Pumpkin Scones

Pumpkin scones are perhaps the most Aussie scone of all, made famous by Lady Flo Bjelke-Petersen, wife of a Queensland premier.

Use leftover roast pumpkin if you have some (you’ll need about 1 cup mashed), in which case you may need to add a splash more milk. These pretty orange scones are delicious with butter or crème fraîche and also make an excellent accompaniment to soup.

Makes: 6

Ingredients

  • 325g peeled and seeded butternut pumpkin
  • 300g self-raising flour, plus extra for dusting
  • pinch salt flakes, crushed
  • 50g cold butter, diced
  • 1/4 cup milk, plus extra for brushing
  • freshly grated nutmeg, to taste

Method

Preheat oven to 240°C.

Place pumpkin in a saucepan of water, bring to the boil, reduce heat to medium and cook for about 15 minutes, until tender.

Tip into a strainer and set aside for a few minutes to steam dry.

Pass through a potato ricer or mash; set aside.

Sift flour into a bowl.

Add salt and butter and use your fingertips to rub butter into the flour until there aren’t any lumps.

Make a well in the centre, add pumpkin, milk and nutmeg and use a pastry scraper or hard spatula to cut it into the flour to form a soft sticky dough.

Turn onto a well-floured bench, dust the top and your hands with flour, and pat the dough into a 3cm-thick round.

Use a 7cm fluted cookie cutter dipped in flour to cut out rounds, placing them close together on a baking paper-lined baking tray.

Gently pat remaining dough together and cut out more rounds.

Brush the tops with milk.

Place in the oven, reduce temperature to 200°C and bake for 20–25 minutes, until well-browned.

Transfer to a wire rack to cool a little.

Serve warm with crème fraîche or butter.

You’ll find a print-friendly version of this recipe here as well as a step-by-step video of how to make classic buttermilk scones.

Subscribe to my Recipe of the Week newsletter to discover more simple, delicious recipes and receive a free Italian online cooking class (RRP $39). Find more cooking inspiration on my website BeInspired.au

Also read: Roberta’s Pommes Dauphinoise

Roberta Muir
Roberta Muirhttps://beinspired.au/
Roberta Muir loves making it easy for home cooks to explore new cuisines and ingredients and sharing her passion for cooking, eating, drinking and travelling. She’s a recipe writer, cooking teacher, and author of four cookbooks including the Sydney Seafood School Cookbook. Find more of her inspiration at BeInspired.au
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