A history of the potato scone, including a recipe for making your own | Scotsman Food and Drink (2024)

Potato scones are dearly loved by anyone who has grown up eating them in Scotland.

A weekend treat, they are closely associated with a good breakfast – either fried and ­sandwiched inside a morning roll with a square sausage, or as part of a full Scottish breakfast alongside the usual ­suspects of sausage, bacon, egg and black pudding.

The vast majority of potato scones are shop bought, so heating them up usually involves frying them, which makes them beautifully crispy; ­others toast them and some even put them under the grill.

However, the shop-bought variety is hugely different to those that are home made. The shop-bought variety tend to be rather stiff and salty, whereas hot potato scones made fresh arefluffy and soft.

In Scotland, the invention of ­potato scones was inevitable, combining the love for this ubiquitous tuber and the common use of the girdle to make one of the many varieties of ­flatbreads that occur in Scottish cookery’s rich history.

A history of the potato scone, including a recipe for making your own | Scotsman Food and Drink (1)

A Scottish Girdle. Picture: Pinterest

In her bookRecipes from Scotland(1947), F. Marian McNeill explains: "In cottage homes,these scones are usually made just after the midday meal when the left-over potatoes arestill warm."

A history of the potato scone, including a recipe for making your own | Scotsman Food and Drink (2)

Freshly made potato scones. Picture: Fraser Wright

These would be a treat to have with a strong cup of tea, where butter would have been spread on the ­potato scone when still hot and rolled up as you would when eating a ­Scottish crumpet.

Lady Clark of Tillypronie, who was renowned for her vast ­collection of recipes, wrote describing how good homemade, hot and fresh ­potato scones can really be – turning the most elemental and ­simple of baked goods into something ­special – after she was served them at ­Balcaskie House in 1880:"Looking like very thin pancakes well browned, but soft, not crisp, and come up warm, in awarm napkin folded like a pocket to hold chestnuts. Scones to be triangular shaped, i.e. around, cut in quarters.

"If you wish these scones to be good and light, you must boil the potatoes expressly for themand not let them get cold after boiling, but use as soon as passed through a sieve. Addbutter, flour, and salt, but no milk, as the moisture of the potatoes is sufficient. Mix upthoroughly; roll out; shape, cut, and bake on the girdle. Turn them once, to cook both sides."

There is a misconception that potato scones are something made with leftover mashedpotato, which is just wrong, as cold mashed potato has a completely different texture to hotpotatoes, and would produce something quite different.

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To have soft and floppy potatoscones you need to use hot, or warm at least, potatoes.

Potato scones are so simple, and so cheap to make so it is worth having a go if you have abit of spare time at the weekend. And of course, they reheat extremely well if you want tohave them fried.

The texture of these is similar to a roti, and could be used for a similarpurpose – scooping up sauce from a stew, or dipping into soup.

First try them served hotspread with butter – it is plain but comforting and delicious.

Don’t be tempted to grease your pan, for potato scones are traditionally baked on a hot anddry girdle, otherwise they will become something more like potato cakes.

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Use amealy(floury) variety of potato, such as King Edward, as waxier varieties (that were nottraditionally grown in Scotland) are not suitable for potato scones, they would produce agummy sticky mess.

Recipe for Potato Scones

A history of the potato scone, including a recipe for making your own | Scotsman Food and Drink (3)

Picture: Naomi Vance

Ingredients:

• 500g floury potatoes all roughly the same size
• 100g plain flour
• 25g unsalted butter, softened
• 1/4 tsp salt

Method:

1 Put the potatoes in a pot unpeeled and cover with cold water. Try to get potatoes of a similarsize so they cook evenly.

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Cover with a lid and bring to a boil, then turn the heat down tosimmer for 30 minutes, or until they feel soft when pierced with a sharp knife.

2 Drain the potatoes and leave them to dry and cool down for about 10 minutes.

When theyare cool enough to handle, peel the potatoes, scraping away the skin with your hands.

3 Now mash the potatoes and incorporate the butter and salt. Make sure the potatoes arecompletely smooth.

Now work in half the flour using your hands.

4 When that has been wellincorporated add the rest of the flour. You may need to add some more flour if the dough isa bit wet.

You want a fairly soft but not sticky dough.

Too little flour and you won’t be able towork it, too much the scones will be doughy and dry.

5 Heat up a girdle or heavy based frying pan over a medium high heat so it is ready to go.

6 Now divide the dough. I quartered it to make 16 scones, a size similar to shop bought ones,however you could divide it into 6 to make slightly smaller scones which would be easier towork.

7 Roll out each piece to half a centimetre thickness on a floured surface. Then immediatelytransfer it to the girdle – you do not need any fat to cook them.

8 Prick the scone all over witha fork. Bake them on either side for 3 – 4 minutes.

You want to cook them fast so they get agood colour on the outside, but also not so fast that they burn and stay raw in the middle.

9 You can flip them more than once to make sure they are thoroughly cooked. Serve hotspread with butter, or store in the fridge to be re-heated in a frying pan for breakfast.

• See more of Fraser’s recipes atwww.redbookrecipes.com/

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A history of the potato scone, including a recipe for making your own | Scotsman Food and Drink (2024)

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