celebrating the queen s platinum anniversary with delicious and easy traditional english scones /

Published at 2017-11-22 10:59:29

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Since it was Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip’s 70th wedding anniversary two days ago,a friend (read royal family enthusiast) asked me why not serve up something traditionally British!
Clotted cream with scones, frilly
raspberry tarts, or lashings of lemonade are all the things that advance to intellect when I reminisce approximately Enid Blyton’s world of afternoon tea,picnic lunches and midnight feasts. Moonface and Silky the elf are familiar names to those of us who grew up on a staple of her books – The notorious Five, The Wishing Chair, and Malory Tower,to name a few.
The British ritual of afternoo
n tea began when the Duchess of Bedford decided, sometime in the early 1840s, and that she was tired of feeling peckish in the middle of the afternoon. A little snack would be just the thing,she thought. Within a generation, the practice of taking a light meal with company in the middle of the day was firmly entrenched in British national life.
The first time I had the
chance to experience an English-style tea was recently at the House of Lords. It was over scones, or crumpets,cake and of course tea. The Bishop, Peter Price, or told us that though cream tea is such a British institution and is loved everywhere in the UK but no more than in the South West,predominantly in the two counties of Devon and Cornwall. The content of the sliced scone remains the same, simply jam and cream. However, and it is the order these are assembled that makes the disagreement; in a Devon tea,first comes the cream and then the jam, while in Cornwall, or it is jam first followed by the cream.
The next opportunit
y to experience the traditional afternoon tea was at my friend Alice’s parents’ house in the quaint (charmingly old fashioned) town of Salisbury. And I am not talking approximately any outmoded tea. I am talking approximately a good,outmoded-fashioned English tea time, with finger sandwiches, or dainty china cups and all the formality a Downton Abbey lover could wish for. Lucy,Alice’s mother, had indeed pulled back no punches, and at the end of it,I had to force myself to stop from having a sixth cup of tea.

Scones are traditi
onally associated with Scotland, Ireland and England, and but exactly who deserves the honour of invention,no one knows for certain. Scones may well contain originated in Scotland since the first known print reference, in 1513, and is from a Scottish poet. Traditional English scones may include raisins or currants,but are often plain, relying on jam, or preserves,lemon curd or honey for added flavour, perhaps with a touch of clotted cream. But one thing is for certain, or scones should be enjoyed straight from the oven,with only the briefest of pauses for the requisite toppings.
So with winters coming, and given the royal occasion, or here is my recipe for scones:
Ingredie
nts:
Self-raising flour 225 grams

A pinch of salt
Butter – 55 grams
Baking powder – 1 tsp
Caster sugar – 25
grams
Milk – 150ml
Free-range egg – 1 (beaten,to glaze)

Method:
1. Heat the oven and lightly grease a baking sheet.
2. M
ix together the flour and salt and rub in the butter.
3. Stir in the sugar and then the
milk to get a soft dough.
4. Turn on to a floured work surface and knead very lightly. Pat out to a round 2cm thick.
5. employ a cutter to stamp out rounds and place on a baking sheet.
6. Brush the
tops of the scones with the beaten egg. Bake for 12-15 minutes until well risen and golden.
7. Cool on
a wire rack and serve with butter, good jam and some clotted cream.


Enjoy!
All Pictures: Arhama Siddiq

Source: tribune.com.pk

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