Peach & Vanilla Scones
Ingredients
- 3 1/2 cups (500g) all purpose/plain flour (3 1/2 cups)
- 2 tsp baking powder
- 1/2 cup (100g) caster sugar
- 1/2 cup (125g) butter, cubed
- 3 small fresh peaches, chopped coarsely
- 1 tsp poppyseeds
- 1/2 tsp vanilla extract
- 1 medium free range egg, beaten
- 7 TBS (100ml) whole milk (7 TBS)
- Cream to brush on the tops
- demerara sugar to sprinkle on the tops
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 190*C/375*F/ gas mark 5. Line a baking tray with baking parchment. Set aside.
- Sift the flour into a bowl along with the sugar and baking powder.
- Drop in the butter and rub it in with your fingertips, using a snapping motion, until the mixture resembles bread crumbs. Stir in the chopped peaches and the poppyseeds.
- Whisk together the vanilla, egg and milk. Add to the dry mixture to make a soft dough.
- Tip out onto a lightly floured surface and knead gently. Pat out about 1 1/2 inch thick.
- Stamp out into rounds with a very sharp 3 inch round cutter. Place onto the baking sheet.
- Push any trimmings together and re-pat out to stamp out more rounds if necessary and also place on the baking sheet.
- Brush tops lightly with cream and sprinkle with demerara sugar.
- Bake for 15 to 20 minutes until golden brown.
- Serve slightly warm with clotted or whipped cream and apricot jam. Fabulous!
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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!
A good shortbread cookie should be nice and buttery of course, but never greasy. They should be crisp edged and they should melt in the mouth. These are all that and so much more.
These are lemon flavoured shortbread cookies. There is lemon juice and finely grated lemon zest right in the dough itself, giving you a double blast of lemony tastiness.
Lemon Curd Cookies
Ingredients
- 1 cup (240g) butter, at room temperature
- 2/3 cup (130g) granulated sugar
- 1/2 tsp vanilla extract
- the juice of 1/2 fresh lemon
- the finely grated zest of one lemon
- pinch salt
- 2 cups + 2 TBS (280g +2 TBS) plain all purpose flour
- lemon curd to fill
- 1 cup (130g) icing sugar, sifted
- the juice of 1/2 lemon
Instructions
- Cream the butter, sugar, vanilla, salt, lemon juice and zest together in a bowl until creamy with an electric whisk, scraping down the sides of the bowl periodically. Add the flour in 3 parts until well combined. Cover and chill for 1 hour in the refrigerator.
- Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/ gas mark 4. Line several baking trays with baking paper.
- Shape the chilled dough into 1 inch balls. Place 2 inches apart on the baking sheets. Make an indention in the centre of each, using the end of a wooden spoon. Don't try to push it in too deeply, only about halfway down. I rotate it a tiny bit to make the hole about 1/3 inch in diameter. Fill each hole with heaped 1/4 tsp of lemon curd.
- Bake in the preheated oven for 15 minutes, until puffed and the edges are golden brown. Leave to rest on the trays for a few minutes before removing to a wire rack to finish cooling.
- Whisk the icing sugar and lemon juice for the drizzle icing together until you have a smooth and drizzleable mixture. Flick over the cooled cookies and allow to set. Store any leftovers in an airtight container.
Did you make this recipe?
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!
If you are looking for a mighty fine cake to serve at your teatime table, then this is the one to choose. Pretty and delicious. What more could you want??? Nom! Nom!

Battenburg Cake
Ingredients
- 3/4 cup (175g) butter, softened
- 1 cup minus 2 TBS (175g) caster sugar
- 3 large free range eggs, beaten
- 1 1/4 cups (175g) self raising flour
- a little red food colouring
- 2/3 pound (275g) of natural almond paste (marzipan)
- warmed seedless raspberry jam (about 3 TBS)
- vanilla buttercream icing (about 3 TBS)
- granulated sugar to dust
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 160*C/325*F/ gas mark 3. Butter a 7-inch square cake tin and line with parchment paper.
- Cream the butter together with the sugar until very light and fluffy.
- Add the lightly beaten eggs and the flour, a little at a time, beating until smooth.
- Divide the cake batter in half, placing each half in a different bowl.
- Tint one half with a bit of red food colouring to give you a pink batter.
- Spoon the pink batter into the left hand side of the tin, and the normal colour into the other side. Smooth the top gently.
- Bake in the oven for about 30 to 35 minutes or until firm when lightly pressed in the centre.
- Carefully turn out onto a wire rack to cool completely before proceeding.
- When the cake is completely cool, trim the edges of the cake and then divide it equally into 4 long sections, with two being pink and two being white.
- Using a little of the butter cream and some of the warmed raspberry jam, place one of each colour on the bottom and the remaining two on top. alternating the colours to give you a chequer board pattern and having some butter cream and jam between each. You will not need much, only just enough to make them adhere to the other.
- Dust the counter top with some granulated sugar and then roll out the marzipan on top. You need to roll it thinly into an oblong roughly the length of the cake and large enough to roll around the cake.
- Spread with a thin layer of jam and then place the sponge checkerboard on top. Roll the marzipan around the cake and seal with a bit more jam.
- Trim the edges neatly at each end. Place onto a plate with the "seam" underneath and lightly mark the top in the traditional criss cross pattern.
notes:
Make Your Own Self Raising Flour:
You can make your own self raising flour by adding 1 1/2 tsp of baking powder and 1/4 tsp of salt to every cup of plain flour.
Did you make this recipe?
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!
There is also a simple icing sugar glaze which gets spooned over top of the finished muffins. This is the photograph from the book I got the recipe from.
I am still struggling to find good light for my food photography. In the UK I had a specific place that worked very well for this purpose. Here its a lot more difficult, as the windows in my sister’s house are not really facing in the right direction.
Whisk flour, dry milk powder, baking powder, sugar, and salt in a large bowl until thoroughly combined. Cut shortening into dry ingredients with a pastry cutter, about 1/2 cup at a time, until mixture resembles cornmeal. Store in an air-tight container for up to 3 months.
They refer to these in the cookbook as being muffins. I really think they are more like a cross between a muffin and a biscuit/scone type of pastry.
I would think they are more like the biscuit than the muffin, but you can make your own mind up.
I love recipes with a history and containing a bit of nostalgia. In modern times we have a tendancy to look past these types of things and judge them as being archaic and old fashioned.
Young people today are keen to embrace the new, and I don't blame them. New is good. But I think old is often better. (That is my age speaking I guess!)
It was not always so. I remember gorging myself on some from a neighbours raspberry canes when I was 10 years old. (Very naughty on my part.)
I got a tummy bug combined with being motion sick not too long after the binge. My father was hoovering the seeds from out of the carpeting in the car for years afterwards, and it was a very long time before I could face a raspberry again.
In any case I hope that you will be inspired to want to bake these lush muffins/pastries for your family. I think they are something which everyone will enjoy.
If you are not fond of raspberries I am thinking you could use blackberries or even blueberries! I think toasted flaked almonds would also be very nice baked on top! And if you used almond flavouring in the batter, they would be almost like a Bakewell type of bake! Yum!!
Raspberry Peek-A-Boos

Ingredients
- 1 cup (125g) fresh raspberries, washed and drained
- 4 TBS granulated sugar
- 1 tsp lemon juice
- 1/2 tsp ground nutmeg
- 1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
- 2 cups (240g) original bisquick baking mx
- 1/4 cup (60g) butter softened
- 2/3 cup (160ml) milk
- 1 cup (130g) icing sugar, sifted
- 1/2 tsp vanilla
- pinch salt
- 1 to 2 TBS milk
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 200*C/400*F/ gas mark 6. Butter a 12-cup medium muffin cup really well, or line with paper liners.
- Toss the berries together in a bowl with 2 TBS of the sugar, the lemon juice, nutmeg and cinnamon.
- Combine the bisquick and remaining sugar. Drop in the butter and rub it in with your fingertips to combine. Add the milk all at once, stirring it in just until moistened.
- Spread 1 TBS of the dough into the bottom of each muffin cup. Top each with 1 TBS of the raspberry mixture. Divide the remainder of the dough equally and drop it on top of the raspberry mixture.
- Bake in the preheated oven for 12 to 15 minutes, or until golden brown. Allow to cool in the pan for a few minutes before removing to a wire rack to cool for about 10 minutes.
- Whisk all of the ingredients for the glaze together, adding milk 1 TBS at a time until you have a mixture with a drizzle consistency.
- Drizzle over muffins and allow to set before serving.
Did you make this recipe?
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!



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