Monday 20 October 2014

Oh, Flour of Scotland!

Fanny isn't feart (scared) of anyone, and certainly not the entire Scots nation. She feels her instructions are clear, follow her and you will succeed is her mantra. Even when it just seems wrong. Or maybe just not what we are used to. Fanny reckons that all Scots will 'have a fit' at her recipe for Shortbread because she insists that we 'stick to self raising flour' even for this. She never wavers from her love of self-raising. Maybe to try and appease each and every Scottish person alive and dead, she includes three different recipes with differing and different ingredients to make standard Shortbread, Scotch Shortbread and a 'wild alternative', Orange Shortcake.


The technique remains fairly similar for this related trio. The key thing seems to be to make sure that the ingredients don't get too warm while they are being prepared. Fanny says to mix them on a cold surface. I use a chilled bowl as I don't have the marble work tops installed Chez Cradock. First take the butter - which can be squeezed vigorously through a clean cloth if it's a little liquidy, eek I'm not sure but I'll skip this, it sounds messy - and the sugar together. Work them up with a small knife in each hand. Chop chop. It's Fannys favourite technique, and it's a little like fencing. Not that I've ever tried fencing, but I'm imagining. Keep chopping away until they are well combined, simple as that, making sure that the 'warmth of the human hand' goes nowhere near it, as the butter will 'oil'. Some would say that Fanny had no human warmth of course.


After some furious chopping the flour is added in gradually. More chopping. It's really quite good fun (maybe actual fencing is too?) but I reckon you could give it a quick whizz in the food processor and achieve the same result. No fun though. For the 'Standard Shortbread' it's a mix of self-raising flour and Rice Flour, but for the 'Scotch' version no Rice Flour is used. The chopping results in a crumb-like mix, and this is Fannys cue to us all to stop. Check your hands, not for cleanliness, but for warmth again. If you have been furiously fencing with the knives as explained your hands may be hot, so plunge them in a bath of ice cold water before proceeding. Brrrrr.


For both shortbreads, the crumbs need to be pushed into butted and floured moulds to bring them together. Cold hand remember. For the Scotch version I'm using an oblong dish and to complete the Saltire Flag 'illusion' I sprinkle on some blue sugar before baking. Fanny prefers to decorate them after baking with holly leaves made of fondant, and ONLY AT CHRISTMAS (because presumably it's too costly at other times of the year) a thick dusting of icing sugar. That sifter is never far from Fannys warm almost human hand at this time of year.  The 'Orange Shortcake' is altogether different.


The ingredients are different for a start - quite a bit of baking powder is added to the already lifted self-raising flour, with salt, an egg yolk and orange juice joining the sugar and butter. It's all chopped together in the same way, with the orange juice being added gradually until it forms a paste. I added some harmless food colouring to the juice to make it even more orange-y. Fanny warns that the amount of juice you will need to add depends completely on the size of your egg yolk, so please do not 'slop on regardless'. Give the paste a quick knead, roll it out either into one big circle or cut into fun shapes. I've gone for a selection of Halloween ones, ghouls, pumpkins and cats which don't really look like cats, and therefore don't feature in the finished photo. I reckon Fanny would like it, keeping up the cold, inhuman feel. The final results are as ever great. All three shortbreads are light and the orange ones are puffy, but still buttery, slightly crunchy and crumbly. The orange ones aren't very orange-y, but still taste good. Maybe some orange icing would help. Or fondant. Or orange flavoured icing sugar thickly sifted. Not that likely to spook my fellow country folk at all are they? 

8 comments:

  1. I would love to have seen Fanny fencing - can you imagine the sight? And when you said Scotch Shortbread I wrongly thought it would have whiskey in it. Can you imagine? Bleugh...

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    1. Oh, erm, glad I shelved the whisky shortbread idea... Fanny would be fabulous at fencing!

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  2. I'm surprised that Fanny advises against using her hands as she is normally so French in her technique. The French call shortbread 'pâte sablée' and is associated with Brittany, the Celtic part of France and so there has to be a link with Shortbread. You always start off with your chilled butter and sugar and then rub it gently between your fore, middle fingers, and thumbs until you achieve a 'sandy' consistency ('sablée' means sandy). Very quick and easy, but no 'chop, chop, chop' so unsurprisingly not appealing to our drama Queen de la cuisine.

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    1. Drama Queen de la cuisine? Is that Fanny, me or you?! She does normally love to get her (clean) hands in there you are right, but not here!

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    2. I think that's probably all three of us! :)

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  3. Love the orange halloween ones - great for this time of year. Must admit, I too thought 'Scotch Shortbread' was going to include whisky - didn't sound like the best combination!

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    1. I'm hearing the feedback! I was going to use Strawberry Whisky if that changes anything... Scotch Shortbread is just Fannys name for it... I'll leave it there! Thanks...

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