Were you wondering what to serve at your next coffee or book club meeting? Look no further. Use this guide to learn how to make the best British scones. In England, these are served at โcream teaโ in the late morning, or with afternoon tea. These scones are the best and super easy to makeโTheyโre a fun treat to make as a compliment to your dinner, or a snack between meals to go with a refreshing beverage.
Perfectly flaky scones that can easily be made into any flavor youโd like including blueberry, cranberry orange, pumpkin, chocolate chip, pumpkin, and cinnamon!
Should I add an egg to my British Scone batter? What does it do?
It’s a matter of personal preference as to whether or not you add eggs to your scones. Adding an egg to your scone batter will change the texture of your scone, creating a richer, more dense result. This recipe will work either way and the egg is completely optional and does not need to be replaced.
What is the difference between a British scone and a biscuit?
A British scone uses more leavening and less butter than traditional biscuits. They are also made with cream. They end up denser and less sweet than American scones or biscuits.
You will use grated butter to create a biscuit-like dough, but you will use cream in the dough and to brush on top. These scones go great with traditional biscuit or toast toppings, like Apple Butter, jam, honey butter, or plain old, delicious butter.
Grating Butter vs. Pastry Cutter vs. Food Processor
Scones require a pastry technique where you cut a fat into a flour mixture in order to create a sand-like coarse meal texture. This process provides an even distribution of the cold fat in the recipe. When baked at a high heat this fat will expand quickly, creating a flaky, layered texture in the baked good. There are several different ways to accomplish this. You can use a cheese grater to finely grate your butter, you can use a pastry cutter which is a traditional manual method, or you can use the S-blade on a food processor and pulse the fat.
Can I make the dough in advance?
Yes. This dough freezes nicely to be made in later on. Make the dough and cut into wedges and then, wrap in parchment paper and seal in a freezer bag. To make, thaw the dough and bake as directed.
Flavor Options
- Blueberry Scones (1 cup blueberries + 1 teaspoon vanilla extract)
- Chocolate Chip Scones (1 cup mini chocolate chips)
- Cranberry Orange Scones (3/4 cup dried cranberries + 2 tablespoons orange zest)
- Pumpkin Scones (replace half of the heavy cream with 1/2 cup pumpkin puree + 2 teaspoons pumpkin pie spice)
- Cranberry Scones (1 cup dried cranberries + 1 teaspoon vanilla extract)
- Lemon Scones (replace 1/4 cup of the heavy cream with 1/4 cup lemon juice + 2 tablespoons lemon zest)
- Cinnamon Scones (replace white sugar with brown sugar + 1-2 teaspoons ground cinnamon)
Serving Suggestions:
British scones are complemented with jam and butter, clotted cream, honey butter, and apple butter. The most common fruity add-in used in England is sultanas or golden raisins. You can add in all kinds of fruits and berries to change up the flavor or make the scones a little sweeter.
Storage Instructions:
Store scones in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 1 week.
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Watch the video below where Rachel will walk you through every step of this recipe. Sometimes it helps to have a visual, and weโve always got you covered with our cooking show. You can find the complete collection of recipes on YouTube, Facebook Watch, or our Facebook Page, or right here on our website with their corresponding recipes.
Rachael, used Full fat Buttermilk to the Scone recipe. Plus I egg. Oh my gosh. I mixed in the bowl & then put on floured parchment paper. Mixture was so messy, so sticky & wet! Kept adding a little flour. What did I do wrong? Was it the 1 cup of Buttermilk…Help.
This is something I truly enjoy making. It’s easy and delicious! It’s become my husband favorite. Just don’t tell him how easy they are
My father’s family came from England. He
hated scones but I think if he ever had one made from this recipe he would have changed his mind
Amazing. Even though I followed the recipe to the T the dough looked a bit soggy compared to the video. Not sure why, but in the end it didn’t matter because they were the best tasting scones we have ever tried. No leftovers! Can’t wait to make another batch.
So easy to make! And with ingredients you all ready have on hand
Delicious looking recipe but any Brit will tell you that adding anything but currants (and those wouldnโt be the ones we would traditionally use for cream tea, youโd eat them on their own with butter) is generally a
very American thing. A cheese scone is also
acceptable for a gentlemanโs tea (served with cream cheese / butter and pickle rather than jam and cream). Also, thereโs never an egg in a British scone, or oats but perhaps the latter is a Scottish thing.
I made these this morning. They came out perfect and perfectly delicious. I did not add berries, just a drizzle of white icing. And yes, I did add the egg. I’ll certainly make these again and again!๐
LOVE THESE!!! So far I have tried the blueberry and the pumpkin and both were amazing ๐ ๐ ๐ I will use these recipe over and over again.
I have always wanted to make scones but wanted one that was the traditional texture and not “biscuity”. I read the ingredients and decided to try your recipe. I made the cinnamon scones and added one egg. I used the regular-sized grater instead of the small for the frozen butter.
After the scones came out of the oven I opted to sprinkle mixed cinnamon and sugar on the tops. The texture was great. I prefer them a little sweeter so will increase next time. This will be my go to recipe going forward.
The scones are delicious! I did add the egg, and found I needed to add a bit more flour as the dough was very wet. I have yet to make a recipe of yours that has not been wonderful.
Very good, more salt. I did use salted butter.
Thank you.