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've been cooking and sharing recipes online for about 18 years now. I have shared my love of food and recipes on a variety of sites throughout the years, some of which no longer exist.
I discovered very early during my online journey that people really love food and recipes and that I had plenty to share. My blog in its current form has been going for about 10 years now.
Throughout that time I have shared well over 3000 recipes with you. That's a lot of food and a lot of cooking and a lot of tastiness. I thought it would be fun today to share some of my all time favourites with you!
Perhaps some of them are also yours, or maybe you have missed some. In any case there is sure to be something here for everyone.
Creole Chocolate Cake. This is one that I shared with you back in August of last year on my Birthday. This is my all time favourite chocolate cake for several reasons.
It could be the incredibly moist chocolate sponge, or maybe the date caramel nut filling, combined with that rich whipped cream. Don't get me started on the sour cream chocolate ganache frosting. Its just a winner from the outside in and back out again!
Classic Fruited Scones. I love doing tutorials and this one I did on the classic British fruited scone is on of the favourites that I have done.
These scones always turn out light and flaky and go so wonderful with some clotted cream, jam and of course a nice hot cuppa.
BBQ Bacon Cheeseburger Skillet Macaroni. This was a favourite of ours for many years and many Missionaries have enjoyed eating it at our table. A couple of years ago I decided to add some BBQ Sauce to my old standard and took it from wow to WOWSA!
Bacon, ground beef, cheese and a delicious sauce combined with cooked macaroni for a dinner that everyone is sure to want seconds of.
Baby Gem Salad with a Blue Cheese Vinaigrette. I could eat this every night of the week. Crisp baby lettuces, with a wonderfully tangy vinaigrette, plenty of cheese and sharp spring onion. I could eat this and nothing else, truth be told. It is that good.
Crispy Tortilla Eggs. With crisp cheese filled tortillas on the bottom, a perfectly fried egg on top and some sriarcha sauce, green tabasco and spring onions.
I once ate these three times in one week. Yes, they are that good!
Basic Roast Chicken. Of all the roast chickens, this one is the best in my opinion. Nothing
is more comforting than a delicious dinner of Roast Chicken and
vegetables. Crisp skin on the outside, and succulent, flavourful, tender
and juicy meat on the inside.
This is my way of achieving just that.
Lemon and Garlic bring out the best in chicken. The three just go
together like peas and carrots!
Blackberry Pie Bars. Picture this . . . a buttery shortbread cookie type of base . . .
topped with fresh blackberries . . . topped with a rich sour cream
filling . . . and a final topping of the shortbread mixture, crumbled
this time . . .
Cabbage Soup with Cheese. My goodness but this is tasty. Just perfect for these cooler autumn
nights when one has been out and about in the chill. Makes a sturdy
lunch, and a delicious light supper, especially when accompanied with
some crusty bread or homemade scones!
Canadian Dutchies. These sultana studded glazed and yeast raised Doughnuts are a bit of a Canadian
Institution! Not as hard to make as you might think. You can easily
double and make more.
Cardamom & Coffee Bundt Cake. This beautiful cake is an adaptation of the Perfect Pound Cake recipe found
in Rose Levy Bernbaum's Cake Bible. Its rich, dense and delicious with a
wonderful cardamom batter swirled with a tasty coffee and cocoa swirl.
This is a cake that gets better tasting with each day that passes.
That's only ten for you to be getting on with. There are ever so much more. Just a tiny taste today. Enjoy!
I am a real scone lover. Who doesn't love scones! People have a tendency to think that they are the same thing as baking powder biscuits, but they couldn't be further from the truth!
They are not at all the same thing.
Baking Powder Biscuits are light as air, fluffy and flaky, or at least they should be. If your biscuits are like rocks, I hate to tell you but you're doing something wrong!
They are also on the more savoury side, rather than the sweet.
Scones are sweeter and denser, and much crumblier than biscuits . . . Biscuits tend to use shortening, although some modern versions use butter. Scones always use butter.
The fat in biscuits is cut in until you have a variety of bits, some the size of small peas. In scones, the flour is "rubbed" in until the mixture resembles fine bread crumbs.
So you can see, they really aren't the same at all. Both are beautifully delicious and wonderful in their own unique ways!
Its filled with tasty recipes using some of our favourite autumn ingredients like apples and pumpkin, sweet potatoes and plenty of warm baking spices!
Muffins, cakes, pies, breads, you name it!
I can't believe that it has taken me nineteen years to bake these! Wow! So long and now that I have baked them, I wish that I had baked them earlier!
They are actually called Golden Carrot Spice Scones in the booklet, but I thought Carrot Cake Drop Scones sounded so much tastier and believe me . . . these are plenty tasty!
They are everything a great drop scone should be. Dense, buttery, flavourful . . .
Flecked with sweet bits of carrot and studded with sweet sticky raisins . . .
Lightly flavoured with warm baking spices . . .
Glazed with a sweet and spicy glaze . . .
Altogether, all of these things create a scone that is so purely autumnal and delicious . . .
Put the kettle on and grab your tea pot, coz you are going to want to sit right down with one of these hot out of the oven and enjoy with a nice hot cuppa!
Yield: 8 large scones
Author: Marie Rayner
Carrot Cake Drop Scones
If you want you can shape this into one large round and cut into 8 wedges. I like to just drop them onto the baking sheet, in large dollops. They have lots of character that way and are, as always, delicious no matter what!
ingredients:
For the Scones:
- 280g plain flour (2 cups all purpose)
- 45g sugar (1/4 cup)
- 2 1/2 tsp baking powder
- 1 tsp mixed spice or pumpkin pie spice
- 1/2 tsp salt
- 80g cold butter (1/3 cup)
- 80ml double cream (heavy cream) (1/3 cup)
- 90g finely grated carrot (1 cup, about 1 1/2 medium carrots)
- 45g sultana raisins (1/2 cup golden raisins)
- 1 large free range egg, lightly beaten
For the glaze:
- 65g icing sugar (1/2 cup powdered sugar)
- 2 TBS milk
- 1/8 tsp mixed spice or pumpkin pie spice
instructions:
How to cook Carrot Cake Drop Scones
- Preheat the oven to 200*C/400*F/ gas mark 6. Line a large baking tray with baking paper and set aside.
- Sift the flour into a bowl along with the baking powder and spice. Stir in the salt and sugar. Cut the butter into bits and drop it into the bowl. Rub or cut in until the mixture resembles fine bread crumbs. Stir in the carrots and the raisins. Mix together the cream and egg. Make a well in the dry ingredients and pour the wet into that. Mix together with a fork to make a soft dough that leaves the side of the bowl, adding a bit of milk if it seems too dry. Drop by heaped spoons, 2 inches apart, on the prepared baking sheet.
- Bake for 12 to 15 minutes, until light golden brown.
- While they are baking make the glaze by whisking together all of the ingredients until you have a drizzle icing. Remove the hot scones from the baking sheet to a wire rack and drizzle the glaze over top. Enjoy warm!
Created using The Recipes Generator
The are just wonderful! Not just for tea times either, they go fabulously at an autumnal lunch with the ladies served warm with a tasty salad. Yum Yum!
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 Thanks so much for visiting. Do come again!
My kids grew up on homemade granola and homemade granola bars. When you have five children you learn how to do these things yourself! You can't afford the fancy stuff!
I credit my next door neighbour Mabel for teaching me how to make granola. It was a tasty way to get my children to eat oatmeal. They wouldn't touch it cooked, but if I turned it into granola, they didn't mind eating it at all.
As mom's we all want our kids to eat things that are healthy for them, including their breakfast cereals, and especially their snacks.
I heard on the television yesterday that the government was going to be banning eating food on buses to try to combat childhood obesity. I was like what the heck?
How is that going to combat childhood obesity? I may not be a really smart woman but I don't think banning eating on buses is going to do a heck of a lot for childhood obesity!!
How about making healthy food more affordable? There is something wrong when you can buy a package containing half a dozen fatty sausage rolls in pastry for less than you can a pack of green beans or a bag of apples. But that's just my opinion.
How about encouraging them to get off their butts and out the door to play? Too many children spend all of their time in front of a screen. Playing computer games, or watching television.
We liked watching cartoons when I was a child too, but they were only available at certain times of the day and week. Saturday mornings (so our parents could sleep in I guess) and there was a few programs on after school.
The general rule in our house was unless it was raining, you had to be outside playing. End of story. Otherwise you got stuck doing chores and housework. Trust me, we didn't mind being outdoors.
We didn't get bored either, because if we did, my mom soon found something for us to do and it wasn't going to be anything fun to do! Being bored was not an option!
Anyways, I digress. These granola bars make a nice snack for kids. They are filled with less fat and sugar than ready made ones and are filled with plenty of fibre and protein.
You can skip the white chocolate drizzle if you want to, but I think it adds a nice touch. You can also add nuts to the mix, replacing half the dried fruit with them, which would add even more protein. Delicious any way you choose to do it.
Yield: 16
Author: Marie Rayner
White Chocolate and Cranberry Granola Bars
Making your own granola bars is not that hard and they taste far superior to those you can buy. I like that I can control what is in them.
ingredients:
For the bars:
- 240g old fashioned large flake Oatmeal (3 cups)
- 2 TBS butter
- 2 TBS soft light brown sugar, packed
- 2 TBS pure maple syrup
- 85g liquid honey (1/4 cup)
- 1 tsp pure vanilla extract
- 1/2 tsp salt (optional)
- 1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
- 1/4 tsp ground nutmeg
- 1/4 tsp ground cardamom
- 115g dried cranberries (3/4 cup)
- 90g white chocolate chips (1/2 cup)
- 35g mixed sunflower and pumpkin seeds (1/4 cup)
You will also need:
- 75g white chocolate (3 ounces)
instructions:
How to cook White Chocolate and Cranberry Granola Bars
- Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/ gas mark 4. Spread the oats onto two baking trays. Toast them in the preheated oven for 15 minutes, stirring them several times, until they are light golden brown and smell toasty.
- Like a 9 inch square pan with some waxed paper or parchment paper. Set aside.
- Melt the butter in a large saucepan on the stove. Add the brown sugar, maple syrup and honey. Cook, stirring until the sugar is melted and everything is amalgamated. Whisk in the vanilla, salt, cinnamon, nutmeg and cardamon. Stir in the toasted oats and combine well. Let cool completely. Stir in the chocolate chips, cranberries and seeds. Mix well together and then press into the lined pan. Place another sheet of wax paper or parchment paper on top and compress the mixture really well, until it is of an even thickness all over. Cover and place in the refrigerator overnight.
- The next morning, flip them carefully out onto a cutting board and peel off any paper. Cut into quarters with a sharp knife and then cut each quarter into 4 to give you 16 bars. Place them onto a wire rack placed over top of some wax or parchment paper. Break your white chocolate into squares and put into a microwave safe bowl. Melt in the microwave according to package directions. Using a spoon flick the melted chocolate over top of the granola bars. Leave to set before storing in an airtight container. These will keep for about a weeks or so, or you can freeze them tightly covered for longer.
Created using The Recipes Generator
If you are not a fan of white chocolate you can use dark chocolate and semi sweet chocolate chips. I just happen to think that white chocolate goes very well with dried cranberries and pumpkin seeds. These also make for a great breakfast on the go. Just sayin!
Up tomorrow: Carrot Cake Drop Scones
I love this time of year when the hedgerows are beginning to fill up with wild blackberries. We grow our own in our garden as well.
This is the perfect time of year to make beautiful jams and baked treats with all of the bounty. Cooking apples are coming into their own as well. Combining the two into a fabulously tasty jam just makes sense.
We grow some really lovely cooking apples here in the UK. They are called Bramley Apples and they are the UK's favourite cooking apple.
Large, flattish, green in appearance, sometimes with a bit of a red flush, its flesh is white, juicy and quite acidic which makes them perfect for cooking with.
They turn into a frothy pulp when cooked, which makes them perfect for pies, cakes, applesauce and jams.
I think nature is so wonderful. Ofttimes you will find that fruits and vegetables which naturally have a great flavour affinity for being combined with each other happen to ripen at the same time.
I only made half the recipe today as there are only two of us in this house and one of us isn't supposed to eat jam. I also have to apologise for my lack of jars.
I have found myself in the unfortunate position of not having any empty jars, so a leftover takeaway tray has had to suffice.
I know you will forgive me for such a poor presentation, especially if you make this jam and then taste how delicious it is!
Oh, I had great plans in my head for how I was going to show this to you, but alas . . . even the best of plans go astray!
Don't let my failing in presentation put you off from making this delicious jam! It truly is fabulous, and such an easy make.
Just equal quantities of cooking apple and blackberries. Make sure you pick and clean the blackberries well. If you are using wild ones, soak them for a bit in salt water to draw any worms and grubs out.
Just fill a large bowl with tepid water and add two heaped TBS of salt. Carefully dump in the berries and then let them sit for about 10 minutes or so. Swish them around for a bit to draw out any stubborn ones.
The grubs will die and float to the top. You may not find any, but it is worth the extra effort to flush them out.
Discard any debris or grubs, drain the berries and then continue with the recipe. You will want to do this about an hour prior to starting your jam.
Jam sugar is a type of sugar which has had pectin added to it to aid in the quick setting up of jams and the preservation of their colour.
I believe in North America it is called Gelling Sugar. Essentially it is sugar with pectin and citric acid added.
Without it you would have to boil your fruit for a much longer time in order for it to set properly. It is doable, but using jam sugar shortens the cook time immensely, and ensures a perfect finish.
As you can see this is lovely and thick, and my husband says it is really delicious!
I had huge plans to bake some fresh scones to showcase it as well, but I spent most of today upgrading my phone so you will have to make do with buttered toast . . .
I actually made the jam yesterday . . . it is lovely and thick today . . .
Perfect. Not too sweet and just a bit tart from the cooking apples . . .
Toast and jam is one of my favourite things, or at least it used to be before I became a Diabetic. Now it is just a delicious dream, and a once in a blue moon tiny taste.
Apple & Blackberry Jam
Yield: Makes 6 (1 cup/240ml) jars
Author: Marie Rayner
This is the best time of the year for making this delicious jam. with local cooking apples ready for the picking and the hedgerows filling up with wild blackberries. Its a lovely time of year.
ingredients:
- 500g fresh blackberries (a generous pound)
- 500g cooking apples, peeled, cored and cut into chunks (a generous pound)
- 100ml water (3 1/2 ounces)
- the juice of one small lemon
- 1 KG jam sugar (5 1/4 cups)
instructions:
How to cook Apple & Blackberry Jam
- Put the blackberries, apples, water and lemon juice into a large saucepan or preserving kettle over medium heat. Bring to the boil. Reduce to a simmer and cook for 10 minutes, then add the sugar. Bring back to the boil and then boil, stirring for 10 minutes, until the sugar is well dissolved and the jam holds its shape when spooned onto a cold plate. Spoon into clean and sterile jars and seal according to the manufacturers instructions. Store in a cool dark place. Refrigerate once opened.
Created using The Recipes Generator
I've been meaning to ask you. What do you think of me letting you know on Sundays about my planned recipes for the week?
I thought that if I did that then you could make sure you had in the main ingredients you might need to make them. Or would you rather it be a big surprise?
It also helps me in the planning of my week as well. Do tell as I really value your opinion. This page is as much yours as it is mine!
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