Saturday, February 12, 2011

Cranberry Scones


I made these mini scones for a breakfast at work the other day.  Scones have a bad reputation of being hard, dry, and really unappetizing.  Good scones are flaky and buttery.  They have heavy ingredients like butter and cream in them, but they shouldn't feel heavy.

The trick with these is to use really cold ingredients.  The butter, cream, buttermilk, and eggs should all be straight out of the fridge so they're as cold as possible.  And don't overknead the dough for these or you'll get hard bricks!

I had made the ginger lemon scones that were in the Flour cookbook, but I wanted to make something different this time so I just left out the ginger, added some dried cranberries  and did a lime glaze instead of a lemon one.  You can make these in any size that you want.  I have a set of different sized biscuit cutters, so I made these ones small since I was feeding a bunch of people at work.

Cranberry Scones with Lime Glaze
Adapted from Flour

For the scones:
2 3/4 cups unbleached all purpose flour
1 1/2 tsp baking powder
1/4 tsp baking soda
1/4 tsp kosher salt
1/3 cup sugar
1/2 cup dried cranberries, chopped into small pieces
14 tbsp cold butter, cut into small cubes
1/2 cup cold buttermilk
1/2 cup cold heavy cream
1 cold egg

For the glaze:
1 cup confectioner's sugar
2-3 tbsp lime juice


Instructions:


1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees

2. Mix flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt, sugar, and cranberries until combined with paddle attachment of stand mixer.

3. In a separate bowl, whisk together buttermilk, cream, and egg.  On low speed, pour into flour mixture and mix until just combined, 20-30 seconds.  It's ok if there's some flour in the bottom of the bowl.

4. Turn bowl over onto lightly floured counter surface.  Turn dough over lightly a few times until loose flour is combined.  Don't knead the dough hard, just press the flour in lightly.

5. Press the dough out until it's about 1 inch thick all around.  Use biscuit cutter (3 inch for regular size scones, 1 inch for mini bite size ones) to cut out scones.  Gather dough scrapes together and press out more until all the dough has been used.

6. Bake for 40-45 minutes for large scones, 15-20 minutes for small ones.  Bake until golden brown on top/edges.  Put on wire rack to cool.  Cool completely before putting the glaze on or it will just melt off the top.

7. Mix the confectioner's sugar and lime juice in a small bowl.  Drizzle glaze over tops of the scones.  Let the glaze solidify for a few minutes before eating.

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