Yesterday my cousin Sarah contacted me via my blog and told me about a recipe she'd tried for scones made with just flour, cream and lemonade. She said that although she'd tried her friend's version which were lovely and light, her attempt hadn't turned out so well. I was so curious about this intriguing recipe I explored the internet and found lots of blogs and websites raving about them. I don't really understand the science behind this recipe (something to do with the cream replacing the fat of butter in normal scones, and the aeration of the bubbles in the lemonade replacing baking powder?) - but science has never been my strong suit and I've always loved the magic of baking - something gooey going into the oven and coming out as a well-risen cake! Anyway, I had to try these lemonade scones for myself.
Wary of Sarah's difficulties, I also found some really good tips on the Internet Chef's website about how to make sure these scones turned out perfectly. Here are ten top tips - I followed them and mine turned out really well. Thank you Sarah!
- Pre-heat the oven before you start mixing – the dough doesn’t like to sit around once it’s made, so this way you can pop the scones straight into the hot oven.
- Pre-heat the baking tray in the pre-heated oven – this will kick-start the raising process.
- Place the oven shelf in the top quarter of the oven – scones like to be in the hottest part of the oven.
- Use fresh self-raising flour that has not passed its use by date – old self-raising flour will have lost some the potency of its raising agents.
- Use the lemonade at room temperature – this will make the dough easier to work with and produce a better dough as it will require less handling.
- Use a palette knife to mix the wet ingredients into the dry – this means you can quickly and gently cut through the ingredients to combine them into a light dough in just 30 seconds, and the less handling the better. Scones like a light gentle touch - overworking the scones when mixing the dough will result in dense, flat scones.
- Use the rolling-pin lightly so as not to knock the delicate dough about too much - using a very gentle touch to roll the dough out lightly will result in a smooth looking attractive scone.
- Roll the dough more thickly than you think - ideally about a thickness of just over an inch - rolling out too thinly will just create thin, flat scones.
- Dust the cutter in flour each time you cut a scone and push don’t twist the cutter – otherwise you just push down on the dough edges causing the scones to rise unevenly.
- Place the scones snuggly touching each other on a small baking tray – this gives them support as they rise.