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Cream Teas - Jam or Cream first?

It don't matter! ;)
Currently in Cornwall and will be having a cream tea at some point, and I'll be having jam on first, then cream, but thats juts me. You do what you like, and don't let anyone else tell you how you gotta eat food, s*d them... Lol.
 
Butter 1st
Then which ever is thicker
Normally clotted cream 😋😋😜
And if the jam slides off, it’s probably gone off 😏😜
 
This isn't even a debate, if you put the jam on first you should be arrested and banned from ever eating scones again...

Might as well butter your bread before you toast it or wipe your ass before you've shat..!

I tell ya, there should be cameras in tea rooms looking out for people who do this so they can go on some sort of watch list..!
 
Split the scone and then fill it in either order...
This post is concerning. Firstly, I find your lax attitude towards cream teas disturbing, and you also seem to be suggesting that it is acceptable to create some sort of scone sandwich..! It is not..!

You do not FILL a scone!

You're going on the list... ;)
 
Definitely butter first, then jam, then cream it’s the way it’s always been ‘oop north’ we had this debate at work and everyone put butter first regardless of which way round the jam and cream went
 
This post is concerning. Firstly, I find your lax attitude towards cream teas disturbing, and you also seem to be suggesting that it is acceptable to create some sort of scone sandwich..! It is not..!

You do not FILL a scone!

You're going on the list... ;)
I used to split my working week between Devon and Cornwall, so I decided to remain impartial...
 
Ok the butter thing is giving me a nervous tic now...
IMG_4660.webp

😉😜
 
It's just a clotted cream delivery system.
When I discovered a spoon did the job without the dry baked goods I did away with the scone altogether.

But is it pronounced to rhyme with 'cone' or 'gone'?
 
It's just a clotted cream delivery system.
When I discovered a spoon did the job without the dry baked goods I did away with the scone altogether.

But is it pronounced to rhyme with 'cone' or 'gone'?
Cone, or it would be a scon..
 
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