I discovered the cheddar cheese scone at
my favorite NYC bakery and café Once Upon a Tart . . . . It is located in SoHo, just south of Houston at 135
Sullivan Street (and Prince), and has been there for almost twenty years. It is owned by
Frank Mentesana and Jerome Audureau, who do all the baking. I recommend a sojourn to this mecca of savory
delights to my NYC friends and those who plan a visit. I first discovered it as a graduate student in
the early 1990s. I was constantly looking for somewhere quiet to read and study
and get a good cup of coffee. I must have passed Once Upon a Tart . . . a hundred times (I had been living in NYC for
almost 8 years) before I worked up the courage to go in and sit for an
afternoon. It is a small space, yet cozy and quaint. Outside the café is room
for two small tables. It was their windows that called to me, full of glossy fruit
tarts and scones of all sorts.
When I finally walked in, I was beside myself to find that not only did they have the most beautiful pastries I’d seen, but they served sandwiches such as goat cheese, roasted ratatouille, and frisee on a sourdough baguette, and fresh mozzarella with oven-roasted tomatoes and pesto on onion focaccia; individual savory tarts were laid out on the counter—leek and celery, mushroom and potato, carmelized onion; there were chicken pot pies and lentil soup. And then my eyes turned toward the cheddar cheese scone. A scone—cheesy, soft on the inside, crunchy on the outside— with a fine cup of coffee and a book to read was all I needed.
When I finally walked in, I was beside myself to find that not only did they have the most beautiful pastries I’d seen, but they served sandwiches such as goat cheese, roasted ratatouille, and frisee on a sourdough baguette, and fresh mozzarella with oven-roasted tomatoes and pesto on onion focaccia; individual savory tarts were laid out on the counter—leek and celery, mushroom and potato, carmelized onion; there were chicken pot pies and lentil soup. And then my eyes turned toward the cheddar cheese scone. A scone—cheesy, soft on the inside, crunchy on the outside— with a fine cup of coffee and a book to read was all I needed.
When I got my job in Las Vegas, as happy
as I was, I knew I would miss this bakery. There was not, and to this
day there is not, a single cheddar cheese scone to be found in Las Vegas. On my
subsequent visits to NYC I would make sure to make a trip to Once Upon a Tart .
. . and buy a dozen scones; in their pink bakery box tied with white string,
these precious morsels were held tightly on my lap for the
six-hour flight back home. After a couple of years Trader Joe’s began to carry
cheese scones in a package of two. They weren’t too bad, though absolutely not the same.
Then Trader Joe’s discontinued them. I had almost forgotten about my love for
these savories, when one morning watching The Today Show (anything for a glance
at my favorite city) I saw Frank and Jerome, pushing their new cookbook, Once
Upon a Tart . . .. I immediately ordered it. The recipe stayed true to my tastebuds’
memories, and I have been recreating these tasty scones in my Las Vegas suburb ever since.
These scones are great in the morning
with a cup of coffee and even better with a cup of coffee for an afternoon
pickup. I think each scone is fairly high in protein because the recipe is
packed with cheese (cheddar AND parmesan). My guesstimate of calories is 350, a
lot, I know, for those who count. But with the coffee for a snack you won’t
need anything else since they are so satisfying. A recipe yields 8 scones. I
freeze each separately in a baggy and then reheat in the oven when I’m ready. Or
just let them thaw, but never put in the microwave—they lose their special
crunch.
The recipe calls for a food processor,
which I have, but I find that I always over mix the butter. Getting the butter
consistency is crucial for a good scone, so I’ve taken to using my hand pastry
blender. It doesn’t take that much longer, and you’ve got a 95% chance of
getting it right (and it’s easier to clean up).
Grocery List:
2
and 2/3 cups unbleached all-purpose flour
1
tablespoon baking powder
Pinch of cayenne pepper (a secret ingredient)
Pinch of cayenne pepper (a secret ingredient)
½
teaspoon salt
8
tablespoons cold unsalted butter, cut into ¼-inch cubes
3 large eggs
3 large eggs
½
cup cold milk
2
tablespoons fresh dill (another secret ingredient)
2
cups grated cheddar cheese
1/3 cup grated Pecorino or Parmesan cheese (the third secret ingredient)
What You Need to Do:
1. Place oven racks in the
middle, preheat to 400, line baking sheet with parchment paper (not necessary
but it helps).
2. Dump dry ingredients
into big bowl and mix well (a fork is a great way to stir dry ingredients).
3. Add butter to the bowl all at once and mix
with pastry blender until there are no chunks of butter left and the mixture
looks like most crumbs. BE CAREFUL NOT TO OVERWORK.
4. In another bowl whisk
eggs to break up yolks, whisk in milk, whisk in dill and cheeses.
5. Pour wet ingredients on
top of flour-butter crumbs, and stir with a wooden spoon until no flour is
visible. It may seem a bit dry, but keep stirring and it will eventually come
together.
6. Use a ½-cup measuring
cup or your hand to scoop the dough and plop it onto baking sheet, leaving 2 inches
between them.