Happy Easter!
Brunch is On at My Cousin’s House
Our celebration today includes brunch at my cousin’s house. He and his family are a recent back-to-Texas transplant and we’re loving having them close to us after all these years. We enjoyed visiting them in Albuquerque and then in Washington, D.C., but close enough for a spur-of-the-moment Easter brunch invitation is much better. (That’s us with my cousins and niece who lives in DC below, last fall, when we spent a lovely 3 days with them sightseeing.)

We’re Bringing the Sweet Potato Biscuits
We don’t know exactly what’s on the menu at Easter brunch today, but we know it will be good (my cousins can cook!). Our contribution was The Grill-Meister’s idea: sweet potato biscuits. My grandmother, AKA Mema, made this biscuits famous in our family, and the tradition continues. The fact that The Grill-Meister was the one to think of it for today’s menu bears out the truth of a couple of the points in my ode to the sweet potato biscuit delivered right here in the blog a few years back:
- People who come into our family, through marriage or friendship, become Sweet Potato Biscuit converts. Without fail.
- People who loathe sweet potatoes like these biscuits. They are transcendent.
Check it out in the post below when you get time (after church and Easter egg hunting). You might need these little pillows of love on your next brunch menu.
Family Recipes are a Conduit for Shared Memories
It’s quite early in the morning as I write this, a time for peace and contemplation here at Glover Gardens. The sweet potatoes are roasting in the oven and their rich, earthy smell is permeating through the house. I know that when my hands are in the dough and I’m working toward that moment when “it looks right”, which was my grandmother’s level of precision for the recipe, that she and my Dad will be with me in the kitchen. Just as they will be when we all sit down and enjoy them together later. Family recipes are a conduit for shared memories and connects us to generations past and generations to come. I hope one day my tiny grandsons are reminiscing about “Birdie’s sweet potato biscuits” as they’re pulling together a holiday meal with their families and will endeavor to make that happen by teaching them the recipe, channeling Dad and Mema while we work the dough, “til it looks right”.
Maybe I Need to Make Some Extra for Later…
While I wouldn’t mess with the recipe for the biscuits – it’s perfect as-is – I do like to play with different ways to serve them. Today, I’m bringing some Grim Reaper Creamed Honey as a condiment to do a taste test with my nephew, who can handle it HOT.
After last Christmas’ batch of sweet potato goodness, we were at Gumbo Cove in Mississippi and I made little ham sandwiches with arugula, red onion and the rich, dark, smokiness of Salsa Macha, one of my favorite condiments from our Tomball Farmers’ Market.

That dockside lunch was so satisfying, especially with the side of plantains and chimichurri, which also came from our farmers’ market. I think I’ll make a double batch of the biscuits this morning and do something fun with the leftovers. (If there are any…)
What’s On Your Table Today?
What’s on your Easter table? Or if Easter isn’t a holiday for you, what’s on your Sunday plate?
© 2023, Glover Gardens
Will enjoy checking out the recipe. I recently made Irish potato bread and am wondering if this is similar? Thanks for posting.
Hi Kevin, thanks for the comment. Irish potato bread is something I haven’t experienced, but it sounds good – all comfort food-y, like these biscuits. I don’t know if it’s similar, but you’ve piqued my interest. I just looked up Irish potato bread and learned that you can cook it in different forms, like a loaf, a pancake or a fried dumpling-like shape. How interesting! How did you do yours? Do you have a link to the recipe? I also learned that another name for it is a “boxty”. I’ve read that word in novels my whole life and not really known what it was. Now I’d like to make this dish… I think it would go well with country-style ribs I used to make with a cherry preserves and chipotle sauce. Now if I could only find the recipe!
Hi there – here’s a link to my post and recipe. Hope you like it! https://adifferentkitchen452905877.wordpress.com/2023/03/17/irish-potato-bread/
They sound good! Though I always have to remind myself that biscuit means something different.
Hi Anabel, thanks for checking in and Happy Easter! We might be near Glasgow this summer and I’ll reach out to see if you’ll be in town. You make me smile with your ‘biscuit means something different’ comment. I have to remind myself of that every time I’m in the UK. I think this could meet your definition if we added some sugar and cinnamon spice, but I don’t know what my Dad or grandmother would think of that. 😊
Oh please do let me know, that would be wonderful!
Funny, we went to an Easter brunch yesterday and one of the best things on it were the sweet potato biscuits!
Where? Somewhere we need to put on our list? The NOKS Jazz Fest annual pilgrimage is coming up…
I’d say so. One reason is just for the beauty of this place. It’s like stepping back into the 1930’s.
https://blainerestaurantreport.wordpress.com/2023/03/05/messinas-runway-cafe-new-orleans-la-report-556/