By the time my friends came over, I was a sniffly mess. Having all been pregnant and over ambitious themselves a time or three (who can be expected to cook, in the morning, without massive doses of coffee?), they felt my pain. One of them offered to rub my feet while another made the scones, from the beginning. I turned down the kind offer because, as is common in pregnancy, I was so over those effing scones. But they are really good.
Now that the baby is two, I've recovered enough to revisit the scones. The other day, I received an email from Oh! Nuts, offering to send me some of their product. For free. All I had to do in return was use the stuff and consider sharing on my blog. I considered the ethics of such a proposition, got bored and decided to accept. I also warned them, before they sent me free stuff, that I have a tendency to veer into vulgar territory. Knowing myself as I do, I suspected I wouldn't be able to be completely mature about a company called "Oh! Nuts." I was right. Oh! Nuts*. The other day, my free stuff arrived, as promised
Yesterday I made the scones, which also conveniently contain buttermilk, which I had in the fridge and needed to use. I still didn't follow the directions, because they involved too many bowls. This is the real recipe. Here's how I did it.
In the bowl of my beloved Cuisinart, I dumped the following:
- 2 1/4 cups cake flour (not self-rising)
- 1 tablespoon double-acting baking powder
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 3/4 stick (6 tablespoons) cold unsalted butter, cut into bits
- 1/2 cup buttermilk
- 1 large egg
- 3 tablespoons light brown sugar
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 1/2 cup dried sour cherries (with special thanks to Oh! Nuts*.)
Rather than dirty up the counter, I dumped some flour right onto the baking pan and kneaded and shaped the dough there. Have you ever tried to get sticky dough off of a counter? It's not the sort of activity I enjoy.
Then I actually followed instructions and cut the dough circle into eight pieces, using one of my favorite kitchen tools, a Zyliss Pizza Cutter**.
I brushed the top of the scored dough with buttermilk and sprinkled it with sugar. Then I baked it at 400° for 15 to 18 minutes. Just like the directions said. Gold Star!
Then, without even cleaning the food processor, I mixed up a pâte brisée and used it to make a quiche with sliced tomatoes, frozen spinach and all the cheese I had left in the fridge, a combination of mozzarella, Parmesan and St. André. I didn't let the dough chill, because I'm a rebel, but it didn't seem to make a big difference. I didn't par-bake the crust, which I should have done, but it wasn't the end of the world. If you're still reading, thank you for your kind interest. Also, you should know that the scones are really good with orange marmalade.
Namasté, y'all!
*That's what she said. Bwahahahaaaaaaaaaa!
** Available at Mary and Martha's, last I checked.
5 comments:
I am so glad to discover I'm not the only one still saying "that's what she said." Thank you for that.
Those scones look really good. Love the gratuitous product placement. :D With a name like Oh, Nuts!, I had to go visit their site too. See, it worked...
Ha! I love that another reader commented on "that's what she said!". I am going to have to include a link to this foodie post on my blog!
Scones were good. Quiche was out of this world. It must've been the tomatoes -- juicy and tasty. I'm dying here!
Did I mention I'm starving and that looks awesome. Yummmmy!
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