Ladies and gentlemen and those of you who haven’t decided
yet—I present to you, more peanut butter.
The truth is, peanut butter and baking go together like, um,
peanut butter and jelly. Or [insert your favorite combination of things here]. So
you can imagine how I applauded with hearty agreement when I saw the dessert
wizards at Baked
NYC included a chapter on peanut butter in their excellent cookbook Baked Elements: The Importance of Being Baked in 10 Favorite
Ingredients.
If you haven’t heard of this particular bakery, go look them
up real quick. Baked
is another one of those trendy NYC bakeries, with the
distinction of having built a veritable cookbook empire comprising of four
unique, American-inspired volumes. After seeing a copy of Baked Occasions on a relative’s coffee table at a
holiday party, I was rather intrigued. One might say I was hungry for more (ba
dum tss). So, continuing my cookbook binge, I picked up a copy of Baked
Elements at the library and started flipping through.
And really, can you blame me? source |
This book does not, unfortunately, include marijuana in its
list of top 10 ingredients (with all those references to getting baked, you’d
kinda think they would)—however, I was duly impressed by their selection. I don’t
think I would be able to define what, exactly, my 10 favorite dessert ingredients
were. Um...flour? Sugar? Baking powder? In fact, it turns out these Baked
people have a good idea of what Americans like in their desserts, including
chapters on the following ingredients:
Peanut butter (yiss)
Lemon and lime (often overlooked, but appreciated here)
Caramel (because what’s better than cooked sugar)
Booze (sure, you’re cool with that in your desserts, but no weed.
huh)
Pumpkin (for white girls everywhere)
Malted milk powder (not exactly vegan)
Cinnamon (my mother would love this chapter)
Cheese (again, not really vegan-friendly, but I feel their
drift)
Chocolate (obviously)
And banana (unexpected, but in the context of American
baking it certainly deserves its spot on the list)
For creating this list, I thank those sugar-loving peeps at
Baked. I reckon it must’ve taken longer to come up with those 10 flavors than
it did to develop, bake, and shoot all those dozens of desserts within the
cookbook’s pages. They did a good job.
About the desserts themselves? Impressive, to say the least.
I was downright inspired reading through the recipes and the little blurbs of
text that accompanied them and, of course, admiring the photography. The ordinary
ingredients featured in each chapter are used in unexpected ways, from the
pumpkin almond butter cake to the lime tarragon cookies with white chocolate
topping to the chocolate velvet walnut fudge with olive oil and fleur de sel. I
would definitely consider this book worthy of checking out for any baker with a
love for bold, American-style desserts.
It was a tough decision picking out what recipes I wanted to
save and even tougher choosing what to make first, but at last, I settled upon
these peanut butter-infused scones for a pretty easy but still impressive
breakfast. Needless to say, my expectations were filled.
TL;DR, peanut butter. |
The Baked guys weren’t lying when they said these tasted
like oatmeal cookies. The oatmeal adds just a little bit of texture to the
soft, not-too-crumbly scones, and the chocolate chips make them taste like
dessert. But peanut butter is the main event, as evidenced by the ½ cup of the
stuff mixed right into the batter. That’s a whole tablespoon of peanut butter
per scone. Yeah. This ain’t diet food.
Unless you're on a diet of breakfast pastries. Like me. |
And while I did veganize these a little bit, they still have
the heart and soul of a rich, peanut buttery, American-style scone. Maybe they’re
a little healthier for the use of coconut oil. Maybe not. Either way, I’m still
eating these for breakfast.
Here’s the recipe.
___________
Vegan oatmeal peanut butter chocolate chip scones
Adapted
from Baked Elements by Matt Lewis and
Renato Poliafito
Makes
8 scones
Ingredients
272 grams • all-purpose
flour • 2 cups
76 grams • dark
brown sugar • 1/3 cup
4 grams • baking
soda • 1 teaspoon
4 grams • baking
powder • 1 teaspoon
2 grams • salt •
¼ teaspoon
80 grams • rolled
oats • 1 cup
84 grams • coconut
oil, chilled • ¼ cup plus 2 tablespoons
184 grams • nondairy milk •
¾ cup
8 grams • lemon
juice • 2 teaspoons
15 grams • applesauce
• 1 tablespoon
128 grams • peanut
butter • ½ cup
170 grams • chocolate
chips • 1 cup
Directions
Preheat oven to 400 degrees F. Line a baking
sheet with parchment paper.
In a large bowl, whisk together flour, sugar,
baking soda, baking powder, salt, and oats. Add coconut oil and mix in with
your hands until the mixture looks like chunky, coarse sand with pieces of oil
no bigger than a pea.
Combine milk, lemon juice, and applesauce in a
measuring cup. Form a well in the center of the flour mixture and pour in milk
mixture. Add peanut butter as well. Mix gently with a wooden spoon or rubber
spatula until the dough starts to come together. Fold in chocolate chips. Be
sure not to over-work the dough.
Turn dough out onto the baking sheet and shape
into a disk about 8 inches in diameter and 1 ½ inches thick. Using a serrated
knife, cut into eighths, but do not separate the sections.
Bake for 18 to 22 minutes, rotating the baking
sheet halfway through. The scones should be lightly browned, and a toothpick
inserted should come out with a few moist crumbs attached. Let cool for 5
minutes before re-slicing scones and separating the sections. Allow scones to
cool on a wire rack before serving.
__________
Excuse my lighting here. |
For more breakfast baked goods, check out
these links.
Strawberry coffee cake scones. That streusel though.
Dark chocolate chunk strawberry banana bread muffins.
Chocolate chunks make everything better.
Peanut butter zucchini bread with homemade peanut butter
chips. Never buy those fake-ass peanut buter chips again!
Nutella-stuffed cinnamon toast muffins. Gluten-free
too.
Happy year and a half! That is an impressive collection of recipes :D And here's to many more *raises peanut butter jar*
ReplyDeleteThese look fantastic June :D x
*clinks peanut butter jar* Thanks so much! :D
DeleteI am into all peanut butter recipes. And peanut butter and chocolate is my favorite combo..ever!
ReplyDeleteYou and me both, Cathleen! :D
DeleteHmmm...these scones sound delicious, June! I'm not sure if I agree with the top 10 list from Baked, but I think they are definitely on the right track. We are actually heading down to NYC in a couple of weeks, so I'll have to look up this bakery and check 'em out. Thanks!!
ReplyDeleteI agree, I def would not have included bananas...but it's interesting to see different perspectives on it. Would be pretty cool to visit the bakery too! :)
DeleteI love a good peanut butter and chocolate scone and your veganized ones sound absolutely delicious!
ReplyDeleteThank you Shashi! :)
DeleteThese sound awesome - peanut butter makes everything better and these look moist and delicious!
ReplyDeleteThese are pretty moist! Not crumbly at all :D
DeleteBring on all the peanut butter! NO problems here :)
ReplyDeleteThanks, I agree! :P
DeleteI love peanut butter and I absolutely love scones - these look SO delicious!
ReplyDeleteThanks Taylor!!
DeleteYummm! I love anything peanut butter related, I love the look of these x
ReplyDeleteThese are definitely perfect for any peanut butter lover! :)
Deleteawesome idea! As always! I'm seriously considering becoming vegan.
ReplyDeleteThat would be pretty cool! I'm mostly just vegetarian myself but I admire anyone who tries pure veganism :)
Delete