There’s a reason certain combinations survive long enough to become myth.
Chicken and waffles did not rise because it was clever. It rose because it was honest.
In Harlem, long after midnight, musicians stepped off stages with their shirts still damp and their bones still humming. They wanted fried chicken. They wanted waffles. They wanted both. At places like Wells Supper Club, someone understood that hunger does not neatly divide itself into categories. Dinner or breakfast. Savory or sweet. Survival or joy.
So they were given both.
That instinct — to refuse narrowing — runs deep in our kitchens.
It lives in the sweet potato.
A root carried across water it did not choose. Pressed into unfamiliar soil. It grew anyway. Fed families anyway. Quietly. Steadily. Without demanding recognition.
Roast it long enough, and it deepens. The sugars darken. The flesh softens. What seemed simple reveals complexity.
I love sweet potato pie.
I love pancakes.
And the older I get, the less patience I have for pretending I must choose one love over another.
So, for the final recipe of Black History Month, I did what those musicians did, in my own way.
I said yes to both.
Sweet Potato Buttermilk Pancakes with Bourbon Maple Syrup.
Not as a gimmick.
As a continuation.
The pancakes are tender but grounded. The sweet potato gives them weight without heaviness. The buttermilk brings tang. Cinnamon and nutmeg whisper rather than shout. The syrup carries a faint burn at the edge — just enough to remind you that sweetness has always required something.
This is not performance food.
It is an inherited food.
Black history is often spoken loudly in February. Speeches. Panels. Timelines. Names we should never forget.
But history also lives in smaller places.
In cast iron, warming slowly.
In flour dusted across a wooden counter.
In a root mashed by hand.
Sometimes remembrance is not a declaration.
Sometimes it is breakfast.
Made with both hands.
Served warm.
Eaten without apology.
🥞 Sweet Potato Buttermilk Pancakes with Bourbon Maple Syrup
Ingredients
Pancakes
- 1 cup mashed roasted sweet potato (cooled)
- 1 ¼ cups all-purpose flour
- 1 tablespoon brown sugar
- 1 teaspoon baking powder
- ½ teaspoon baking soda
- ½ teaspoon salt
- ½ teaspoon cinnamon
- ¼ teaspoon nutmeg
- 1 cup buttermilk
- 1 large egg
- 2 tablespoons melted butter
- ½ teaspoon vanilla extract
Bourbon Maple Syrup
- ½ cup pure maple syrup
- 1 tablespoon unsalted butter
- 1–2 teaspoons bourbon (optional)
- Pinch of sea salt
Method
1. Roast the Sweet Potato
Roast at 400°F until fork-tender and caramelized at the edges. Mash until smooth. Let cool fully before mixing.
Depth matters.
2. Combine the Dry Ingredients
Whisk flour, brown sugar, baking powder, baking soda, salt, cinnamon, and nutmeg in a bowl.
Keep it simple.
3. Combine the Wet Ingredients
In another bowl, mix sweet potato, buttermilk, egg, melted butter, and vanilla.
Stir gently. No rushing.
4. Bring Them Together
Fold wet into dry. Do not overmix. Small lumps are welcome.
Tenderness lives there.
5. Cook
Heat a lightly buttered skillet over medium heat.
Pour ¼ cup batter per pancake.
Cook until bubbles rise and edges set. Flip once. Finish until golden brown.
Low heat rewards patience.
6. Make the Syrup
Warm the maple syrup and butter in a small saucepan. Remove from heat. Stir in bourbon and sea salt.
The scent should rise before the steam fades.
Serve With
Toasted pecans.
Soft butter.
Strong coffee.
Unhurried conversation.
Kyle J. Hayes
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