Sourdough Scones. Help!

Bill44's picture
Bill44

OK this is my second attempt at sourdough scones, the first attempt was a complete disaster, and was my fault, I have a rotten track record as a scone maker believe me.
Now having had personal on-line coaching by Teresa, I managed to get a nice light fluffy dough, remembered to paint the tops with milk and baked them at 220C for 17 min, instructions were 12-15 min.

Now as you will see from the photos I actually got some lift off, but in spite of the cooking time only some of the tops went a little brown, and the centre of the scones is still a little moist.
I have a feeling that I need a hotter temperature, what do you think?

BTW, they taste bloody fantastic.
[img]http://www.sourdough.com.au/gallery/d/4094-1/new_scones+001.jpg[/img]

[img]http://www.sourdough.com.au/gallery/d/4096-1/new_scones+002.jpg[/img]

[img]http://www.sourdough.com.au/gallery/d/4098-1/new_scones+003.jpg[/img]

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Replies

TJ's picture
TJ 2006 July 8

Qahtan,

it may be a regional thing. My mum from the UK midlands and I learnt scones from her.

TeckPoh's picture
TeckPoh 2006 June 30

Afraid I won't be able to offer any suggestions. To make successful scones, I handle it as little as possible, barely nudging the flour into the fats. That way, I get very light scones. So, I can't imagine using starter, which is on the sticky side. Kudos to Teresa and you!

Since you said yours is nice and fluffy, height shouldn't matter, should it? I want scones NOW! With clotted cream and homemade strawberry jam.

qahtan 2006 July 1

Bill why not do them the other way, with out sourdough...qahtan

[img]http://i3.photobucket.com/albums/y58/qahtan/bake/scones.jpg[/img]

Bill44's picture
Bill44 2006 July 1

qatan, if I could do scone like those beauties of yours I would be tempted to forget the starter, but there is one reason I am going to keep trying, taste.
The flavour that the starter gives the scones has to be tasted to really understand, I'm hooked

qahtan 2006 July 1

Thanks Bill.....:-))))
I will have a go at sourdough ones with your Australian starter in a few days.. qahtan

qahtan 2006 July 1

I only have Australian and another that I don't think has a name:-(((

Lets see if I can do them first.:-)) qahtan

COFFIN GIRL's picture
COFFIN GIRL 2006 July 1

Hey Bill, I was the absolute WORST scone maker in Victoria and was shown by a cook named Heather how to make scones with her mums recipe. NO rubbing butter, no milk and using cream. They were the absolute lightest fluffiest scones I have ever eaten. Lift off like a plane!!! Dont know if they would work for sourdough but can send you the cream recipe if interested - gives a different flavour too than the milk ones. Rich and YUM.

Bill44's picture
Bill44 2006 July 1

CoffinGirl, I hold the title in NSW although my wife reckons she does.
Thanks for the offer for the recipe, but I would like to persevere with this one, the sourdough starter gives a unique flavour to them.

qahtan 2006 July 2

the dough
[img]http://i3.photobucket.com/albums/y58/qahtan/new/Picture015.jpg[/img]

Cut ready for oven

[img]http://i3.photobucket.com/albums/y58/qahtan/new/Picture016.jpg[/img]

Baked

[img]http://i3.photobucket.com/albums/y58/qahtan/new/Picture018.jpg[/img]

Although they are not the greatest looking, I will try again, I had jiggled with Teresa'a recipe, I used butter instead of oil, added 2 tabs sugar, only 1/2 teas salt. I rubbed my butter into the flour/ sugar/ baking powder / baking soda/salt, then poured in my water and starter. qahtan

Normbake 2006 July 2

Bill all I can say is I don't think there is enough sugar in the flour maybe try adding some sugar, maybe even some baking powder and use the sourdough starter as a flavour. I don't knead them just a quick mix with a knife
I sift my flour (I use plain flour) about 5 or 6 times and keep the sift up high..
incorparates more air,

Q your scones look my Nana used to make I bet they taste as nice too..
Normbake

qahtan 2006 July 2

Hi Normbake. thanks.
You know I think I prefer them without the sourdough starter, I suppose it's really what you get used to......
qahtan

TJ's picture
TJ 2006 July 5

Hey Guys,

I may not be a bread guru but I am well renown for my scones (especially the cheese, olive and sun-dried tomato ones )

Base scone mix is

Either

2 cups SR flour and 1/2 tsp baking powder or 2 cups plain flour and 4 1/2 tsp baking powder

Shift into bowl

add 1/4 cup castor or raw sugar for sweet, 1/4 tsp of salt and 1/4 tsp of mustard powder for savoury.

Rub through about 2-3 table spoons of soft margarine (cooking or table) until its evenly disributed.

add up to 3/4 of a cup of fillings at this point

break 1 egg and add 1/4 cup of milk to it (mix gently) and add to above mix. Mix with hands until it forms a dense dough... Add up to 1/4 of a cup more milk as required to get a heavy dense dough.

Oven preheated to 230 C. Cut scone mix with cookie cutter. Rub baking tray with marg / butter and flour it. Put scones on and milk the tops. Bake for 10 - 15 mins and put imediately into a tea-towel lined bowl, Cover and leave them for 5 mins.

HTH

Tony

Bill44's picture
Bill44 2006 July 5

Thanks for the advice folks, but I should clarify a few things. My taste is more savoury than sweet so I don't like sugar in scones, also I am trying to make scones that have been flavoured with sourdough. The recipe I'm using does work, it's just that I have to get it to work for me.

TJ's picture
TJ 2006 July 5

[quote="Bill44"]
Thanks for the advice folks, but I should clarify a few things. My taste is more savoury than sweet so I don't like sugar in scones, also I am trying to make scones that have been flavoured with sourdough. The recipe I'm using does work, it's just that I have to get it to work for me.
[/quote]

Thats why I listed Savoury and sweet

The important bit is the add up to 3/4 cup of filling... That can be your sourdough for flavour or anything else. The base 1/4 cup of milk and 1 egg isn't enough liquid for the flour which is why you adjust it afterwards.

The other important bit is that you have your scones on a cooling rack. It is important that scones be put into a cloth lined bowl after cooking. The last 5 mins in there continues them cooking but seems to make them softer through steaming.

qahtan 2006 July 6

Wow you sure do put a lot of baking powder in your scones....
I also make a great variety of scones but never more than 1 teaspoon B/P per cup of flour.

Chopped black olives/ cheese/ and onion are a favourite here, although I made sweet scones yesterday for the grandchildren they love them with home made strawberry jam and gobs of cream on both halves,:-)))
qahtan

SourYumMum's picture
SourYumMum 2006 July 6

[quote]
NO rubbing butter, no milk and using cream.
[/quote]

Hey Coffin Girl,

Post that recipe!

Who started talking about scones ... now I have a craving!

lyndyloo2010 2010 August 8

Hi there Coffin Girl,Would you be able to send me the recipe that Heather gave you ,with her mum's recipe?Sounds delish.

Thanks Lynn

Tania 2010 August 12

Hi Lyn,

 I have not tried sourdough scones, but have baked regular scones for years, so maybe some of this may be of use in your pursuit of sourdough scones. I guess if you are using your starter in place of baking powder, you could make them and try letting rise for a period of time before baking, just like a loaf.  I have learnt from trial and error to handle the dough as little as possible as this ensures a light fluffy scone. When rubbing in the butter to the flour, you want to get as much air as possible into the dough, so I usually grate the cold butter into the flour and use my fingers to incorporate the flour into the butter, often holding my fingers about a foot above the bowl as I do so and letting it fall into the bowl at the stage where the recipe says you want it to look like breadcrumbs. I use a flat bladed knife to work the milk into the butter. I don't use a rolling pin to flatten out the dough for cutting, just pat it out lightly with your hands, again keeping air in the dough. I use a regular drinking glass as my scone cutter, works beautifully every time.  A hot oven for the initial rise about five minutes, then down to a moderately hot oven for the remainder of the time.  Of course, these are just my observations and methods, but I hope they are of help to you.

Best of luck,

Tania

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