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Hot off the Griddle: Scones with Cardamom and Honey
Recipe Reviews

2010_01_25-scones2.jpgHaggis will be on the menu for many celebrating Scottish poet Robert Burns today, but we'll be forgoing the offal (blasphemy, we know) for another Scottish favorite: girdle cakes. These stove top scones are quick, charming, and best eaten just out of the pan with a dab of butter and honey.

 
 

2010_01_25-scones.jpgFor Burns Night or any day of the year, we recommend BBC Good Food's recipe for girdle, or griddle, scones. The cakes are lightly sweetened with muscovado sugar and ground cardamom, which adds a subtly fragrant dimension.

Unlike oven-baked scones, these are rolled out very thin (about 1/8 inch) and take just a few minutes to puff up and cook until crispy on the outside and biscuit-like on the inside. The recipe instructs that the pan should be heated to "medium hot." We suggest getting the pan hot, turning the heat down to prevent burning, and then cooking just one wedge first get a feel for the right temperature and timing.

A few other notes on ingredients:
• We used self-raising flour, as called for in the recipe, but you could probably use a combination of flour and baking powder.
• Brown sugar may be substituted for muscovado sugar.
• The last time we made them, we didn't have an egg and substituted flax seed (2 tablespoons ground flax + 1/8 teaspoon baking powder + 3 tablespoons water, whisked together). It worked so well that we'll probably continue to go the flax route, as it added some extra nutrition!

Get the recipe:
Griddle Scones with Honey, from Good Food

Related: Breakfast on the Go: Scones

(Images: Emily Ho)

Tags

Recipe Review, scones, cakes, griddle, Scottish, girdle

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Comments (6)

Mmm. I will have to try this.

the typo in your post was apropos: girdle cakes - what you get when you've eaten too many of these!

posted by frzndaqiri on January 25th 2010 at 4:57pm
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How does substituting flax seed work in place of an egg?

posted by Palmetto on January 25th 2010 at 6:20pm
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@frzndaqiri Actually, they are called girdle cakes in Scotland, as that's the word for griddle. :)

@Palmetto Flax seed works as an emulsifier. It's a little more dense than eggs, but we liked it just fine in this particular recipe. Check out the link above for more information on flax substitution.

posted by Emily Ho on January 25th 2010 at 7:16pm
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yum! I'm a little obsessed with cardamom right now - I finally bought some to make lebkuchen over the holidays, and now I want to put it in everything. can't wait to try these!

posted by leanotprincess on January 25th 2010 at 7:45pm
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any chance of a recipe conversion here?

posted by jenawithonen on January 25th 2010 at 10:20pm
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So hungry, these look delicious!

posted by KitchensPro on January 26th 2010 at 2:00am
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