Light & fluffy Devon rhubarb & ginger scones (2024 recipe)
Introducing our Devon Rhubarb & Ginger Scones recipe
When I was 10 my great-granny Phyllis taught me the secret to making exceptional scones. A classic British afternoon tea treat, eaten with clotted cream and jam.
Phyl lived in Devon and Cornwall most of her life and there wasn’t much she didn’t know about scones, pies and pasties. Her secret for soft, light scones was simple, and I can hear her saying it now:
“Don’t touch the mix, for heaven’s sake, use a knife!”
This trick works for pastry too!
In order to get the dough to rise it needs to be handled delicately and stay nice and cool. She maintained that my hands would warm the dough too much, making it sticky and compact the mix. The wet ingredients should be stirred into the mix with a butter knife, and the dough hardly touched from this point on.
Ever so lightly bring it together into a ball and press to the required depth.
As rhubarb is in season and with the Queen’s platinum jubilee almost upon us, I thought I’d share with you my idea of a Devon classic; Rhubarb and Ginger Scones with Homemade Rhubarb Jam.
The recipe makes 14 (or possibly less if you compact the mixture too much!)
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Rhubarb & ginger scone recipe
Scone mix
750g self-raising flour
1 tsp baking power
185g caster sugar
185g butter
200g rhubarb (peeled and diced finely)
30g stem ginger (diced finely)
300ml milk (plus extra for brushing)
Jam
200g rhubarb
200g caster sugar
200ml water
Cream
Devon clotted - I especially like Gayes Creamery
Method for rhubarb & ginger scones
1. Heat the oven to 180°C
2. Sieve dry ingredients together in a bowl
3. Rub in butter till it resembles fine crumbs
4. Finely dice rhubarb and stem ginger and mix till coated in flour
5. Add milk and mix together gently using a knife
6. Lightly, hardly touching, bring the dough together
7. On a floured surface press down until 4cm thick
8. Use a cutter (8cm) and cut out the scones
9. Place on a lined baking tray and brush tops with milk
10. Cook for 20 minutes until light brown
11. While. the scones are cooking in the oven, make the jam. Add the rhubarb, sugar and water to the pan and bring them together, stir till thick and all the liquid has evaporated. The jam should be thick and sticky.
12. Leave to cool jam and scones to cool
Serving suggestion for rhubarb and ginger scones
Serve while still warm, with cream and jam.
Cue the debate on how to pronounce ‘scone’ (s-gone / s-kone) and whether the cream or jam goes first!
Devon way: cream then jam
Cornwall way: jam then cream
However you take your rhubarb and ginger scones, enjoy, and don’t foget to put the kettle on.
Recipe adapted from: National Trust Book of Scones
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