My helmet whacked into the concrete with a bit of a bang, but better that the helmet does it than my scone. |
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Just because you are not on the road, it doesn't mean you can't crack your scone on the concrete. |
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The eggs are firm, and cooked to perfection, the strudel crisp and the tattie scone defiantly light. |
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A puftaloon is a fried scone known to be cooked in Australia. They are popular with children in winter. |
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Call me old-fashioned, but when I go into a coffee shop in Amsterdam, I expect to be offered a cup of tea and a scone. |
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There is a gorgeous coffee shop and the boys love sitting in high chairs having a doughnut or scone while I drink a filter coffee. |
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I have the finest educated palate for a decent cup of tea and a well textured scone. |
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I go back to the gate to eat my scone, which is a creepy dusty rose colour, and also just gross. |
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Nancy is going to go right off her scone when she hears I've taken this certificate from our family's mortal enemy. |
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He was cynically lured into helpless addiction by the Perth scone barons in a lock-in at a local tea-room. |
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For the sake of this review, we shared a toasted teacake and a fruit scone with butter and jam. |
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As a treat, you can put in a slice of a wholesome flapjack, a cheese scone or date slice. |
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My hair had grown out again and was sticking up off my scone like a parrot's crest. |
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Without wishing to be unkind, it was student vegetable gloop with little herby scone things on the top. |
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This consisted of a single warmed scone, a pot of lemon curd and one of clotted cream. |
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You will still hurt from going over backwards, but your scone should still be in one piece. |
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Served with a fresh baked scone or mini muffin, these wraps provide plenty of flavor first thing in the morning. |
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The spa is at the end of the garden, where, if you can find a waiter capable of boiling a kettle and buttering a scone, you can take tea. |
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Using a biscuit or scone cutter, cut out rounds as big or as little as you like. |
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Choose a traditional scone and tea served with Devonshire cream and jam or order our 3-tier service with finger sandwiches, scones, and desserts. |
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He ate his scone rather slowly unlike the gobblers she was surrounded by. |
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But often Christie found the scone superfluous, and just ate the cream by the spoonful instead. |
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He got the idea in his scone that you might both be on the loose out here. |
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Used to do his scone in completely if everything wasn't just so. |
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The sandwich was well up to expectations and this was followed by a warm and very fresh fruit scone which crumbled as we spread it with strawberry jam and cream. |
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A singing hinny is a kind of scone that you bake on a hot griddle. |
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Tea forté's artful maple serving tray is the perfect way to bring tea, a scone, and a note of love to someone curled up in a cosy spot. |
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No gentle reader, the raisin scone was the scone of the gods. |
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Partygoers munched on Chinese stuffed bao with Cantonese duck, prime rib eye with wild mushroom scone and bearnaise, and paper wrapped halibut with heirloom tomato. |
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I love it in there and Trace and I had a pot of tea, and I ate a scone, and she had a buck rarebit, and we discussed how grateful we were to be solvent. |
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Had we the time and the sweet tooth we could have ordered a confection from the counter, anything from a Chester cake to an eclair to a scone with jam and butter. |
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His family don't have a telly and he is the chattiest wee scone have ever met. |
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What about the scone, or the biscotti, or the lowly mandelbrot? |
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Is it sacrilege to alter a hot-cross bun – to change it into a scone? |
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In the past, I have variously been painted as a paragon of the scone and the scolder of errant ways. |
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It is a bread that derives from the Scottish scone, first brought to Canada by the fur traders, and adapted to campfire cooking by Aboriginal people. |
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Brush top of each scone lightly with beaten egg. |
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The sliding scone brick, designed by Kawneer, is a sliding bay that integrates perfectly into new constructions and renders the opening joinery invisible. |
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Enjoy the splendour of yesteryear while relaxing in the wicker furniture on the historic veranda of Laurier House, nestled on the restored grounds while enjoying a cup of tea and a gourmet scone. |
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Origin of the word scone is obscure and may, in fact, derive from different sources. |
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In Australian and New Zealand English, scone is both a slang term for the head and a verb meaning to knock on the head. |
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In Albania the breakfast often consists of a scone, milk, tea, eggs, jam or cheese. |
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At its most extensive it consists of eggs, square sausage, fried dumpling, potato scone, tomato, mushrooms, bacon beef links and fried bread. |
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A quarter thought laverbread was a speciality loaf baked on hot volcanic rocks and a further 45 per cent thought it was a type of scone flavoured with soapwort. |
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The Tattie scone is a popular Scottish dish containing potatoes. |
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In some countries one may also encounter savoury varieties of scone which may contain or be topped with combinations of cheese, onion, bacon, etc. |
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The scone is a basic component of the cream tea or Devonshire tea. |
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A scone is often lightly sweetened and occasionally glazed with egg wash. |
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We have long had, for example, bizzies, bezzies, bevvies, blurts, bifters and scallies, scuffers, scone 'eads, tatty 'eads, twirlies and trainies. |
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