: Biscuits and Breads, Foraged, Sandwiches and Salads, summer Tagged With: bacon, chantrelles, Foraged, pizza, spring

Free State Foraging: Mulberry Scones

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

IMG_2859

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

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

Biscuit Quest Concluded! Perfect Flaky, Fluffy Buttermilk Biscuits

December 28, 2015 by biz.w.harris@gmail.com 1 Comment

 
Oh my gosh, y’all. It’s over. Our search for the perfect biscuit is OVER. Thanks to a recipe my mama had been keeping for at least eight years from Southern Living Magazine titled “Our Best Ever Buttermilk Biscuit recipe” we now have EXACTLY the recipe–and most importantly, the technique–to make the fluffy, flaky biscuits we’ve been dreaming of. These cook beautifully RIGHT after the dough is made and also freeze for a few days and bake perfectly… truly, it seems like a dream (especially when you see the ingredient list) but we’ve actually, honest-to-goodness hit the brakfast/brunch jackpot! (but pay attention…technique is critical here.)

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Filed Under: Biscuits and Breads, Breakfast and Brunch Tagged With: Biscuit Quest, Biscuits, Buttermilk

My Biscuit Quest Continues: Sweet Potato Biscuits

September 24, 2015 by biz.w.harris@gmail.com Leave a Comment

 
A few weekends ago we were given an incredible gift of 60 degree weather in south Mississippi in early September (WHAT?) and it was heavenly. So heavenly, in fact, that I felt the urge to made pumpkin things… and drink coffee all day and crunch leaves underneath my feet.
I settled, however, for a picnic brunch with my family featuring venison sausage from our crazy generous friend John Mark and sweet potato biscuits (the often-overlooked yet most amazing autumn root vegetable). I’ve FINALLY unlocked the secret to flaky, fluffy biscuits, and the sweet potato just added a really lovely orange color to them, but I wouldn’t say that they had an overwhelming sweet potato taste. Do they finally allow me to leave-off my search for the perfect biscuit? Well, no… but only because I love the quest. If I were less interested in testing out new recipes, then these would definitely be a contender. See what you think!

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Filed Under: Biscuits and Breads, Breakfast and Brunch Tagged With: Biscuit Quest, Biscuits, breakfast, fall, sweet potato

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