Award-winning author Molly MacRae writes the Highland
Bookshop Mysteries and the Haunted Yarn Shop Mysteries. Her short stories have
appeared in Alfred Hitchcock Mystery
Magazine since 1990. Learn more about
Molly and her books at her website and blog.
Scones are a perfect food
for cozy mysteries. They’re the ultimate cozy experience when they’re flaky and
buttery and warm from the oven. What more could you ask for on a wintry
afternoon than good smells coming from the kitchen, and then a comfy chair and
a good book, with a scone and a cup of tea at your elbow? But for some, the
whole idea of scones is a mystery.
Maybe because they’ve only ever had those heavy, solid, tasteless, dry-as-hockey
puck things you sometimes find. That’s almost a tragedy.
Scones come in a
variety of shapes and sizes – large, small, round, triangular and, as in the
case of Scottish potato scones, flat as an American pancake. Even the word
scone is a bit of a mystery. Does it rhyme with bone or gone? Here’s a link to The Great Scone Map of the UK and Ireland with an entertaining
discussion of the pronunciation debate.
And here’s the recipe
for the pear ginger scones mentioned (and eaten with relish) in Plaid and Plagiarism, book one in the
Highland Bookshop Mystery series. They’re rich and taste completely decadent,
made sweet (but not overly sweet) by chunks of roasted pear and bits of
crystallized ginger. In book two, Scones
and Scoundrels, orange almond cardamom scones are featured. You’ll find that
recipe when I’m a guest on the Mystery Lovers’ Kitchen blog January
11th.
Pear Ginger Scones
Makes 6 or 8 scones,
depending on how big you want them.
Ingredients:
2 or 3 firmish pears
(about 1 pound), peeled, cored, and cut into 1 inch chunks
1-1/2 cups
all-purpose flour
1/4 cup granulated
sugar
1-1/2 teaspoons
baking powder
1/2 teaspoon ground
ginger
1/2 teaspoon salt
6 tablespoons cold
unsalted butter, cut into small cubes
1/4 cup chopped
crystallized ginger
1/4 cup heavy cream
1 large egg
Heat oven to 375°F.
Line a large baking
sheet with parchment paper. Arrange pear chunks on parchment and roast (no need
to stir) until they feel dry to the touch and look a little browned on the
bottom, about 20 minutes. Slide parchment with pear chunks onto a cooling rack
and cool to lukewarm. Leave oven on. Line baking sheet with another piece of
parchment.
Whisk flour, sugar,
baking powder, ground ginger, and salt together in a large bowl. Add butter
cubes and cut in with a pastry blender until the cubes are about the size of
baby green peas. Stir in cooled pear chunks. Give the mixture three or four
quick mashes with the pastry blender (to break a few of the pear chunks, but
leaving most intact). Stir in crystallized ginger.
In a small bowl, beat
cream and egg. Stir into flour mixture with a fork, just until you can bring
the dough together in a ball. Don’t overmix.
On a well-floured
board, pat dough into a 6-inch circle. Cut either into 6 or 8 wedges. Arrange
wedges, two inches apart, on parchment-lined baking sheet.
Bake scones until
firm and golden, about 30 minutes if you’re making 6, about 22 minutes if
you’re making 8. Transfer to a cooling rack. Serve warm.
Unbaked scones freeze
beautifully and you can put them straight into the oven from the freezer.
They’ll only take a few minutes longer to bake.
Scones and Scoundrels
A Highland Bookshop Mystery, Book 2
The new mystery in
the Highland Bookshop series, bringing together a body outside a pub, a
visiting author determined to find the killer, and a murderously good batch of
scones . . .
Inversgail, on the
west coast of the Scottish Highlands, welcomes home native daughter and
best-selling environmental writer Daphne Wood. Known as the icon of ecology,
Daphne will spend three months as the author in residence for the Inversgail
schools. Janet Marsh and her business partners at Yon Bonnie Books are looking
forward to hosting a gala book signing for her. Daphne, who hasn’t set foot in
Scotland in thirty years, is . . . eccentric. She lives in the Canadian
wilderness, in a cabin she built herself, with only her dog for a companion,
and her people skills have developed a few rough-hewn edges. She and the dog
(which she insists on bringing with her) cause problems for the school, the
library, and the bookshop even before they get to Inversgail. Then, on the misty
night they arrive, a young man—an American who’d spent a night in the B&B
above Yon Bonnie Books—is found dead outside a pub.
Daphne did her
Inversgail homework and knows that Janet and her partners solved a previous
murder. She tries to persuade them to join her in uncovering the killer and the
truth. To prove she’s capable, she starts poking and prying. But investigating
crimes can be murder, and Daphne ends up dead, poisoned by scones from the
tearoom at Yon Bonnie Books. Now, to save the reputation of their business—not
to mention the reputation of their scones—Janet and her partners must solve
both murders. And Daphne’s dog might be able to help them, if only they can get
it to stop howling. . .
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10 comments:
Thanks for the recipe, Molly. I'm thinking apples can be substituted for pears -- or even mixed with them. Best wishes for 2018!
Oh, yum! Scones are my favorite treat, perfect with coffee or tea and a good book. Thanks for the recipe, Molly.
this looks wonderful like the pears and ginger - cant wait to try this.
Apples would be great, Angela, and you can trade the ginger for cheese. Yum! Best wishes for 2018 to you, too.
Hi Pat! Happy New Year, and congratulations on the release of Wishing Caswell Dead. It's a great read!
The pear and ginger combination is amazing, templarlady. I made these scones for Christmas morning. They were a definite hit!
Thanks for having me as your guest, Anastasia, and for letting me spread the joy of freshly baked scones.
Always happy to have you stop by, Molly. Happy New Year!
That recipe looks heavenly--ty! And ty for the book giveaway. legallyblonde1961@yahoo.com
This looks amazing. Thanks
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