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Sweet Mornings: 125 Sweet and Savory Breakfast and Brunch Recipes

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Start your days off right with taste-tempting delights from the author of Sweety Pies and Soul Food Desserts and Memories.   From donuts to crumb cakes to sweet rolls, this cookbook collects the kind of treats that evoke feelings of warmth and comfort like only good, old-fashioned breakfast food can.   Author Patty Pinner has been collecting breakfast recipes for as long as she can remember. She comes from a long line of breakfast bakers, and many of the recipes in this book have been passed down from the “Greats” —great-grannies and -aunties—as well as cousins and other influential women in Pinner’s life. To pore through these recipes, and then to bake them at home, evokes in Pinner memories of the many women who created them. Pinner includes charming, often comical stories about her life and family throughout the cookbook.   With generations-old recipes that range from the familiar (Blueberry Buttermilk Pancakes) to the fun (Pineapple Upside Down Biscuits), Sweet Mornings is a reliable, well-tested addition to any kitchen. These recipes are ideal for slow weekend mornings and afternoons when you want to lure family and friends to the table with the intoxicating aroma of a homemade sweet treat baking in the oven.   As the author’s mother used to say, the only thing that differentiates breakfast from dinner is the time of day. Where does it say you can’t have a little sugar in the morning?   “Pinner shares these succulent sentiments amongst these pages from women who cooked meals that could make modern men cry . . . a delightful read that feels like home.” —Cuisine Noir

272 pages, Kindle Edition

First published February 9, 2016

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Patty Pinner

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Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
Profile Image for BRNTerri.
480 reviews10 followers
June 5, 2016
THINGS I'VE MADE

LEMON-CORNMEAL MUFFINS
These taste good and are very dense. No hand mixer required, just a mixing bowl and whisk. You can't really taste the cornmeal and there's only the slightest bit of grittiness from it. I omitted the blueberries. I used water in the glaze in place of lemon juice. I made half the recipe and got seven. Though these have good flavor, I don't know if I'll make them again because of their density.

MISS ROSE'S BACON QUICHE
This was very easy to make but it did have a few extra steps, including cooking the bacon. I left out the mushrooms and used a little less bacon than called for. I used a premade store-bought pie crust instead of making my own like the recipe called for. This was too much mixture for a standard 9"/1 qt. pie pan so I used one that was almost 10". This was very good, made with eggs, milk, onion, bacon, and lots of cheese, but I think I'll use precooked sausage next time instead of bacon and make just half.CHOCOLATE SWIRL COFFEE CAKE


This is terrible, borderline unedible, and an epic fail. Dry, crumbly, and bitter bitter bitter from way too much unsweetened cocoa powder that wasn't mixed with enough sugar layered between the batter. I really wanted to use less but stuck to following the recipe.


The full recipe is to be made in a 9" square baking dish and uses a staggering mixture of 1/2 c. unsweetened cocoa powder (that amount I suspect was a typo) and just three tablespoons of sugar in the swirl layer. I made half the batter and swirl mixture and baked it in an 8" x 1 1/2" round pan. The recipe didn't state to stick a knife down into the batter and swirl it around to mix the chocolate layer in but I did it anyway. I've never heard of a 'swirl' cake that omitted that step. I made a chocolate glaze for it and that didn't help at all.
MORNING APPLE CRISP
Very good. I left the cinnamon out of the topping and put it in the apple mixture instead. In the filling I used white sugar in place of brown sugar. I'm very familiar with baking apple crisps and I knew I wouldn't want brown sugar in the mixture. This topping has too much brown sugar in it and the rolled (old fashioned) oats are very large and the mixture just sort of fell apart though it tasted good. In fact, the whole recipe uses way too much brown sugar.

The apples took a lot longer to bake than specified (35-45 minutes) in the recipe. I did use a slightly shorter baking dish so the apples weren't spread out as much. Raw apples, like raw potatoes, take quite awhile to cook. After 40 minutes the topping browned as much as I wanted but the apples were still hard. I covered the top of the baking dish loosely with foil and let it bake for an additional 35 minutes. I used a 2.5qt/11"x7" dish.


BLACKBERRY BUCKLE


This is very good. A buckle is cake batter that you top with fruit, fresh, frozen, or canned. The batter cooks up around the fruit, covering most of it. The recipe said to use a 9" square dish (which is usually 2" deep) but this was so much mixture. I smartly used a 10"x2.5" 7c. capacity dish, and it was perfect.

I used slightly more than 2c. frozen berries, and it was a little too much. They weren't as sweet as they should have been so I sprinkled close to 1/4c. white sugar on top, which gave the cooked cake a nice sweet top. Mine took 47 minutes to bake and the recipe stated to bake it 30-35 minutes. I didn't make the crumb topping. I felt it was very unnecessary. This was very easy to make and I'd make it again. I also doubled the salt in the batter for a total of 1/4t. and it was perfect.


PUFFED CHERRY PANCAKE CASSEROLE


This is very good but it's nothing like a pancake. It's made with eggs, sugar, butter, flour, milk, and flavorings. It bakes up into a thick slab of firm custard and the cherries rise to the top.

I made half the recipe in a 1.5qt baking dish and baked it 25 minutes. It's 1" thick. I added a little almond extract to the mixture because of the cherries and used just a few dashes of cinnamon. It needed more salt so I added a little extra but that wasn't enough. I think four tablespoons of butter was too much because it was squirting and running out of every crack so I'll use half that amount next time.I'm very happy with this and I'll make it again. I already make a similar version. You could use fresh or frozen raspberries or blueberries in place of cherries, or chopped canned peaches. LEMON-COCONUT BREAD


This was terrible. Dry, dense, flavor's not good, and was a waste of ingredients. Most sweet quick breads are moist but this one is truly drier like yeast batter bread. I made half in a 1qt. loaf pan and baked it for 38 minutes. I was only able to eat two pieces of this before it went into the trash.

PEACH COBBLER

This recipe calls for fresh or canned peaches so I used three 15oz. cans of peach chunks and some of their juice. I used a 10"x2.5", 7c. capacity round baking dish and it was barely deep enough. I added cinnamon to the peaches and left the nutmeg out of the topping. The topping is a very very sweet, thin eggless batter that gets poured evenly over the peaches. I added a little vanilla extract to it. It needed a little more salt but other than that, it's very good. I'm happy with how this turned out.
MY THOUGHTS: Of the eight things I baked there are only four that I'd make again. None of the cakes turned out so I'd never bake another cake from this book. There's also a mistake in the brownie muffin recipe. It calls for 'semisweet cocoa powder' when there's no such thing. There aren't many photos in this book either.

I received this from the publisher in exchange for an honest review.

Profile Image for Kym.
258 reviews1 follower
May 15, 2017
Excellent book. Made several recipes, one of my favorite was Almond crescent rolls, very quick and easy. The cherry granola is a keeper, will never buy granola again. Never before have I read a cook book that literally every single recipe is one that I was eager to make. A little dramatic or beginner with the instructions, I followed but not sure if they were needed. "Add eggs one at a time" was told in a paragraph (mix, scrape the bowl, etc) I used unsalted butter as all the recipes called for, which I never did before. I liked it.
97 reviews2 followers
June 25, 2024
Enjoyed the recipes on offer, they all seem very tasty. I feel like I can't give this higher or lower than a 3 star because I have so many allergies that I had to make some drastic changes to the recipes I tried, but overall they turned out well and I enjoyed them so I think that people who can eat the originals will probably enjoy these!
Profile Image for Kelly.
58 reviews
May 24, 2017
Baked oatmeal squares with brown sugar and cinnamon :)
Profile Image for Bundt.
41 reviews
March 9, 2017
Mornings have always been my favorite time of the day – sitting down enjoying a leisurely cup of coffee and a freshly baked treat as the sun streams across the kitchen table is the perfect way to start the day. I have and cherish both of Patty Pinner’s memoir cookbooks, Sweets: Soul Food Desserts and Memories and Sweety Pies: An Uncommon Collection of Womanish Observations, with Pie, and was excited to see that she had a new cookbook coming out that focused on breakfast and brunch recipes. Patty, a fellow native of Michigan, collected wonderful soul food recipes and stories in her two previous cookbooks, and “Sweet Mornings” is no exception. Each of the 125 recipes is peppered with memories of friends, family and neighbors in Michigan, visiting family in Tennessee, and the larger-than-life personalities of the strong women that surrounded her. No matter your favorite breakfast vice (biscuits, quick breads, pancakes, muffins, bars, waffles, cinnamon rolls, French toast), all are amply represented in the 125 recipes. I loved that some fall into the quick and easy category (including a handful that use pie filling or pudding mix, such as the pistachio coffee cake and Ava Joy’s Lemon Streusel), while others like the orange-filled rolls are perfect for more leisurely mornings. Although most of the book is devoted to baked goods, you’ll also find more substantial brunch offerings including chicken and waffles, chicken salad, hash browns, steak and eggs.
Profile Image for Sandra Noel.
458 reviews
May 24, 2016
I'll be honest, I can't really handle sweets in the morning, but my 14 year old daughter absolutely adores sweet breakfasts! She doesn't get them often, so you can imagine her excitement when she found out I received this book to review! She latched on it and I practically had to pry it out of her hands to read it myself! She was over the moon when I allowed her to make the Brown Sugar and Cinnamon Swirl Pancakes by herself. They didn't turn out perfectly, but the pancake batter is so nice that with the addition of a touch of sugar (the original recipe doesn't have sugar in the actual pancake batter as there is the swirl AND an icing for them), it's become my girls' go-to recipe for making pancakes from scratch themselves, and they turn out very nicely.

If you love sweets, this is perfect for you. You'll find everything from muffins, to cobblers, fruit breads, tea breads, granolas, French Toast Casserole, cinnamon rolls and so much more.

If you don't love sweets in the morning, there are some savory recipes as well including Mrs. Ruby's Table-Talk White Bread. My oldest daughter and I made this, and it turned out wonderfully. There is also a Bacon Quiche, Biscuits and more in the savory section.

This is a lovely cookbook. It's a quality cookbook that I'm giving to my daughter to keep as she grows up and moves away. I know it's something she can use for years and years to come. I'm very happy to highly recommend it.

I received a copy of this book from Agate Publishing for my honest review. All thoughts and opinions are my own.
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews

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