Britain's Afternoon Best #2

 It's been a LONG time since the last afternoon tea post (5 months, yikes!) but this is an enjoyable series so it'd rather last well, right? Today, I'm highlighting the famous, classic scone. Scones are basically a pastry that have a crusty exterior and are flaky and soft in the interior. You can imagine them as a lightly sweetened biscuit that you'd normally eat with butter, jam (and tea, of course). Scones are often paired with oats along with flour to make oat scones, which also adds another flavour. They are relatively easy to make, however there are a few steps which, if not followed would result in the creation of baked hockey pucks (literally). I know this is the most stereotypical description of an over kneaded scone, but it's true, trust me.

The most important thing while making scones is to make sure all your ingredients are cold, especially the butter. The butter has to be cold and un-melted and you should be able to see chunks of it in your final dough. The butter is meant to melt in the oven, so that it creates little pockets with air that turns to steam, that forces the layers apart, making soft/ flaky scones. To make sure you have air in the dough to form steam, you have to avoid over mixing the dough, keeping it lose. If you press the dough too hard, you're forcing the air out and so your scones will turn out to be dense (worthy of a rock garden). For shaping/ cutting the dough, you should preferably use something sharp like a bench scraper, again, to avoid overworking it. If you want to be on the real safe side, you can shape your scones, chill them while preheating your oven and then bake.

At first glance, this might seem too much to process, but it's really important to know the "why", just so you know your work is being put to good use! Plus, you'll get a buttery, soft scone!


Tea scones!

Makes 12-16:

  • 2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 1 tbsp. baking powder
  • 2 tbsp. sugar
  • 1/2 tsp. salt
  • A little more than 1/4 cup black raisins
  • 6 tbsp. cold butter
  • 1/2 cup milk
  • 2 eggs

Preheat your oven to 220˚C. Stir the flour, sugar, baking powder and salt. Cut in the butter into the dry ingredients till the mixture turns to coarse crumbs. Beat one egg and add to the mixture along with milk, mixing until the dough is just combined. Knead gently on a lightly floured surface. divide the dough into half using a bench scraper/knife. Roll each part into a ball and pat to form a circle, about 1/2 inch thick. Divide the the circle into sixths or eighths. Place the wedges on an ungreased baking tray. Lightly beat an egg and brush the wedges with it. Bake in the oven for about 15 minutes until golden brown.

Slice in half laterally and spread with butter and jam. Eat fresh out of the oven!



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Tea Traditions
Around the World


POST | KAHWA: KASHMIRI TEA

Let’s talk about tea

Whether it’s a whole ceremony at your home or a reason to argue over who is going to make it on weekend mornings, tea rules: it’s a universal beverage. The big drink.

Whenever I think of afternoon tea, or just tea in general, one of the first things that comes to my mind is a cup of milk tea surrounded by a table loaded with finger sandwiches, biscuits, scones, jam, cream and Victoria sponge cake; British tea. That’s what I think of tea as. But this visual could be different for you. You might think of masala chai from India, matcha tea ceremonies if you’re from Japan, the first time you drank çai on your visit to Turkey, some tea bags or just some soggy tea-drenched toast.

Whatever it is, tea is a huge tradition all over the world, and just like truth, it has different versions: British afternoon tea, Indian milk tea, Burmese laphet and Moroccan mint tea, to name a few.

What are some of your tea traditions?



Food for thought,

by food, for food.


A lot of my friends ask me where I get my ideas from. Many just assume that I’m a culinary genius and I pick ideas from my brain just as someone would go apple-picking. But that’s far from the truth. You do NOT know what other salt has fallen into my failed dishes.

I get all of my ideas from other food: cookbooks, recipes on Instagram and food blogs of chefs and MasterChef contestants (especially Beccy from Canada Season 5, Fred and Nick from US Season 10 and Suu from US Season 11) whom I admired in their seasons. Many of my findings act as a catalyst for new ideas or help me steer existing dishes in the right direction. Sometimes I’d just want to be a normal foodie and try other’s dishes because, well, I’m hungry. In short, food for my new ideas, by other chef’s food for MY food on this blog. Quite the analogy.


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