Wednesday, February 23, 2022

I thought I'd tried clotted cream before...

I sincerely thought I'd had clotted cream before, years ago. For whatever bizarre reason, the basement grocery in the building where I work is selling these tiny little bottles of clotted cream, so on a whim, and guessing the cream would have little in the way of carbs (1 g of carbs per 28 g of cream, in fact), I bought a bottle, brought it home, and tasted it.

Damn. Whatever I thought I'd had before (whipped cream bordering on butter?), that wasn't clotted cream, not by a long shot. Clotted cream tastes like nothing I've tasted. Sure, it has a texture that's not totally unfamiliar—somewhere in the neighborhood of soft-but-firm, spreadable butter or mascarpone—but the taste is... I don't even know how to describe it. A bit grassy or even loamy, and paradoxically, a taste that's almost as if the cream had arrived that way fresh from the cow. That's impossible, of course: to make clotted cream, you need hours of simmering (see Chef John's video), so "fresh from the cow" is right out. And yet... that's the vibe I got all the same. Clotted cream is very, shall we say, farm-y in taste.

I should also note that, by itself, clotted cream is no big shakes, but I can absolutely see how it goes with a good strawberry jam or preserves on a nice, lumpy, rough-looking scone (I'm aware there's some contention over how to pronounce scone; when I say it, I rhyme it with "phone," so come at me, haters). 

And by the way, scones should be rough-looking—none of this Starbucks machine-cut, assembly-line bullshit. (In case you haven't guessed, I hate Starbucks scones.) An English scone should look as if an American drop biscuit has just gotten out of Royal Military Academy Sandhurst—a bit trimmer and more shapely than a drop biscuit, and arguably a bit sweeter-tasting, too—but still looking ready to handle Mos Eisley ruffians. If a scone is a drop biscuit after military training, a drop biscuit is a scone gone to seed: relaxed and tasty, but fat around the waist like a vet who lets himself go after leaving the military. Both are delicious to me, without a doubt, but I'd give scones the edge.*

Back to the main topic of this post—clotted cream. So now that I've had the bottled stuff, I want to make my own clotted cream. Look out for photos of that sometime in the coming months. And if I time the clotted cream with a cheat day, maybe I'll make scones, too, and possibly even some sort of jam. O, sinful delight!

(Scone-recipe video here.)

__________

*So, how can I know scones so well, but not clotted cream? Remember I'm a Yank, so my experience of other cultures is sometimes piecemeal. My apologies to the scone-eating folks who know that scones without clotted cream is like a chicken with no legs or wings. In fact, those above-mentioned Starbucks scones were among the first scones I ever tried. Blech.



3 comments:

  1. Scones with jam and clotted cream are definitely a treat, but you don't have to have them that way. Buttered scones are also very much a thing.

    And I don't want to toot my own horn, but I make a pretty mean scone. Next time you drop by my place, when things have calmed down a bit, we'll have some fresh scones right out of the oven.

    (As for pronunciation, I've sort of been influenced by the shorter British vowel, as I was introduced to scones in London, but I don't fuss about it.)

    ReplyDelete
  2. kevin, clotted cream is easy to make, but maybe not easy to make in korea. you bake on low (175-180) deg f heat a shallow pan of heavy whipping cream for 12 hours. drain whey. the rest is clotted cream. i know ovens are (or at least were bc i dont know about now) rare and i dont know how easy it is to obtain heavy cream. -hahna

    ReplyDelete
  3. Hahna,

    Sounds like what Chef John says in his video. My oven has a one-hour timer that I'd have to reset and reset, but I imagine it's possible to cook something for 12 hours as long as I'm there to rest the timer every hour.

    ReplyDelete

READ THIS BEFORE COMMENTING!

All comments are subject to approval before they are published, so they will not appear immediately. Comments should be civil, relevant, and substantive. Anonymous comments are not allowed and will be unceremoniously deleted. For more on my comments policy, please see this entry on my other blog.