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Serves
8 large scones, 12 round scones
Author Notes
I was trying to make Irish Soda bread with candied orange peel. I gave up on the soda bread when the idea of scones with currants, raisins, candied orange peel, and lemon zest popped into my mind. —Hilarybee
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Ingredients
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2 cups
All Purpose Flour
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1 teaspoon
Baking Powder
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1/2 teaspoon
Baking Soda
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Pinch of Salt
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3 tablespoons
Granulated Sugar, plus more for dusting
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Zest of One Lemon
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1/4 cup
Dried Currants
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1/4 cup
Sultanas (Thompson's Seedless)
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1/2 cup
Candied Orange Peel, finely diced
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8 tablespoons
Butter, chilled
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1
Egg
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1/2 cup
Buttermilk
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1/2 teaspoon
Vanilla
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1/2 teaspoon
Orange Essence
Directions
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Preheat the oven to 350. Soak the sultanas and currants in hot water or hot apple juice. This will plump them, and make them juicy in the scones.
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Whisk together the flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt, sugar, and lemon zest. In a separate bowl, combine the buttermilk, vanilla, orange essence, and egg.
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Cut the butter into the flour mixture, using your fingers or a dough cutter. (I use a cutter). Work the mixture until the butter is about the size of large peas.
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Drain the sultanas and currants very well. Add to the dough.
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Combine the liquid and dry ingredients, stirring gently with a fork or your fingers. The dough will form a very shaggy ball.
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Dump the dough onto a clean work surface. Form into a large circle. You can cut the dough in eighths, making triangular scones. I like to gently roll out the dough and use a biscuit cutter to make 12 round scones (about the size of a hockey puck). Sprinkle with sugar if desired.
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Bake at 350 degrees for 16-18 minutes, until the tops are lightly golden. I try to serve these immediately, but they will keep in an airtight container for up to two days.
Dedicated locavore. I spend my weekends on the back roads (often lost!) looking for the best ingredients Ohio has to offer. I am often accompanied by my husband, Mr. Radar and our dog, Buddy. Born in West Virginia, raised in Michigan, I moved to Ohio for college and have lived there on and off since. I love to meet farmers and local producers. Cooking is an extension of this love.
You can follow my move from government analyst to cottage industrialist and view the food I cook for my personal mad scientist on thistleconfections.com
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