I ditched the glaze and just swapped out two cups of flour for two cups of almond flour:
2 c almond flour
1/2 c flour
6 Tb sugar
1 Tb baking powder
1/4 tsp salt
1/2 tsp cinnamon
1/2 tsp nutmeg
1/4 tsp cloves
1/4 tsp ginger
1/2 c butter
1/2 c pumpkin puree
3 Tb heavy cream (or milk; see below)
1 egg
1 tsp vanilla
First I dumped all of the dry ingredients into the bowl--making a very pretty display--then added the butter.
I let the butter soften, then cut it in with two forks. I don't have a pastry cutter, but the two fork method works pretty well. If the butter is soft, an entire stick can be cut into the flour in about five minutes.
I mixed all of the wet ingredients, then added them. I have now made three batches of these. Twice I have used condensed milk, three tablespoons, undiluted. Once I used heavy whipping cream. I don't really notice a difference.
Until this point, I was expecting to make almond flour scones. I formed a circle of dough and tried to cut a wedge, but the dough didn't have enough cohesiveness to hold together as I lifted it and tried to put it on the cookie sheet. At this point I realized I was going to be making pumpkin biscuits, soft cookies, or buns, but not scones. I baked them at about 17 minutes at 400 (I have learned, by the way, that my oven runs about 20 degrees cool--meaning I actually baked them at 380; 17 at a true 400 degrees might toast them a little too much). They turned out reasonably well.
It may be that I need a greater percentage of wheat flour to get them to hold together, or it could be that making a drier dough would help. One way to do that would be to substitute powdered whole milk in place of regular (or condensed) milk. I may try that. Or I can just live with buns instead of scones. The flavor is fine.
No comments:
Post a Comment