Mum's Pumpkin Scone Recipe - Strayed from the Table (2024)

  • ByLizzie Moult
  • October 16, 2013
  • 8 Comments
  • 06 Recipes

About a month ago, I went to my folks place to get some rest and some good old-fashioned country cooking. I had a tick on my head and I felt ill and all I wanted was to get looked after for a couple of days, with Roy away my decision was easy. Mum. It’s amazing that I am 30 years old and I still will go to my folks place to catch up on rest and get fed for a couple of days when I don’t feel great. I am not sure this is a natural instinct for most of us but for me our parents are always there to help pick up the pieces, make soup or generally let me lie on the couch with out me feeling guilty.

Writing a recipe column each week can sometimes be daunting and when you leave it to the last-minute because you are not feeling well is not a good idea. I asked my mum if I could help out in the kitchen for a day making food for their weekly lunches and sweet things for morning/afternoon tea. Over the next four weeks you will get to see those recipes they are all classics in my mum’s kitchen.

I am surprised that I am not orange by the amount of pumpkin scones I have eaten in my life. We never really did plain scones very often it was more about pumpkin. My grandparents live inBjelke Petersen country and my grandmother has Lady Flo’s cookbook with her prize-winning pumpkin scone recipe in it, which now sits on my bookshelf. So we don’t do plain we do pumpkin.I think that also pumpkin scones are also moister – not sure if that is a real word but you get what I am saying.

Watching my mum craft her scones, which I have not witnessed since I was really young. I forgot that she grew up in a different era from me and is really from a hard-working dairy farm. As I watch mum get the butter out of the container, she slips some of the pumpkin in to get the last of the butter juices out of the container before washing it. She doesn’t want to waste a thing. Its funny, I remember having mashed pumpkin for dinner served up in a margarine container – nothing fancy, yet mum used all the butter before reusing the container for something else.

Watching her do this waste nothing cooking style which comes from her own mothers cooking of the time. I realize I too, yes (mum), do this. I have been known to work in kitchens, where I am teased for making sure every last thing is scraped out of the bowl before going to the sink to be washed, Roy teases me for liking my bowl, I don’t want to waste anything, I finish everything on my plate at dinner – the list goes on. I come from people who don’t waste. In most kitchens I have ever worked in I use to teach people they could eat the stalks of parsley, yes it has the same flavour and to keep all the leafy greens and old bread to take home for my chickens. They would love scraps and in return keep me in good supply of eggs.

I laughed when I too realized I am stingy with food – waste not want not. We live in such a consumer world and maybe I have become a little more relaxed about things. Yet I don’t waste food, I keep my plastic containers, who knows why (mum), maybe so I can store something else in it later instead of adding it to landfill.

Getting back to the scones, taking notes on a piece of paper in my mums kitchen, by the end I have written a novel on how to make the best pumpkin scones. Mind you mum’s didn’t look like they would normally because she has a new oven and still learning how the temperature works as it is a slow heat. Pumpkin scones need hot. The “true test is that you can break them in half without cutting” my mum explains when they are pulled out of the oven ready to be eaten. I take for granted my practicalities – I just thought scones were suppose to do that but apparently they don’t. The recipe is at the end of the post – shorter but still thorough.

Do you still go to your parents place for good old home cooking when you are feeling a little down, sick or tired?


Mum's Pumpkin Scone Recipe

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Author: Mandy Evans & Lizzie Moult, www.strayedtable.com

Recipe type: sweet

Cuisine: australian

Serves: 16

Ingredients

  • 400gm Jap pumpkin, cut into 1 inch chunks, skin removed
  • 60gm butter, room temperature
  • 75gm sugar
  • 2 cups (400gm) SR Flour, plus a little extra for shaping
  • ¼ cup of milk

Instructions

  1. Preheat your oven to 230’c and line a baking tray with baking paper.
  2. Boil the pumpkin in lightly salted water until tender and soft. Drain the water off the pumpkin immediately.
  3. In a large mixing bowl cream the butter and sugar roughly. Add the warm pumpkin and mix to combine; the butter will melt while you do this.
  4. Add the flour to the mix and gently fold it through. Once lightly mixed, dust a large chopping board or bench space with flour. Pour the mixture onto the surface and fold again a couple of times with your hands. Being gentle with your hands while you work with the dough the mixture is still a little wet, you really don’t want to overwork it or you will get hard scones.
  5. Pat out the dough to about 1 inch thick and using a 1 inch biscuit cutter, cut the scones out and place them on your baking tray close together. Keep the biscuit cutter coated in flour so the scones don’t stick to it while cutting.
  6. Once all the mixture is used up, coat the top of the scones with milk which creates a crust. Place the scones in the oven and bake for 15 – 20 minutes, turning the tray around at the ten minute mark.
  7. Serve the scones immediately with lashings of butter, cream and your favourite jam.

Thanks Mum for cooking for me. 🙂

Mum's Pumpkin Scone Recipe - Strayed from the Table (14)

Lizzie Moult

Planning, cooking, chasing kids & running an online business; it might seem like there is a lot going on. Yet Lizzie is all about living simply and creating a flexible lifestyle that enables plenty of travel, adventure and quality time. A lifestyle writer and photographer for over 10 years for numerous publications, working online for over 14 years Lizzie also works as Cognitive Behavioural Therapist to help people live a life with passion & purpose without people-pleasing, imposter syndrome and seeking approval at www.lizziemoult.com.

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8 Responses

  1. There’s nothing quite like being taken care of by your mum 🙂 I hope you’re feeling better. I have to assume that these pumpkin scones are a cure-all 😉 They look amazing! Love the bright orange color!!

    Reply

  2. Pumpkin scones are my FAVOURITE. I am always amazed when (Aussie) people have never even heard of them (imagine!!).

    Reply

  3. My parents just live around the corner and J and I pop in there regularly. It’s nice to be able to pop round as an adult for a cuppa. These scones look amazing!

    Reply

  4. Great scones! Really nice way to use pumpkin. So glad you decided to share this classic recipe with us – thanks so much!

    Reply

  5. how wonderful, capturing your mum’s scones llike that. i love the floury pics of them before they go in the oven.
    that is a good tip about the scones – they should break in half without a knife. i don’t make many scones but i have been thinking about it lately…you’re providing further reason to!

    Reply

  6. Hi Lizzie … your Mum sounds just like mine. Loved your post and wonderful pics how superb!

    Reply

  7. Do you know if gramma can be substituted for pumpkin for scones. Thank you. Am giving it a try anyway. Cheers. Kathy.

    Reply

  8. Since I found this recipe they have become my grandchildren’s favourite when they come for the holidays. We add a little bit of ground cloves and a pinch of cinnamon. The grandchildren are very picky eaters but usually eat 5 or 6 with a cup of tea and lashings of jam and cream for breakfast or lunch. Thank you 🧡

    Reply

Mum's Pumpkin Scone Recipe - Strayed from the Table (18)

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We are Roy & Lizzie an Aussie couple, who started food & travel blogging back in 2008, documenting our adventures, food discoveries, different cultures, and the natural world. We are here to inspire more people to leave their table and explore the world.

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Mum's Pumpkin Scone Recipe - Strayed from the Table (2024)

FAQs

Why is the scone dough rest before baking? ›

This short rest relaxes the gluten, making scones more tender; and cold chills the fat, increasing flakiness. Make scone dough up to three days ahead. Shape into 3/4"-thick disks, wrap in plastic, and refrigerate until ready to cut and bake.

Why do my scones fall over when cooking? ›

You may have used too little raising agent or over handled the dough before it was baked. The oven may have been too cool.

Why should you place the scones close together on the tray? ›

Scones placed close together on the baking tray will rise higher and more evenly (they are very 'supportive' by nature!) than those spaced out. 1-2cm between each works well.

Should you fold scone dough? ›

Using your hands, pat the dough out into a rough square and then fold it over once on itself. This fold gives the traditional mark in the middle of the scone. Once baked one can easily pull the scone apart in the middle because of this fold.

What not to do when making scones? ›

Just a reminder: Don't overwork the dough or the scones will turn out rubbery – or worse, bullety and hard. Cut out your scones cleanly. Twisting the cutter can impair the rise. If you use a fluted cutter, you can't twist it.

How long should you rest scones before baking? ›

Recipes for scones sometimes provide a make-ahead option that involves refrigerating the dough overnight so it can simply be shaped and then popped into the oven the next day. But now we've found that resting the dough overnight has another benefit: It makes for more symmetrical and attractive pastries.

Should scones be baked at a high temperature? ›

Pre-heat oven to 350-375 degrees (350* for convection, 375* for standard). Place frozen scones directly on parchment-lined, un-greased baking sheet - evenly spaced. Tip: Use cooking spray or foil on baking sheet if you don't have parchment paper. For best results, bake scones on the the middle shelf.

Should you chill scone dough before baking? ›

As previously mentioned, it's crucial to keep the dough cold so that the butter doesn't melt before the scones are baked. Using cold ingredients helps, but your hands can warm up the dough when you're working with it. For extra precaution, it helps to chill the dough again before it's baked.

What are the differences between American style scones and British style scones? ›

American scones use much more butter than British scones, and they usually have quite a bit more sugar. The extra butter is what makes them so much denser. This is not really a good or bad thing, as British scones pile on plenty of sugar (in the form of preserves/jam) and butter or clotted cream as toppings.

Why put eggs in scones? ›

The egg gives the scones a golden and shiny finish once they are baked. It is however possible to omit the egg and use 1-2 tablespoons of extra milk as a glaze for the scones instead. They will not quite have the same colour and shine but they will still be delicious to eat.

Why don't my scones rise high? ›

The longer you get the dough sit before baking it, the less your scones will rise. Try to bake the dough as soon as you finishing kneading and rolling it out. Letting the mixture sit too long will cause the gas bubbles from the leavening agent to disappear. These gas bubbles are what help the scones rise.

How to get scones to rise higher? ›

How to make scones rise high? Once you've cut out your scone shapes, flip them over and place upside down on the baking tray. This will help them rise evenly and counteract any 'squashing' that happened when you cut out the dough. Perfect scones should rise to about 2 inches high.

What is the best flour for scones? ›

We recommend using all-purpose flour. There is some debate as to what flour one should use to go around achieving the perfect scone. This is because within different flours comes different levels of protein. Typically, if there is a higher protein level within a flour, the more dense the scone would come out.

Should scones be doughy in the middle? ›

A scone should be slightly moist, but a very moist doughy one just won't do.

Why is it necessary to relax a dough before baking? ›

Resting dough has several purposes, but the primary purposes are hydrating the flour, gluten expansion, rise of the dough, and enhancing complex flavor.

Why does the dough need to rest? ›

Well-rested dough will be fully hydrated, easier to work with, and yield a better texture,” says BA's deputy food editor Hana Asbrink. A bit of patience will reward you with chewy, bouncy noodles. It's a step you just can't skip.

Why are my scones so doughy in the middle? ›

Overworking the dough: when you overwork your dough, your scones can come out tough and chewy, rather than that desired light, crumbly texture. The trick is to use light pressure and only the work the dough until it just comes together.

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