Many people assume I cook as much as I bake, but in truth my time spent baking usually reduces the time I spend cooking. As I’ve devoted more free hours to baking, my weekday dinners often became simple and quick affairs.
When I commuted to an office—up until a few months ago—I seldom had the energy for elaborate meals. Most nights I’d assemble something minimal, like sliced bread and cheese. On the occasions I did cook, I relied on straightforward comfort-food recipes that required little prep and minimal cleanup while delivering big flavor.
Now that I work from home and spend more time alone, I cook more often, but my approach remains the same: low effort, high reward. The best recipes are those that feel greater than the sum of their parts—simple ingredients transformed into something unexpectedly delicious. Even though my cookbook collection is large, a handful of recipes are my go-tos.
Deb Perelman of Smitten Kitchen is a maestro of this genre; several of my staples come from her site, including Quick Pasta and Chickpeas, One-Pan Farro with Tomatoes, and Mushrooms and Greens with Toast. David Lebowitz’s French Lentil Salad with Goat Cheese and Walnuts is another favorite—it’s far more exciting than a typical lentil salad. For a bright, sweet-savory contrast, Nigella Lawson’s Watermelon, Feta, and Black Olive salad remains one of my all-time favorites.

One standout that consistently amazes me is Cynthia Chen McTernan’s Ginger-Scallion Chicken and Dumplings from A Common Table. With only six ingredients and a couple hours from start to finish, it delivers surprisingly rich, layered flavors.
Low-effort, high-reward baking exists too. For breakfast I’ve been enchanted by Dutch babies (oven pancakes), and regular pancakes are an enduring simple joy—sourdough discard pancakes have been a recent favorite.

My breakfast habits cycle through phases: months of oatmeal, stretches of egg sandwiches, or long runs of one particular bake. Lately I’ve been craving savory biscuits—quick to mix and fast to bake. For a while I riffed on Bon Appetit’s Sour Cream and Onion Biscuits, but more recently Cynthia Chen McTernan’s Cheddar and Scallion Biscuits (adjusted to what I have on hand) have become my default.

The recipe is wonderfully adaptable. I’ve swapped ramps or garlic scallions for regular scallions, omitted alliums altogether, used gruyère in place of cheddar, and added chopped sage. For liquids I’ve used buttermilk, a milk-and-yogurt mixture, leftover whey from an attempted ricotta, and even a bit of sourdough starter mixed with milk.

When butter is frozen in the freezer I grate it as the recipe suggests; otherwise I cut it in with a pastry blender or rub it in with my fingers. I usually cut rounds with a biscuit cutter, but if I don’t want to re-roll scraps I’ll cut squares or triangles instead.

This choose-your-own-adventure method won’t produce identical biscuits every time—some batches are flakier, others cakier; some richer, some leaner. You’ll discover which variations you prefer. Regardless, when you wake craving a savory biscuit, most versions will satisfy.

Below is a flexible savory biscuit template adapted from A Common Table by Cynthia Chen McTernan. It outlines several methods for incorporating butter and suggests ingredient substitutions so you can tailor the biscuits to what’s available in your kitchen.

A Savory Biscuit Template
Adapted from A Common Table by Cynthia Chen McTernan. This template describes three techniques for incorporating butter and lists common substitutions. Use it as a starting point and experiment to suit your tastes.
Breakfast, Side Dish, Snack
cheddar biscuits, cheddar scallion biscuits, cheese biscuits, savory biscuits
Ingredients
-
6
tbsp
cold unsalted butter, cut into small chunks
OR 8 tbsp (1 stick) frozen butter (you won’t use all of it) -
250
g
all-purpose flour -
1
tbsp
baking powder
(preferably aluminum-free) -
1/4
tsp
baking soda -
1
tsp
salt -
110
g (4 oz)
grated sharp cheddar cheese
or another firm, flavorful cheese such as gouda or gruyère -
1/3
cup
thinly sliced scallions, garlic scallions, or ramps -
1
cup
cold buttermilk, or a mixture of 1/2 whole milk and 1/2 Greek yogurt or sour cream
– see notes below
For the top of the biscuits:
- egg wash, heavy cream, melted butter, or additional buttermilk
Instructions
-
Whisk the flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt in a large, wide bowl. If convenient, chill the bowl in the freezer for 5 minutes.
-
Incorporate the butter using one of these methods: add cold butter chunks and either cut in with a pastry blender until pea-sized, or rub the butter into the flour with your fingers to create thin flakes. If using frozen butter, grate about 6 tbsp over the flour and toss gently to combine.
-
Optional: return the bowl to the freezer for another 5 minutes while you gather the remaining ingredients.
-
Add the grated cheese and sliced scallions, tossing gently to distribute them evenly.
-
Make a well in the center and pour in about 3/4 cup cold buttermilk (or the chosen alternative). Toss gently with a silicone spatula until a shaggy dough forms, then use your hands to bring it together. Add more liquid by tablespoons only if needed—the dough can remain slightly shaggy.
-
Turn the dough onto a lightly floured surface and pat or roll into a 1/2-inch-thick rectangle. Fold the rectangle into thirds like a business letter, pat back to 1/2 inch, fold again, then pat the dough into a 1-inch-thick rectangle.
-
Place the dough rectangle on a parchment-lined sheet and freeze for 10–15 minutes.
-
Preheat the oven to 425°F (218°C).
-
Remove the dough from the freezer and cut biscuits: use a 2.5–3 inch cutter for rounds, or a bench scraper to cut 6 squares/triangles. Press straight down—don’t twist the cutter. Re-form scraps and repeat.
-
Transfer biscuits to a fresh parchment-lined sheet and brush the tops with egg wash, melted butter, cream, or extra buttermilk.
-
Bake for about 13–18 minutes, until risen and golden; timing varies with size and oven. Let cool for a minute or two on the sheet, then serve.
Recipe Notes
- Keeping ingredients cold is key to flakiness—periodically chilling the bowl or dough helps. If you’re short on time you can skip some chilling steps, but colder ingredients yield better layers.
- Suitable liquid alternatives include buttermilk, thinned sour cream or yogurt, or milk acidified with a bit of lemon juice. Whey or a small amount of discard sourdough starter have also worked for me.
- Swap scallions for 2–4 tablespoons of chopped herbs such as chives, sage, rosemary, or dill.
- Use a smaller amount of a salty hard cheese like Parmesan or Pecorino instead of cheddar for a different flavor profile.
- At the lamination stage, try folding in caramelized onions or small roasted fruit pieces for a savory-sweet twist.
- Biscuits freeze well. To freeze unbaked, arrange cut biscuits on a sheet to firm up, then wrap and store in a freezer bag. Bake from frozen—just add a few minutes to the baking time. Baked biscuits also freeze; reheat in the oven or microwave.