Paul, I love you I was looking at recipes for all sorts of different scones the other night and had written out how I thought I could make pumpkin ones using our basic scone recipe in the everyday book. Just where I put that conversion though is another matter Now you have done the work for me and I am very grateful. How can you not have a pumpkin scone recipe in an Australian cookbook
http://brazen20au.blogspot.com/2008/05/spiced-sweet-potato-scones.html
I think that would make them less soggy than steaming them. I will give that a try next time. I still have 1/4 of a pumpkin left
Love to have a camera to take a photo of my 'scones' - they look more like a rock cake Paul, I ended up putting 550g flour into the mix as it was sooo soggy and then thought I had better not add anymore so I put them onto the tray with a tablespoon as there was no way I would have been able to cut them like you normally do a scone. Cooked them for 15 minutes, not cooked inside so gave them another 5 minutes. Still a little gluey but wasn't going to cook them any longer as they would have been as heavy as a rock cake. Tried a couple but tasted a bit stodgy. Where did I go wrong? Where's Flo when you need her
possum
Quote from: Paul on June 14, 2009, 04:30:18 amI think that would make them less soggy than steaming them. I will give that a try next time. I still have 1/4 of a pumpkin leftDon't think it makes a difference to sogginess - some recipes (including Stephanie's) say you may need to add some milk.I have made them by steaming in the basket and then butter and sugar creamed before adding the pumpkin (not dried) and blitzing before adding the flour. They work fine - but roasting may give a stronger flavour?Should there be a "Brush tops with milk" ? before placing in oven>