Happy New Year!
Champagnes and sparkling wines from around the world!
Champagnes and sparkling wines from around the world!
Preheat oven to 450 degrees, and fry up some bacon if you're going to use it. Crumble the bacon into very small pieces and plaace in the fridge to chill. Also grate about half a cup of cheddar if you're going to use that.
Mix the dry ingredients in a bowl and cut in the flour. You can use a food processor, but I find for one batch it's not worth the cleanup. Just use your fingers, making sure your hands are cold. Press the flour into the butter, working quickly so the butter doesn't melt. You' want to break the butter up enough to make it look like rolled oats are floating in the flour. You're not trying to get the flour to become completely uniform in consistency; by the time you've done that, the butter will have melted. The idea is to have small chunks of butter no bigger than peas floating throughout the flour. Add cheese and bacon at this point.
Use a large spoon or spatula to stir in the yogurt or buttermilk. Dig to the bottom of the bowl and turn the flour over, cutting through the dough occassionally. Stir as little as possible until the dough barely forms a ball. Less is more here, as you can tell by this photo. The dough is barely holding itself together. That's good.
Dump the dough onto a floured surface and knead no more than 10 times. It might stick a little, but try not to add more than a sprinkle of flour if any.
Press into a 3/4 inch thick rectangle and cut into rounds or squares. I like to just cut the dough into triangles because I don't want to re-roll the dough left over when I cut circles. Every time you re-work dough, the gluten in the dough gets stronger and chewier. Not good for biscuits.
A few more tips: when you cut, whether it's with a knife or a cookie cutter, press straight down into the dough and lift straight up. Don't twist the cutter or drag your knife. Doing so will keep the dough from rising in the oven. Place on an ungreased baking sheet about an inch and a half from each other. The steam from the biscuits help each other to rise, so don't put them too far from each other.
You can freeze the dough on a tray, then put the frozen triangles in an airtight container. I'm not sure how long they'll keep, but I assume at least a month or two. You can put the frozen ones directly in a 400-450 degree toaster oven for about 20 minutes, or until the top of the biscuit is browned and firm.
The tips in this post also apply to making the scones below, so happy eating!
In addition to being salty and cheesy, these scones have very crispy top. Doesn't it look like the batter on a good piece of fried chicken? The crunchiness tastes like I'd put cornmeal in it, even though I hadn't.
Combine flour, baking soda, baking powder, salt, and pepper in a mixing bowl and stir with a whisk. Cut butter in with food processor or hands until the flour looks like a coarse meal. Because this recipe doesn't have as much butter as a biscuit recipe, my flour never quite looked like meal, but it was okay.
Stir in the egg and 2 teaspoons of milk very gently. You want to just combine the ingredients, not beat them together. If you need it, add the final tablespoon of milk. I added a teaspoon at a time and didn't need the last teaspoon (1 tablespoon=3 teaspoons).
Dump the dough onto a floured surface. My dough barely came together. I just slapped it into a rectangle, cut it in half the long way, and then cut each log into small triangles. I ended up with 10 mini scones. Bake in a pre-heated 425 degree oven for 15 minutes and serve immediately. OR...
FREEZING AND RE-HEATING
This is the fun part. You can find a scone recipe anywhere, but it's hard to find opinions about how to make it easy to have fresh scones any time you want. So, for the sake of science, I baked my scones three ways to see what was best.
#1: fresh dough into a pre-heated toaster oven. You never want to put fresh dough in a lukewarm oven, so make sure you give the oven ten minutes or more to heat up. Unsurprisingly, this scone turned out very well and took about 15 minutes to bake.
#2: frozen dough in a cold toaster oven. The next morning, I threw a frozen scone in a cold oven set to 425 degrees. About 20 minutes later (for a very small scone) it was puffed up and ready to go. Just to get it more brown on top, I turned on the broiler for the last two minutes. Success! The perfect thing to throw in the toaster oven when you wake up, and grab to eat on your way out the door.
#3: frozen dough in a pre-heated toaster oven. After I toasted the first one in an oven that started out cold, I put a second one in the hot oven. No big difference, so don't waste your time on this.
The winner: method #2. So now I know I can make a batch of scones, cut them up, freeze them on a tray, and throw them in an airtight container. That way, fresh scones are never more than 20 minutes way. It's like having my own Pillsbury frozen doughs on hand, but better!
Future attempts will include different kinds of cheese, chives, bacon, and/or ham. Any other suggestions?
Here's a close up of the inside of a biscuit. I made square biscuits about an inch and a half across. They're the perfect size for snacking on, but I sacrificed some of the height that make big biscuits so appealing.
I used Mark Bittman's recipe from How to Cook Everything. I'll post details if someone will promise to make it and send me photos!
Add flour and salt, mix, and knead for a minute until glossy and oily rather than sticky.
I found this photo on a craft blog and had thought it was adorable. Coincidentally, I had striped fabric left over from another project, so: