Did I elaborate on that scone recipe, the one mentioned in My Fan Club? I should have. The Scone Episode is classic Playing With Food.
When I lived in Seattle, I visited Larrys Market at least once a week, on Sundays, and, if I was working in Bellevue, more often. I fell in love with many of their baked and deli goods. Larrys Pumpkin Cranberry Muffins, for instance. Larrys Curried Rice, which was wonderful with a little shredded chicken, warmed in the oven on a bleak February day. Larrys Cranberry Scones.
Larrys Cranberry Scones are the only reason I like scones. Id never tried scones before, being only a recent and reluctant bisquit fan. I couldnt see any more sense to sweet bisquits than to bisquit-bisquits. I tried a (rather large) free sample, though, one morning, and went home with four scones for the next four mornings.
These scones were so peculiarly good that I decided to crack the recipe code. The next Sunday morning I bought a pre-packaged set of scones that had been baked the previous day. It had a list of ingredients on it. I wasnt expecting a recipe, but I was expecting to find out what the secret was to Larrys scones.
I found it, toward the end of the list. Grated orange peel. Thats right; and a listing of baking soda and baking powder that put it further down on the list than I would have thought wise (Ingredients on packaged products are typically listed in descending order of their percentage of the whole.).
Since Id never dealt with scone recipes at length, I scouted for a base recipe to work from that featured traditional ingredients and richness (cream instead of milk, for example; no substitution of fruit pulp for fat). I found a likely candidate in a Sunset Bread Book someone had given me for Christmas years ago. Then, I started to play. I added grated orange peel, of course, fresh off the rind, and dried cranberries. I cut back on the baking powder/soda but increased the amount of sugar. This is the scone recipe I came up with:
| Dry Ingredients: 1 3/4 cups white flour 1/4 cup whole wheat flour 2 tsp baking powder 1/3 cup sugar 1/4 tsp salt |
Wet Ingredients: 4 Tbl margarine 2 eggs, beaten 1/3 cup whipping cream 3 Tbl grated orange peel 2 handfuls dried cranberies |
I nailed these delicious breakfast bisquits on the first try. I became famous for them in Seattle. My boss expected scones whenever I visited the home office. I even negotiated job terms with scones.
Several friends of mine tried the recipe. Donna made them with non-fat milk and was pleased with the results. I experimented with adding more wheat flour and discovered that the scones became grainy if I raised the ratio of wheat to white over 25% per batch. I also tried inserting chopped Turkish apricots and finely ground pecans. Those went over well at Rittenhouse, Zeman and Associates.
What else might you find in the list of ingredients for any particular item?
The ideas you can get from the ingredients lists on processed foods for tweaking recipes are endless. Pay attention to what you like. Follow your likes around the side to the list of ingredients. Figure out what (besides the chemicals) it is that youre tasting. Try it, the next time you prepare the food from scratch.
What finally happened between Larrys and me? I continued buying their Curried Rice, until they changed it (they added what was clearly canned chicken and some creamy, disgusting sauce base) and then discontinued it. Although I liked the emotional resonance of buying Cranberry Scones at Larrys, I eventually supplied all my own scones. Larrys increased the fat content to where the scones were downright greasy. I couldnt handle that. Fortunately, due to a life time of playing with food, I dont have to.
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