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Baking (rec.food.baking) For bakers, would-be bakers, and fans and consumers of breads, pastries, cakes, pies, cookies, crackers, bagels, and other items commonly found in a bakery. Includes all methods of preparation, both conventional and not. |
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On Fri, 26 Aug 2011 15:50:18 +1000, Richard Bollard
> wrote: >On Thu, 25 Aug 2011 21:02:55 +0100, Mike Lyle > wrote: [...] >> >>But mark the "etc". Aus and other scones may be plain: you use these >>much like bread. And they can be either separate small ones or one >>bigger round marked into triangles (I think an American reader >>mentioned triangles, too). >> >>As I've mentioned before, accidental experience reveals that >>overcooking Brit-type plain scones results in something not at all >>unlike a plain biscuit, so it's easy to understand the AmE usage. > >WIWAL, if we ran out of bread for school lunch, my mother would bake a >"scone loaf", which we would use instead. It wasn't sweetened and used >the same scone dough as normal scones but was loafed instead of >bunned. Yes, that's one of my family memes, too, except that my mother never baked it in a loaf tin. I do it myself sometimes, too: delicious straight out of the oven. There's soda bread, of course... -- Mike. |
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