Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Scones. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Scones. Sort by date Show all posts
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!
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.
I didn't really know all that much about sugar before I moved over here, except that there was white sugar and brown sugar. That just shows you how ignorant I was, really . . .
Since coming to the UK, I have discovered that there are a whole plethoria of sugars out there . . . granulated sugar, which is the sugar I grew up with, both dark and light brown soft sugars (the light being what I grew up with as well).
There is jam sugar (a sugar with the pectin already added to make jam), caster sugar (a fine white sugar used for baking), Icing sugar (Also one I was familiar with) light brown and dark brown muscovado sugars (a sugar that has a higher molasses content and is less refined than regular brown sugars), demerara sugar (highly granular and wonderful in hot drinks and to add a bit of a crunch to your baking), Amber sugar crystals for use in coffee and decoration, etc. That is just to name a few!
I fell in love with the Tate & Lyle brand of sugars when I first came over here. Taste and Smile Not that sugar isn't just . . . well . . . sugar, cos it is . . . but their packaging is the best in my opinion.
It keeps the sugar fresh and their brown and muscovado sugars don't harden like they do in the packaging of some other brands.
They are also the only sugar company in the UK that are committed to having their entire range of sugars Fairtrade, which means that when you buy a bag of Tate & Lyle, you are helping to support smallholding farmers in the world.
That can't be bad. I like to try use fairtrade products wherever possible in every avenue of my life.
They also have a scrummy Facebook page you can join: We Love Baking Tis chock full of people who love to bake, like you and me!! It's a great place to show off your cakes and bakes and recipes!
They contacted me the other day and asked me if I would write a little piece about them and I was more than happy to do so.
I believe in their products and in their ideology . . . and their products are something that I use regularly and that I enjoy (especially the golden syrup!!).
Of course it would not be a proper sugar post unless I showed you something that I had made with their sugars. This scrumptious recipe showcases not one . . . not two . . . but three of their sugars!
The jam sugar, which I used in making my own strawberry jam last year. Castor sugar, which is incorporated into that scrummy buttery scone dough, and finally . . . their icing sugar, which is used in the lemon drizzle icing.
I am fairly certain that when you bite into one of these you will be in scone heaven. The dough is buttery and short, with just the faintest hint of mint throughout.
The strawberry jam is like a sweet surprise in the centre and that lemon drizzle, well . . . it's just the perfect capper!
I bet you can't eat just one! I dare you to try! These are scones . . . but not as you know them. mmmmm . . . so delicious!
I bet you can't eat just one! I dare you to try! These are scones . . . but not as you know them. mmmmm . . . so delicious!
*Strawberry and Mint Scones*
Makes about 14
Printable Recipe
You will find it hard to stop at eating one of these. They are so scrummy. Buttery . . . jammy and the lemon drizzle on top is just the perfect finishing touch.
280g plain flour (2 cups)
110g caster sugar (1/2 cup)
2 tsp baking powder
1 TBS finely chopped fresh mint leaves
1/4 tsp salt
6 TBS unsalted butter, cut into small cubes
225ml double cream (1 cup)
strawberry jam (homemade or store bought)
For the drizzle:
450g icing sugar, sifted (2 cups)
the juice of 1 large lemon
water as needed
Preheat the oven to 190*C/375*F/Gas Mark 5. Line two baking sheets with parchment paper and set aside.
Sift the flour into a bowl. Whisk in the baking powder and the sugar. Rub in the butter with your fingertips until the mixture resembles fine bread crumbs. Stir in the mint leaves. Add the cream, stirring it in with a fork and mixing it in until the mixture forms a soft dough. Knead several times to really bring it all together and then turn the dough out onto a lightly floured surface. Roll the dough out until it is about 1/2 inch thick. Cut out with a sharp heart shaped metal cookie cutter that is about 3 inches across at it's widest point. Place onto the prepared baking sheets, leaving a good two inches between each. Reroll any scraps and cut out more hearts until you have used all the dough.
Gently make an indentation into the centre of each heart using the back of a teaspoon or one of your fingers. Spoon a heaped half teaspoon of strawberry jam into the middle of each indentation. Place into the heated oven and bake for 20 to 25 minutes, or until the edges are golden brown. Remove from the oven and let sit for 5 minutes before removing the scones to a wire rack to finish cooling completely.
Mix together all the glaze ingredients in a medium sized bowl, mixing them until smooth and only adding enough water to give you a drizzeable consistency. Using a teaspoon, drizzle the lemon drizzle diagonally across the cooled scones. Let set for about 30 minutes before serving. Delicious!
I like to think of scones as the delicious, and slightly more sophisticated, ancestor of the North American Baking Powder Biscuit. After all the English have been making scones ever since the 16th century and . . . well . . . America was still pretty much a wilderness at that point.
Although they may have a somewhat similar appearance, the two are actually quite different.
Scones are much taller and lighter in texture, and somewhat sweeter. A true scone, in fact, should look a bit craggy! Kind of like an elderly Great Uncle . . .
Scones generally use less fat and the fat used is rarely chilled, meaning that the consistency of the rubbed flour is more crumbly than mealy, quite unlike their biscuit counterpart . . .
Hot from the oven, Scones are one of the most delicious breads invented by mankind. Served split and buttered and spread with cold preserves, there is no finer teatime treat on earth.
I like to think of these tasty Date and Lemon Scones as the ultimate Tea Scone . . . Rich and chock full of lovely bits of date . . . with the merest hint of lemon in their fragrance and just a whisper of it in their flavour . . .
I wanted to serve them with some lemon curd, but didn't have any to hand . . . Greengage Preserves had to do in it's place.
We were not disappointed.
*Date and Lemon Scones*
Makes about 12
Printable Recipe
Silky soft and rich, these scones are studded with dates and a delightful whisper of lemon.
100ml of double cream
2 large free range eggs
2 TBS fresh lemon juice
1 TBS freshly grated lemon rind (I always use unwaxed lemons)
245g of plain flour (1 3/4 cups)
2 TBS caster sugar
3 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
85g of finely chopped pitted dates (1/2 cup)
Preheat the oven to 220*C/425*F/ gas mark 7. Butter a baking sheet and set aside.
Whisk the cream and eggs together in a small bowl. Remove and reserve 1 TBS of the mixture for later. Whisk iin the lemon juice and the lemon zest.
Sift the flour into a bowl and whisk in the baking powder, sugar and salt. Stir in the dates and add the liquid mixture all at once, stirring only until a soft dough forms.
Tip out onto a floured surface and knead lightly about 8 times. Pat out about 3/4 of an inch thick. Cut into rounds with a 2 1/2 inch cutter, giving the cutter a sharp tap in an up and down motion. Do not twist the cutter or you will have lopsided scones. Pat the scraps together and cut out more rounds. Arrange the rounds on the baking sheet leaving about 1/2 inch between them. Brush the tops with the reserved cream mixture, making sure that none drips down the sides.
Bake in the centre of the oven for 15 minutes until golden brown.
Serve warm with butter and or preserves if desired.
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!
I'm always on the lookout for a new scone recipe. We do love our scones in this house, to say the least.
They make a nice snack for supper in the evening with a hot drink whilst watching a bit of something on the telly . . . I always keep some done up in the freezer, just waiting for that unexpected company to drop in . . .
We quite often have them on Sunday afternoons. I don't really do a big Sunday Lunch these days, not with church and all . . . we just have what I can rustle up when we get in from church and then I bake us a treat for later on . . . like scones.
This recipe comes from the Australian Women's Weekly Afternoon Tea book. I love the Australian Women's weekly books. They always have nice recipes in them.
I have been wanting to make these for a while now and finally got around to it today. The raisins are my own addition, as is the candied ginger on top. In truth, I don't think I would go to the trouble of adding the raisins again . . . they didn't really add much. The ginger on top though is great! The scones are light and crumbly and that lemon glaze is just the ticket!
They went down a real treat with some hot lemon and ginger tea. A real treat! So good in fact that I might have another one when I get off of here.
Don't they say feed a fever, starve a cold? Or is it the other way around. Me? I'm not taking any chances. I'm not starving anything! (just in case.)
*Gingerbread Scones with a Lemon Glaze*
Makes about 16
Printable RecipeDelicious scones, with a tender crumb, and a bit of a snap! The raisins are optional. So is the chopped candied ginger on top. Fabulous!
1 ounce butter, softened
55g of soft light brown sugar (1/4 cup, firmly packed)
1 large free range egg yolk
375g self raising flour (2 1/2 cups)
3 tsp ground ginger
1 1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
1/4 tsp ground cloves
250ml of buttermilk (1 cup)
2 TBS treacle or golden syrup (can use molasses)
a handful of raisins (optional)
Additional buttermilk for tops
For the Lemon Glaze:
160g icing sugar, sifted (1 cup)
1/2 ounce of butter, melted
1 TBS fresh lemon juice (more if needed)
To decorate some chopped candied ginger or lemon zest(optional)
Preheat the oven to 220*C.425*F/ gas mark 7. Butter a 9 inch square cake tin. Set aside.
Cream together the butter, brown sugar and egg yolk until light and fluffy, in a large bowl. Sift the dry ingredients together. Mix together the buttermilk and the syrup. Add the dry ingredients to the creamed ,mixture along with the buttermilk mixture. Use a knife to cut the buttermilk mixture through the flour to make a soft and sticky dough. (If using raisins add them now.) Turn out onto a lightly floured surface and knead lightly until smooth. Pat out into a 3/4 inch thick round. Cut with a sharp round 2 inch cutter, tapping straight down and up. Place the rounds into the baking pan, just barely touching. Gently knead the scraps and repeat until all are used. Brush the scones with some additonal buttermilk.
Bake for about 20 minutes, until risen and golden brown. Remove from the oven and allow to cool for 10 minutes before proceeding.
Whisk together the ingredients for the lemon glaze until you have a smooth drizzable icing. You may need more lemon juice to give you the right consistency. Spoon this glaze over the warm scones and decorate the tops with some candied ginger or lemon zest.
These scones are best made on the day of serving, although they can be rozen for up to 3 months, unglazed. Thaw in an oven, wrapped in foil, before glazing.
Cooking in The Cottage today, some delicious Stuffed French Toast.
Is it scon that rhymes with on, or is it scone that rhymes with stone??
Who knows. It sounds mightly delicious no matter which way you say it. If asked what the difference between a scone and a North American baking powder biscuit is, I would have to say first and foremost, it is in the preparation. In a baking powder biscuit the fat is cut into the flour using a pastry blender, or two round bladed knives. In a scone the fat is gently rubbed into the mixture with your fingertips, lifting the mixture high up and dropping it back into the bowl as you rub, in order to help incorporate some air to the mix.
Baking powder biscuits generally use all vegetable fat, and sometimes cream . . . scones usually use all butter, and sometimes butter and cream.
In both instances, it is wise not to overhandle the dough, lest you end up with tough scones or biscuits.
Baking powder biscuits are a bit heavier in texture and more savoury than scones . . . most scones are light and sweet . . . and go just perfectly with a nice hot cuppa and lashings of preserves and clotted cream, whereas baking powder biscuits are at their most perfect when served with hot soups and stews.
When cutting press the cutter straight down onto the scone dough and then lift it straight up without twisting. This gives you nice straight edges and they bake up straight as well. Twisting when you cut means you end up with lopsides scones.
Delicious, no matter how you cut them . . . no pun intended.
A plate of these, split and buttered alongside of a bowl of clotted cream and a jar of strawberry preserves and I am in heaven. This . . . is . . . bliss.
Damn . . . I forgot to buy the clotted cream . . .
No matter . . .
*Sultana Scones*
Makes about 14
Printable Recipe
Making good scones is easy as long as you don't overhandle the dough. Tender and moist, wrap them in a clean tea towel after baking to help to keep them that way. Served warm with lots of butter and preserves, these are wonderfully delicious . . .
8 ounces self raising flour
1 tsp baking powder
2 ounces softened butter
1 ounce caster sugar
2 ounces sultanas
1 large egg
milk
Pre-heat the oven to 220*C/425*F. Line two baking trays with baking parchment and set aside.
Measure the flour and baking powder into a large bowl. Add the butter and rub it into the flour mixture with the tips of your fingers, until the mixture closely resembles fine breadcrumbs. Stir in the sugar and the sultanas.
Beat the egg together with enough milk to make a total of 150 ml of liquid. Stir this mixture into the flour mixture to make a soft, but not sticky dough. You don't want it to be too dry, or too sticky.
Turn out onto a lightly floured board. Knead lightly a few times, then pat out to 1/2 inch thickness. Cut into rounds with a 2 inch cutter, then place them onto the prepared baking trays. Brush the tops with a little milk.
Bake for about 10 minutes, until golden brown and nicely risen. Lift onto a wire rack to cool and then wrap in a clean tea towel to serve. Delicious!
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