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Рецепт Mad Cheddar: Cheddar Black Pepper Breakfast Biscuits
by Isabelle Boucher

This is a sponsored post on behalf of Dairy Farmers of Canada. As a compulsive list-maker, I have a list for pretty much everything – a list of books I’ve been meaning to read, a list of things I need to fix around the house, a list of things I want to do with my summer, and a list of terrible puns I can use for blog post titles. My favourite list, though, is all of the unforgettable foods I want to re-create in my own kitchen, mostly because I can’t afford the plane ticket (or in some cases, the time machine) to go back to the place I first tried them every time I have a craving. These biscuits have been at the top of the list for a very, very long time. I first had them at a little café in Mahone Bay, an adorable little town in Nova Scotia that’s a perfect stopover when you’re driving from Halifax to Peggy’s Cove. The food at this little café was lovely, but the real star of the show was the basket of freshly-baked cheddar biscuits they’d bring out instead of the usual bread basket. The biscuits were soft and pillowy, and generously flavoured with loads of cheddar and black pepper. It was worth the drive just to get a basket of those biscuits. These biscuits seemed like the perfect way to show off this month’s featured Canadian cheese: Avonlea Clothbound Cheddar from Cows Creamery in PEI. (If that name sounds familiar, it’s probably because you’ve seen their ice cream and/or their cute cartoon cow t-shirts, both of which are basically an institution in the Maritimes at this point.) The same summer that I first discovered the little café in Mahone Bay and their delicious biscuits, I also discovered the Cows ice cream shop that sits on a pier in the Halifax harbour. I may or may not have sacrificed a chunk of my paycheque and my waistline to their chocolate cheesecake ice cream. I’m pleased to report that Cows’ cheese is as delicious as their ice cream, if not more. Avonlea is a traditional English-style cheddar that’s made with unpasteurized cows’ milk from local farms. Each wheel is wrapped in cloth and aged for at least a year in the creamery’s caves. It’s sharp and crumbly, like a proper cheddar should be, with a well-rounded creamy flavour. I’m also pleased to report these biscuits are every bit as tasty as the ones I remember from the café.  They’re pillowy, tender and golden-brown, and full of loads of cheddar and black pepper. They’re perfectly delicious on their own, freshly baked and a little bit warm from the oven. They’re even better as the base for a savoury breakfast sandwich stuffed with bacon, egg, and (obviously) sliced Avonlea cheddar. And best of all, you don’t have to hop in a car and drive all the way to Mahone Bay to get them. (Or, in this case, a time machine… because the café is now long-gone.) // Disclosure: This post is sponsored by Dairy Farmers of Canada. Thanks for supporting the brands that keep the Crumb Test Kitchen running! All opinions, as always, are entirely my own. // Cheddar Black Pepper Breakfast Biscuits   Print Prep time Cook time Total time   These savoury breakfast sandwiches will have you swearing off the coffee shop version forever. Prefer to keep it simple? Skip the fillings and enjoy the perfectly golden and fluffy cheddar and black pepper biscuits on their own! Author: Isabelle Boucher (Crumb) Recipe type: Breakfast Serves: 8 Ingredients Biscuits: 2 cups flour 1 tbsp baking powder 2 tsp coarsely ground black pepper ½ tsp salt 1 ½ cup grated Avonlea Clothbound Cheddar (or any aged Canadian cheddar) ¼ cup very cold butter, cut into small cubes ¾ cup milk ½ cup plain Greek yogurt 2 tbsp melted butter Toppings: 8 slices bacon, fried until crisp and broken in half 8 eggs, cooked over-easy Thinly sliced Avonlea Clothbound Cheddar Instructions Preheat oven 425F. Line a large baking sheet with parchment paper. In a large mixing bowl, combine flour, sugar, baking powder, pepper, and salt. Using a pastry cutter or two sharp knives, cut in the butter until the mixture is coarse and crumbly. Add the cheese, mixing until well combined. In a second small bowl, whisk together the milk and yogurt. Add to the dry ingredients, and stir until just barely combined, stopping as soon as the last few floury streaks are incorporated. Spoon 8 large dollops of batter onto the prepared baking sheet. Brush the tops with melted butter. Bake in preheated oven for 15-18 minutes, or until tops are golden brown. Cool on baking sheet for 5 minutes, then transfer to a wire rack to cool for another 10 minutes. Once the biscuits are cool enough to handle but still a little warm, carefully slice each one in half using a serrated knife. Starting with the bottom half of each biscuit, layer on two half-slices of bacon, an egg, and a few slices of cheddar. Top with the top half of the biscuit and serve immediately. Wordpress Recipe Plugin by EasyRecipe 3.5.3226   You may also like -Feeling Blue: Pear-Walnut SconesHot Buns: Savoury Hot Cross Buns with Bacon and Green OnionSay Cheese: Savoury Herbed Ricotta WafflesI Yam What I Yam – Maple-Cardamom Sweet Potato Biscuits