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| General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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"BabyJane Hudson" wrote in message ... I've always wanted to try one. Are they any good? I saw a pic of one with English Clotted Cream and it sure look good and I imagine with go well with tea, which I am now drinking as opposed to coffee. Anyone have a good and simple recipe or are there good mixes available and if so, which are good and which should be avoided? Here's the recipe I always use. We often have them for lunch. They're great. Apparently the trick is to keep them cool, with out too much handling, and have the oven hot. Scones 2 cups Self Raising Flour 1/4 ts salt 1 Tablespoon butter 3/4 cups milk Rub butter into flour, add milk. Mix to a soft dough. Knead lightly. Roll out to about 1/2 inch thick. Cut into circles. Put onto greased cookie sheet. Glaze with milk. Bake at 230 C (450 F) for 7 - 10 mins. Variation: Cheese scones - use water instead of milk, add 1/2 cup grated cheese, 1/4 ts mustard and 1/4 ts cayenne pepper to flour. You can eat them hot or cold. Hot is usually best with butter and jam or honey. Cold is better with jam and cream. This is the only type of scones I had ever heard of before seeing this newsgroup. They're very popular in Australia as an afternoon tea. Jen |
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