Favorite Recipe
4 teaspoons baking powder
5 tablespoons unsalted butter
5 tablespoons white sugar
2/3 cup whole milk
1/2 cup currants
1 egg yolk, beaten
Preheat oven to 400 degrees. This is relatively high so watch that they don't burn. Spray cookie sheet with vegetable spray and set aside.
*To keep your scones light and fluffy, sift your flour and baking powder into a bowl.
*Now take your butter and rub it into the flour mixture. Once the mixture resembles bread crumbs, add your sugar.
* Using a spoon, make a small well in the center of your dry ingredients and then add your milk and currents.
*Using fingers, gently kneat everything together to form a soft dough. The trick is to NOT overwork the dough.
*Scoop dough out of bowl and place on a floured surface. I love using the island in my kitchen for this purpose. Gives me lots of room!
*Pat dough out until it is about an inch thick and stamp out your scones with a round cookie cutter. I have more than one size of cookie cutters so I can always grab the smaller ones for myself.
Using a spatula, scoop the unbaked scones and place on cookie sheet. Using a pastry brush, paint the tops of each with a little egg yolk.
*Allow to stand for twenty minutes on the counter before placing into the oven.
*Place the cookie sheet into the oven and bake for about 15 minutes, but do keep your eyes on them as the oven is set a little higher than usual.
*Remove from cookie sheet and allow to cool on a wire rack.
Photo Credit: amazon unless noted
Are you getting hungry??
There is nothing like toasting your scone on a griddle and then simply slathering it with butter!Photo Credit: http://www.apptrav.com/scottish-bakery.html
Great Scones on CafePress
Whipping Up a Batch of Scones
Griddle is a Must
And it always takes a good bowl...
Scones makes the news!
- Scone Pony in Spring Lake is a pastry paradise
- By Peter J. Genovese PHOTO BY PATTI SAPONE/THE STAR-LEDGERTaylor Barry, left, and Bridget O'Neill work in the kitchen at the Scone Pony in Spring Lake. ...
- Say 'hello' to 2010 with the Strolling Scones in Paonia
- The Strolling Scones will be celebrating the fifth anniversary of the group first performing at the Blue Sage Center for the Arts in Paonia. ...
- Hazel, 88, wins cricket medal for scones
- But 68 years later, she has been honoured for her contribution to the game, not for runs scored, but scones baked. Ms Smith, 88, of Reservoir, ...
- Treat your vegetarian guests to tarts and scones
- I'm also looking for a scone recipe. I'd like something different but please no chocolate chips or cran raisins! A: Here is a vegetarian tart from a Bon ...
Drizzled with honey
Sometimes nothing more is needed, especially on a cold winter morning! And don't forget to try different varieties of honey. It is amazing how different they can taste!Photo Credit: wikipedia
How they eat them in England
We were at the War Museum in London, England ( I think... I'm really bad at locales), but I do remember this. I had seen everything that interested me at the museum so I went wandering and ended up in the coffee shop on the main floor. This is what most of the people were eating with their tea. Very civilized those Brits lol...photo credit: wikipedia
This is how my husband likes them...
What is she talking about today??

- shoppingdiva
- aka Shirley Bragg
- 1,556 followers
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- Give kids a stamp pad and watch them become little writers. ( http://bit.ly/8tA1BW )
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- When did Tootsie Rolls get so cloyingly sweet?? Feeling kind of nauseous right about now. That will teach me!
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- at ikea. it's nuts here. one more coffee and then back to shopping
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- Does anyone still use spray on snow for Christmas decorating? Don't know what made me think of it??
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- "Done In Sixty Seconds » Clothing Your Characters" ( http://bit.ly/7guMIx ) a brand new blog at CrabbysBeach ;)
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- "So You Want to Be A Writer" ( http://bit.ly/ndw1P ) how much can you write in sixty seconds?
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- Need more bookshelves... might be in search of an Ikea store today!
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- Okay... it was a whole lot more complicated that I expected. Spent hours trying to figure it out and it's still a no go. Going to bed!
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- Considering yet another project... but I think that this one is going to be a keeper! Details as I figure out where I'm going ;)
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- "So You Want to Be A Writer: Quilt by Fireplace" ( http://bit.ly/53ocHp )
English Dried Fruit Scones...
People are Blogging about Scones... who knew??
- A Pot of Tea and a Biscuit: Traditional Scones
- Well, you get up and bake some scones of course! Happy New Year, everyone! Traditional Scones (makes 12-18) 450gr self-raising flour a pinch of baking powder a generous pinch of salt 50gr caster sugar 110gr unsalted butter, diced ...
- Please Come For Tea And Scones | ireallylikefood
- Maybe it's the English in me or maybe it is the sheer comfort of tea and scones. I think it is both. Afternoon tea in Greenwich, England last week just warmed me to the soul. Scones with clotted cream or whipped cream and jam are ...
- Pirate Penguin's Reads: Scones & Sensibility by Lindsay Eland
- Overall, Lindsay Eland's Scones & Sensibility was a charming, enjoyable read with a main character that's sure to entertain those of the middle-grade audience. (My inner tween certainly liked Polly!) Rating: 4.0 ...
- Epic Fail: Raspberry Scones « Cupcake Cutie's Baking Blog
- I was really excited to try out this scone recipe. I've always loved scones ? I will devour almost any kind ? chocolate, raspberry, blueberry, you name it!! I've been looking out for a good low fat scone recipe. ...
Scones... a little history
Category: File - :Tea and scones.jpg|thumb|250px|Scones with strawberry jam and clotted cream as commonly eaten in a Cream Tea
The scone is a small British quickbread (or cake if recipe includes sugar) of Scottish origin. Scones are especially popular in the United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland and Canada, but are eaten in many other countries. They are usually made of wheat, barley or oatmeal, with baking powder as a leavening agent. The scone is a basic component of the cream tea or Devonshire tea.
The pronunciation of the word across the United Kingdom varies. According to one academic study, two-thirds of the British population pronounce it , rhyming with "con" and "John", with the preference rising to 99% in the Scottish population. The rest pronounce it , rhyming with "cone" and "Joan". British dictionaries usually show the "con" form as the preferred pronunciation, while recognizing that the "cone" form also exists.Wells, J.C. "Pronunciation Preferences in British English: A New Survey". University College London, 1998
The word scone derives perhaps from the Middle Dutch schoonbrood (fine white bread), from schoon (pure, clean) and brood (bread). The Oxford English Dictionary reports that the first mention of the word was in 1513.
The original scone was round and flat, usually the size of a small plate. It was made with unleavened oats and baked on a griddle (or girdle, in the Scots language), then cut into triangle-like quadrants for serving. Today, many would call the large round cake a bannock, and call the quadrants scones. In Scotland, the words are often used interchangeably.
When baking powder became available to the masses, scones began to be the oven-baked, well-leavened items we know today.
Modern scones are widely available in British bakeries, grocery stores, and supermarkets. A 2005 market report estimated the UK scone market to be worth £64m, showing a 9% increase over the previous five years. The increase is partly due to an increasing consumer preference for impulse and convenience foods.
Scones sold commercially are usually round in shape, although some cheaper brands are hexagonal as this shape minimises wasteage of dough. When prepared at home, they take various shapes including triangles, rounds and squares. The baking of scones at home is often closely tied to heritage baking. They tend to be made from family recipes rather than recipe books, since it is often a family member who holds the "best" and most treasured recipe.











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