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Savory Kale and Two-Cheese Scones
When standard breakfast pastries are too sugary, bake a batch of these flavorful savory scones. This recipe is our adaptation of the hearty kale and cheese scones created by Briana Holt, of Tandem Coffee + Bakery in Portland, Maine. Dried currants and a small amount of the sugar in the dough complement the minerally, vegetal notes of the kale and counterbalance the saltiness of the cheddar and pecorino, while a good dose of black pepper adds an undercurrent of spiciness. Either lacinato kale (also called dinosaur or Tuscan kale) or curly kale will work; you will need an average-sized bunch to obtain the amount of chopped stemmed leaves for the recipe.
12
Large scones
Don’t allow the buttermilk and butter to lose their chill before use. Keeping them cold helps ensure that the dough will remain workable and won’t become unmanageably soft during shaping. When rotating the baking sheets halfway through the baking time, work quickly so the oven doesn’t lose too much heat.
1¼ hours
40 minutes active, plus cooling
Ingredients
-
80
grams (½ cup) dried currants
-
87
grams (4 cups) stemmed and finely chopped lacinato or curly kale (see note)
Directions
-
01Heat the oven to 375°F with racks in the upper- and lower-middle positions. Line 2 rimmed baking sheets with kitchen parchment. In a small microwave-safe bowl, stir together the currants and 2 tablespoons water. Microwave uncovered on high until warm and plump, about 30 seconds; set aside. In a medium bowl, toss the kale and lemon juice; set aside. In a large bowl, whisk together the flour, sugar, baking powder, baking soda, salt and pepper.
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GET DIGITAL & PRINTDo I keep scones refrigerated or on counter?
Can I freeze the scones for later? Or is it better to freeze 1/2 dough and then bake them later?
Best thing I did was to buy a great cheddar, not the bagged shredded stuff, imo.
Milk Street, I love your recipes but I really wish you would give options for those who don’t have a microwave. Often I find a recipe I want to make and get the ingredients (Such as I did with this) only to find that it requires a microwave.
When I visited Portland I went to Tandem every morning just to have these scones, they were so good. Beyond excited to have this recipe, they turned out perfectly! The process for me was exactly as described, and I really appreciate the specific details of knowing that it would a shaggy dough. It stopped me from potentially over-mixing. Just perfect and exactly as I remember from enjoying them at Tandem!
This is both a question and a comment/answer to another baker. Question: I have the original recipe from Briana Holt/Tandem, which called for 727.5 g all purpose flour (6 cups) versus your 455 g (3.5 cups). Milk St is also suggesting a lot more cheese and keeping the volume of butter and buttermilk (1.5 cups) the same. I'm wondering if this reduction in flour in comparison to the other ingredients could have contributed to the wet dough some bakers experienced. I thought the flour measurement might be typo when the recipe first appeared on your site, but checked again now and it hasn't changed. I'm really surprised that you made such a significant reduction in Tandem's recipe and some bakers found that it worked out OK. Answer/comment: For the person who asked about gluten free, I made my Tandem recipe for these scones (1/2 recipe producing 8 normal sized scones) using 3 cups GF flour blend + 1.5 tsp xanthan gum and all other ingredients about the same as this Milk St recipe. Even with almost twice the ratio of flour, the dough wasn't all that shaggy and came together easily. It seemed well hydrated. The scones were delicious. I think if you substitute GF flour in this recipe 1:1 for the all purpose flour, you might get a REALLY wet dough. I hope that helps.
Boy are these good. Great contrasts of taste and texture. I too had a wet dough. I'm sure the buttermilk was cold, and I thought the butter was. So I lowered the temp and baked 10 minutes longer and they came out a bit flatter than I would have liked, but still fine. Maybe using frozen butter?
Followed the recipe using red kale because that’s what I had. Awesome.