tiny happy

making journal

Scones 1
Scones 2

Confession: I love cheese scones. I don't know how popular they are in other countries, but savoury scones appear in most cafes in NZ, and i'll usually order one to have with my coffee. Plain and date scones are usually on offer as well, and sometimes you find 'savoury' scones filled with random bits of cooked vegetables, which have their place I guess. But I think well-made, plain cheese scones (still slightly warm and spread with some butter) reign supreme.

For a while now I've been trying to perfect my scone-making skills, and that has meant experimenting on the family and my workmates. I'm happy with my current recipe and method, so I thought I'd share it here. If you don't like the idea of cheese in your scones, just omit it, along with the seasonings, and be sure to serve your plain scones with jam and cream.

My idea of the perfect cheese scone is something that's well-cooked but not at all stodgy or dry, well-seasoned and almost flaky in texture, and not too big (it shouldn't be a task to eat). You could cut them into rounds but I just cut the dough into rectangles for ease and speed. It's also important to use really flavoursome cheddar cheese if you can.

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CHEESE SCONES

In a large bowl, sift in 3 cups plain flour, 4 tsp baking powder, 1/2 tsp mustard powder, 1/2 tsp salt, and 1/2 tsp cayenne powder. Crack in some black pepper and mix well.

Cut 75 grams cold butter into cubes. Rub into flour mixture with your fingers or a pastry cutter, until the butter is the consistency of breadcrumbs. You could also use a food processor for this bit.

Line a metal tray with baking paper and preheat the oven to 200 degrees Celcius.

Grate cheese- I use 1 cup of cheddar (usually 'Mainland Tasty' because I love the texture and flavour but you could use any type) and a little parmesan cheese as well if you have it. Stir the grated cheeses into the flour mixture. Then tip in 1 1/4 cup of plain milk. Stir lightly. Tip the dough onto a board and knead lightly (try not to overwork it). Add a little more flour or milk if needed.

Shape into a rounded rectangle (about 1.5 – 2" high). Cut lengthwise, then into 5 pieces width-wise. Top with extra grated cheese.

Transfer to the papered tray then bake for 10-15 minutes, or until just cooked. Cool for a while before slicing in half and buttering.

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Scones 3

 

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22 responses to “scone story”

  1. Susan Hemann Avatar

    yum! be right over

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  2. tinyhappy Avatar

    youd be most welcome, susan!
    m X

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  3. Christy Avatar

    Auntie Gladys an old family friend always offered lovely warm cheese scones with butter and tea on a cold day, or even not so cold, so very good. Also when I was visiting my sister in UK, we had cheese scones served with tomato jam and that was delicious.

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  4. Jeanette Avatar
    Jeanette

    Lovely, will try this recipe Melissa. Great with cuppa for sure. Have a great day. J

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  5. Jeanette Avatar
    Jeanette

    Lovely, will try this recipe Melissa. Great with cuppa for sure. Have a great day. J

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  6. Awfulknitter Avatar

    Mmm, I’m hungry now! I’d add a bit of mustard powder (probably only about a quarter of a teaspoon) to the recipe. I tend to add it to anything involving strong hard cheeses, it does a really good job of highlighting the flavour.

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  7. Sally Avatar
    Sally

    They look great. Just warmed with butter. Yum. I’ve only recently started buying tasty cheese as well as the family block of Edam, and am amazed at how much better cheese rolls, pizza, muffins etc taste.

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  8. tinyhappy Avatar

    thank you sally! yes, flavoursome cheese makes everything better… XX

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  9. Lucinda Bain Avatar

    Looks delicious! 🙂

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  10. Wendy Avatar
    Wendy

    Wow, best cheese scones I’ve seen ! – enjoy.

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  11. susan hall Avatar
    susan hall

    we love them and that recipe is almost exactly he same as mine, and I’ve been making them about 40 years 🙂 I’ve taught my sons to make them too, they like a thin scrape of marmite across the butter on theirs, not me , just best salted. i use strong cheddar in mine and like you a must of cheese on top !
    i made a batch the other day and put the pic on instagram – it looks like plenty of people like cheese scones judging by the response .
    i like your no scone cutter method
    susiestitch1 on instagram

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  12. tinyhappy Avatar

    i love the look of yours, susie! cant go wrong with some proper cheddar and butter 🙂

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  13. tinyhappy Avatar

    thank you, wendy! X

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  14. tinyhappy Avatar

    thanks lucinda!

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  15. tinyhappy Avatar

    thanks for your message, awfulknitter! yes im a mustard powder fan too… i always add it in 🙂

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  16. tinyhappy Avatar

    thank you jeanette! hope you like them 🙂

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  17. tinyhappy Avatar

    that sounds really good christy! love how baking brings back so many memories 🙂

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  18. Ella Avatar

    I’ve never had much luck with the regular cheese scone recipes, so I might give these a try now you’ve done the hard work! I use a recipe that produces quite a different baked good, texture-wise, but very cheesy and definitely not dry (the ultimate transgression).

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  19. Meg Avatar

    Thank you for sharing your recipe, Melissa. I love cheese anything!! Our favourites here are pumpkin scones, which I usually make with leftover pumpkin soup! Meg:)

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  20. tinyhappy Avatar

    thanks ella, i hope these work out for you! i agree that dry scones are a no-no 😉 XX

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  21. tinyhappy Avatar

    that sounds yum, meg!
    X

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  22. muenzeeins Avatar

    mmhh these look delicious! have to try them soon 🙂

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