Showing posts sorted by date for query Scones. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by date for query Scones. Sort by relevance Show all posts
I am a lover of quick breads . . . scones, tea loaves, baking powder biscuits, muffins, corn bread, etc. I just love them. One of the reasons I love them is because they are quick to put together and they freeze really well. If you are making a pot of soup, it really isn't much extra work to put together a savoury muffin or quick bread to go along with it, and they realy turn a simple meal into something very special.
One of my favourite experiences over here is the Cream Tea, and you will find them all over the country. Hot pots of tea (and they can be herbal teas if you wish) served up with flakey fruited scones and butter, along with pots of fruit jam and clotted cream. What a delicious treat this is and such a quintessentially British experience!
Delicious Cherry Granola Breakfast Buns.
A drop type of scone, all short and buttery . . . each crumbly buttery
mound filled with delicious cherry preserves and topped with some
crunchy granola.
Baked until golden brown and then glazed with a
delicious vanilla icing drizzle.
Oh so good! Sweet and savoury at the same time, with some crunch and meltingly buttery goodness.
What's not to like??
Oh, and did I remember to tell you that they are quick as a wink to
make, easy and you can have them on the table in about 20 minutes???
Well . . . You can! Go on . . . what you waiting for??? Your family will thank you for them!
*Cherry Granola Breakfast Buns*
Makes 12
Printable Recipe
Buttery drop scones, filled with cherry preserves and granola crumbles, and then glazed with a delicious vanilla drizzle. Yummo!
280g plain flour (2 cups)
2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp baking soda
1 TBS caster sugar
3/4 tsp salt
8 TBS butter, melted
225ml of cold buttermilk (1 cup)
cherry fruit preserves
1 crisp granola bar crumbled (I used Nature's Valley honey and oat)
to glaze:
2 heaped dessertspoons of icing sugar
milk
vanilla
Preheat the oven to 220*C/425*F/ gas mark 6. Line a baking tray with parchment paper. Set aside.
Whisk together the flour, baking powder, soda, salt and sugar. Stir together the melted butter and cold buttermilk. Stir this into the flour mixture. You should have a somewhat sticky dough of dropping consistency. Drop this mixture by heaped tablespoonful's onto the prepared baking sheet, leaving some space inbetween for spreading. You should get 12 mounds.
Using the back of a wet teaspoon, make a shallow hollow in the centre of each. Drop a scant teaspoon of cherry preserves into each hollow. Sprinkle some of the crumbled granola bar over each.
Bake for about 15 minutes, until browned on the bottoms and golden on the tops. Remove from the oven. Allow them to cool for a few minutes.
Whisk together the icing sugar along with a few drops of milk and vanilla, to make a drizzable consistency glaze. Drizzle over top of the breakfast buns. Serve while still warm. Store any leftovers in an airtight container. Reheat briefly in the microwave before serving. (Not too long as you don't want the jam to get too hot, about 15 to 20 seconds should do the trick.)
These are the perfect thing to bake for your sweetheart (s) this month, don't you think? Bon Appetit!
This content (written and photography) is the sole property of The English Kitchen. Any reposting or misuse is not permitted. If you are reading this elsewhere, please know that it is stolen content and you may report it to me at: mariealicejoan@aol.com
Who does not love a scone? A delicious tiny bread, built just for one. Small indulgences meant to be enjoyed with a hot drink . . . and sometimes cream and jam.
Not me! I adore scones! I can honestly say I have never met a scone that I didn't like!
That is why when I saw these on the Land'O'Lakes site the other day I immediately wanted to go into the kitchen and bake them.
Gingerbread Scones. Just the name is tempting! How much more festive could you get in a scone? The recipe is attributed to the Pioneer Woman.
The dough was a lot wetter than I thought it would be. She mentioned in her recipe that the dough would be crumbly, but mine wasn't. It was quite wet, but I went with the flow and just used a well floured board.
Perhaps it is the difference between British and American flour, I am not sure. If you don't want a wet dough, add the liquid ingredients gradually until you get a dough the consistency of what you are looking for.
These smell heavenly when they are baking. Absolutely heavenly.
I wanted to dive in right away.
But you really need to wait until they are cooled, and then you need to glaze them with that scrumptious cream cheese glaze . . .
And then you need to let that set before you dive in. Trust me. It will be well worth the wait.
Mmmm . . . these are FABULOUS! Really delish! Tender and flakey and oh so filled with flavour!
*Gingerbread Scones*
Makes 8
1/4 tsp each ground nutmeg and ground cardamom
1/2 tsp salt
60ml molasses (1/4 cup)
milk for brushing
demerara sugar for sprinkling (turbinado)
Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/ gas mark 4. Have ready a large baking sheet which you have lined with baking paper.
Bake in the preheated oven for 20 to 24 minutes until nicely poufy and set. Remove from the oven and allow to cool completely.
Whisk together the drizzle ingredients until smooth. Drizzle decoratively over the top of the scones. Allow the drizzle to set before serving. These will keep in an airtight container for several days.
You really need to try these. They are truly wonderful! They will fill your house with lovely Christmasy Festive Smells!! Bon Appetit!
This content (written and photography) is the sole property of The English Kitchen. Any reposting or misuse is not permitted. If you are reading this elsewhere, please know that it is stolen content and you may report it to me at mariealicejoan at aol dot com.
These Quick Drop Danish are fabulously delicious breakfast buns that I have made over and over through the years. I think that the recipe originally came from Bisquick, but I have adapted it to use my own homemade baking mix and it works beautifully that way. (Recipe for both the buns and the mix below)

Are you like me when it comes to anything cinnamon? If it has cinnamon in its title I am immediately salivating. Cinnamon Cookies, Cinnamon Rolls, Cinnamon . . . well, anything . . . I am on it!

Brrrr . . . we have been having a real cold snap of weather this past week and they are saying now we are in for the coldest Winter we have had in a while.

Kinda like a muffin. But not like a muffin . . .
You are going to love these delicious cheese and oat scones. Not only are they very comfortable sitting down next to a hot bowl of soup, but they are equally as comfortable next to a plate of salad, or being slathered with butter and jam!
I thought I better post this recipe before the weather gets too hot to enjoy a bowl of soup. This is a delicious soup we had for supper the other night along with some homemade scones. It went down a real treat on a cool and rainy day!
Nan's Sugar Scones. I think this has to be one of the best, if not the best scone recipe! I adapted this delicious recipe from one in the April issue of Delicious magazine.





These
are delicious! For soft sided scones, place them close together on the
pan, for crisp crusted ones place them on the baking sheet with some
space in between. Adapted from a recipe found in Delicious magazine.
400g self raising flour, plus extra for dusting (3 1/2 cups)
50g caster sugar (1/4 cup)
1 tsp salt
60g cold unsalted butter, cut into bits (1/4 cup)
310ml buttermilk (1 1/3 cup)
the finely grated zest of 2 unwaxed lemons
the juice of one lemon
15 sugar cubes
buttermilk to glaze

Preheat the oven to 230*C/425*F/ gas mark 7. Line a baking sheet with baking paper. Set aside.
Measure
the flour into a bowl. Whisk in the sugar and salt. Drop in the
butter. Rub the butter in with your fingertip until the mixture
resembles fine bread crumbs. Stir in the lemon zest. Add most of the
buttermilk, stirring it in with a round bladed knife. Only add the
remaining buttermilk to give you a soft dough. Turn out onto a floured
surface and knead gently 2 or 3 times. Pat or roll out to 1 inch
thickness.


Place
the lemon juice into a bowl. Working with one sugar cube at a time dip
them into the lemon juice, turning to coat, and then push them down
into the centre of each scone.

Bake for 12 to 15
minutes until they are risen and golden brown. Serve warm or cold, on
the day, with some cream and jam. Delicious!

From the moment I saw it, I knew it was something I wanted to bake. A fairly ordinary buttermilk English scones recipe which have lemon soaked sugar cubes pushed into their centers!
The scone dough is fairly simple. It was quite damp, so if you want scones that look more like baking powder biscuits, don't add all of the liquid. I found it very tacky.
I did not want to add too much extra flour to them, so I just patted them out on a well floured surface and used a well floured cutter to cut them out.
Because the dough was kind of tacky they spread a bit . . . the ones in the magazine were straight up and down.
I actually liked them spread out a bit, and soft sided . . .
The lemon soaked sugar cubes melt and end up tasting sort of like lemon curd. It's like magic really!
I love magic in cooking, don't you?
In the magazine they recommended serving them with cream and jam, but I can tell you, they were positively delicious all on their own.
Even the day after. In fact we found them quite, quite moreish!
*Nan's Sugar Scones*
Makes 15 medium scones
Cut into 2 1/2 inch rounds using a sharp round cutter and
using a sharp tapping up and down motion. Do not twist the cutter and
flour the cutter in between cuts.
Place the scones onto the baking
sheet as desired. Gather the trimmings and re-pat and cut until you
have used up all the dough, and placing them on the baking sheet.
Once you have finished this, brush the
scones with a bit more buttermilk.
Hope you will give them a go and let me know what you think!
Bon Appetit!
Bon Appetit!
This content (written and photography) is the sole property of The English Kitchen. Any reposting or misuse is not permitted. If you are reading this elsewhere, please know that it is stolen content and you may report it to me at mariealicejoan at aol dot com.
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It's a good thing this recipe only makes two scones because if it made any more than that I would be in deep, deep trouble! These are fabulous!
I found the recipe over on a page called Dessert for Two and it looked like it would be something we might enjoy and so I went for it!

On looking a bit closer at the recipe I could see that it was a riff on a delicious scone recipe from Wolfgang Puck, albeit of a much smaller quantity and with a Maple Glaze added.
On looking a bit closer at the recipe I could see that it was a riff on a delicious scone recipe from Wolfgang Puck, albeit of a much smaller quantity and with a Maple Glaze added.
There really IS nothing new under the sun, only new ways of doing things!
I didn't do anything different, I just made them and baked them and then we devoured them.
I have done the hard work of converting the measurements to UK measurements and that is how I made them, using UK measurements, so that I could be sure that they worked, and they did. So that was my addition to the recipe.
You really have to bake these. They are quite simply amazingly fabulous. You can thank me later. ;-)
*Small Batch Maple Glazed Black Pepper Scones*
Makes 2 very large sconesWhisk together the egg yolk and cream. Pour this
over the flour mixture and then mix together with a fork to make a
shaggy type of dough. Don't overmix, but all of the ingredients should
be well incorporated.
Using your hands, divide the dough in half and
shape into two mounds on the baking sheet, leaving plenty of space in
between to spread. (I would leave 4 inches)
Mmmm . . . gorgeous served warm, and pretty damn good served cold. These babies are huge so my husband and I shared one the first day and then had the second one the day after cold. Scrumdiddlyumptious!
Bon Appetit!
I rcently received the most beautiful cookbook for review, entitled Love, Aimee x by noted crafter and blogger, Aimee Twigger, (Twigg Studios) I love her blog. It's gorgeous. And so is this book. I fell in love with it as soon as I saw the cover, and I think you will too.
This is a recipe I got from a Women's Weekly Cookbook entitled "Muffins, Scones and Bread." I like the Women's Weekly books. I have a few of them and the recipes always turn out well and are delicious. These little damper buns are no exception!
Did you make mud pies when you were a little girl? I did. I can remember sitting by the ditch at the end of our garden with my little bowl and spoon and making mud pies.

I still make mud pies, but these days they are quite edible, delicious. In fact, they are stogged full of lovely chunks of milk chocolate, sweet sticky sultanas and crunchy toasted walnuts!






Very
reminiscent of the mud pies of childhood. These are not made of mud
but are delicious drop scones, stogged full of milk chocolate, toasted
walnuts and sultana raisins! Break out the cold milk, these are
scrumptious!
280g of plain flour (2 cups)
90g soft light brown sugar (1/2 cup, firmly packed)
40g sifted cocoa powder (1/3 cup)
2 tsp baking powder
1/4 tsp salt
86g of unsalted butter, chilled (6 TBS)
120ml of milk (1/2 cup)
1 large free range egg
1 tsp vanilla
10 ounces of milk chocolate, broken into bits
75g of sultana raisins (1/2 cup)
55g toasted walnut pieces (1/2 cup)
Icing sugar to dust (optional)
Preheat the oven to 190*C/375*F/ gas mark 5. LIine a large baking sheet with baking paper and butter the paper. Set aside.
Sift
the flour into a bowl along with the cocoa powder and baking powder.
Stir in the salt and brown sugar. Drop in the butter and rub it in
with your fingertips until the mixture resembles coarse crumbs. Beat
together the milk, egg and vanilla. Add all at once to the dry
mixture, stirring to combine. Stir in the chocolate bits, raisins and
nuts. Drop by 1/3 cups, leaving 3 inches in between, onto the prepared
baking sheet.
Bake for 16 to 18 minutes, or
until a skewer inserted into the centre of a scone comes out clean.
Remove to a wire rack and allwo to cool on the baking sheet for five
minutes, before scooping off onto a wire rack to cool. Serve warm or
cool, dusted with icing sugar if desired. Tasty tasty!

Little unappealing lumps of mud and twigs . . . grass and gravel . . . inedible of course to anyone but my imaginary family who really loved them!
I still make mud pies, but these days they are quite edible, delicious. In fact, they are stogged full of lovely chunks of milk chocolate, sweet sticky sultanas and crunchy toasted walnuts!
Deliciousness personified!
They aren't pies really, but a lovely drop scone! So lovely to make and to eat.
I adore scones, and when they are as easy as these are, I love them even more.
Dusted with a sweet drift of icing sugar . . . covering all of their tasty lumps and bumps.
I don't know anything that a light dusting of icing sugar doesn't pretty up. Well, baked goods that it. I doubt it would do much for mac and cheese.
I really wanted to bake something today that wasn't low fat or low sugar. I knew I wouldn't be able eat them myself.
But, then again, I often don't eat what I bake. My husband does or I give it away. I simply get a pleasure out of baking things for others. I do have a tiny taste, but that's all basically.
And my husband . . . well, he is not overly fond of chocolate things. But I really wanted to bake these today.
They were begging me to be baked and so I did. He had one and said it was pretty good as far as chocolate things go . . . I took it as a compliment.
But you know how these things work out. The two Buckley Elders, Singsam and Judd . . . they happened by this afternoon, checking up on me after my experience from yesterday,
So I was able to sit them down with cold glasses of milk and one each of these. And they REALLY enjoyed them.
So much so that they took the remainder of them home with them. I love it when that happens.
*Mud Pies*
Makes 8 or 9
I don't know why, but chocolate things are really difficult to photograph and come out looking tasty, but I did try my best. I hope you'll give them a go!
This content (written and photography) is the sole property of The English Kitchen. Any reposting or misuse is not permitted. If you are reading this elsewhere, please know that it is stolen content and you may report it to me at mariealicejoan at aol dot com.
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