| Whole Foods has some very good oatmeal scones in their bakery section. They are a rare treat though - so much sugar. |
That was sticker shock, not flavor. |
English scone = American biscuit English biscuit = American cookie English flapjack = American variation of coffee cake American pancakes (sometimes called flapjacks) = English what? Starbucks scone = hockey puck! |
| Zingermann’s scones are the best I’ve ever had. Enjoy, Sasha Obama. |
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The dry ones are awful. Fresh, moist ones can be good.
Try Reynolds Tavern in Annapolis. |
Village Sweets in Arlington ALEXANDRIA Pastry Shop in Alexandria |
| The King Arthur Blueberry scones are awesome. |
Close. IMHO: English scone = English scone American biscuit = American biscuit. Can be similar to an English scone made without the sugar, but there are a lot of varieties out there that differ mostly in the type of fat used (lard v butter v heavy cream v margarine that all yield very different results) English biscuit = American cookie English flapjack = American quick bread or coffee cake, baked to the height of a brownie. American pancakes (sometimes called flapjacks) = American pancakes. Similar to a crepe that you might make for shrove Tuesday, but thicker. Starbucks scone = hockey puck! Yes! Gross! |
| Cook’s Illustrated cream scones are so worth making. They’re wonderful! I make them at least once a month. More in the fall and winter and always on snow days. |
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Hmmm, I love my homemade cranberry, macadamia nut, white chocolate scones.
I've never had a store bought scone though. I do love me a dry ass stale tasting biscotti with black coffee. |
If you’d share this recipe, we’d be forever grateful. |
| I don't really get British deserts, well, some of them. What is a biscuit? Watched Great British Bake Show, and it is really cookies, I think. With frosting, but they knead it? Why do you knead a cookie? |
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A flapjack in the UK would be called an oat bar in the US.
https://www.bbcgoodfood.com/recipes/1148640/yummy-golden-syrup-flapjacks American cookies are British biscuits are mostly the same. But in the US, the canonical "cookie" is a soft chocolate chip version. When British folks think about making biscuits, they are more likely to think of a crunchy version. Like a gingersnap. And possibly something that you roll out and shape. And of course on Bake-Off they are going the extra mile. You *can* ice a biscuit, but most of us wouldn't bother on a day to day basis. |
Thanks! I like the show, but all the names are so confusing. When they make Viennese cakes and pastries, then I get it! |
+1 we’ve had good luck with ‘sticky fingers’ mixes at home. |