
In addition to the several shelves of cookbooks that I have, in my kitchen I've got a file box full of recipes dilligently cut from magazines or printed from online sources or gotten at food festivals and the like. Liberally sprinkled throughout are the photocopies that I made of my mom's recipe binder when I left home. They were, for the most part, handwritten on lined paper; many of them are credited to a relative or a friend, some of whom I only vaguely remember, a few of them I never met.
This is the food of my childhood. I'm not going to say that I love each and every one of these recipes. I don't. I do, however, love that they're there. That I have them around for when I need a reminder of my youth, or to feel like part of a culinary heritage.
My mom's scone recipe is very simple and plain. It looks like either she copied it in a hurry, or she copied it from someone else who copied it in a hurry. But it works. In a world of a million-million scone recipes, these are dependable, tried and true. Make them and you'll understand why they've lasted so long, and why I'll pass them on to my own kids someday.


