Maria Samms wrote: Peter May - I was wondering if you would post your scone recipe as well?
Hi Maria
I've been making them for so long I don't remember the amount of fat & milk - I put about a pound of flour in a mixing bowls and then just add as much as necessary, but originally I used Delia Smiths recipe so I've dug out the measurements used there
Ingredients
1 pound self-raising flour (roughly 3 x 250ml cups)
3 oz Flora margarine or butter*
1/2 pint milk
handful sultanas
pinch salt
pinch mixed spices or nutmeg (optional)
(* The Flora 'Make your man a Flora man' implying giving ones husband butter an instant coronanry was a great hit in my house with 50% of the adults and that is the only spread allowed and thus I use that. )
Add a pinch salt to the flour (and pinch spices if wanted). Cut the fat into the flour and rub in to breadcrumb consistency.
Add a generous handfull of sultanas, separate any stuck together, and mix through.
Add enough milk to get a dough.
Give it a little knead and roll out on a floured board to about 3/4 inch thick. (if mix is too wet it will take up the flour)
Cut into circles with serrated cutter.
Place on greased baking tray.
Cook in a preheated oven at 220C for 20 minutes till firm on top when pressed.
Split open, butter and jam and eat while hot.
Will freeze well, defrost and warm before eating)
(notes
- when rubbing in lift the flour high and let it fallback to get in the air and lighten the scone
- cook books say not to knead the dough but I found that the leftovers after cutting the rounds that you bring together and roll out again always made higher scones so I always knead now.
- mixed spices are used in making Christmas cakes - its not hot but an aromatic mix of nutmeg cinnamon & etc
- I don't add sugar, the sultanas add sweetness and anyway I'm going to eat the scone with jams which are sweet
- sultanas are a soft dried white seedless grape. If you use currents with pips in them the scone with have hard bits in it.
- the serrated edge seems to help the scones rise, giving the attarctive cracks around them
- I don't add salt in cooking, scones and bread are the only exception as they don't taste right without a small pinch.
scone1.jpg
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