Real English Scones Recipe - Food.com (2024)

21

Community Pick

Submitted by Zurie

"This is SO plain and SO simple that I'm not sure if I should post it. Yet, these are the scones you get in Britain with clotted cream and strawberry jam, or in South African coffee shops and tea gardens with whipped cream and apricot jam."

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Ready In:
45mins

Ingredients:
7
Yields:

12 scones

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ingredients

  • 2 cups flour, preferably cake flour
  • 4 teaspoons baking powder (not soda)
  • 12 teaspoon salt
  • 4 tablespoons butter, room temp
  • 1 egg, lightly beaten
  • milk, enough to add up to 3/4 cup with the egg added
  • 1 egg, extra

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directions

  • Heat oven to 400 deg F.
  • Mix flour, baking powder and salt in a bowl.
  • Add butter and rub in with fingers until it resembles crumbs.
  • Beat egg lightly, pour into a measuring cup, and add milk -- you can use buttermilk instead -- to make up 3/4 cup liquid.
  • Add liquid slowly to dry ingredients while mixing. You should have a soft dough, but not wet or very sticky.
  • Sprinkle flour on a wooden board or working surface. Turn dough out on that. Pat out lightly with fingers until about 1 1/2 inch flat, or a little less.
  • Press out rounds about 2 1/2 inches across.
  • Gather excess dough and repeat process.
  • Beat extra egg well.
  • Put the scones on a greased tin, use a pastry brush and brush with the beaten egg.
  • Bake for about 13 minutes until well risen and golden.
  • To serve, best use them quickly. Coffee shops keep making up batches, so as to serve them almost hot from the oven.
  • To eat, break open while hot or warm, and eat with cream and different jams.

Questions & Replies

Real English Scones Recipe - Food.com (13)

  1. Hello, Can you please tell me how much is one cup in grams? I don't know whether to use the South African, American or which cup measure? (I'm from central Europe.) Thank you!

    gnes T.

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Reviews

  1. After visiting England, Scotland and Ireland (due to my job) many, many times for over 40 years and having the most wonderful Cream Teas, I couldn't bear to eat what we in America call a scone. Hardly a resemblance!! Thanks for this recipe. I made these scones today and thoroughly enjoyed them with my clotted cream and jam. It was almost like being back in Devon on the Cornish Coast. Will definitely make this recipe again!

    maryann.nowak1949

  2. I just made these scones, and they were great. But i must admit i will be putting some sugar into the mix next time, as i think the recipe really needs some.

    Elizabeth W.

  3. Yummy Indeed! Light and flaky with golden brown top.

    Bianca Rochelle P.

  4. Taking off one star because we had to cut the baking powder in half and remove the salt. Brits hate too much salt and bitter baking powder!

    Sally L.

  5. I was born and raised in South Africa for 23 years, lived in England 13 years, 20 years in the USA and 2 years in Mexico a f these are definitely the best scones. The Americans make them too sweet. Yummy..

    Celine H.

see 16 more reviews

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Tweaks

  1. Bit less salt and baking powder reduces that tongue numbing effect but the scones are still tasty and rise well

    Bianca Rochelle P.

  2. Cut baking powder in half, no salt. Hubby is British and carnt stand bloody salt!

    Sally L.

  3. we are now on the blood group diet, so i had to change many of the key ingredients. i used 1 1/2 cups rice flour, 1/2 cup buckwheat flour and changed the butter to flax oil based margarine, substituted the milk for soy milk. i also added caster sugar 1/2 cup. worked great! next time will use all rice flour though as the buckwheat was too 'grainy' for my liking.

    sticky fingers

RECIPE SUBMITTED BY

Zurie

South Africa

  • 163 Followers
  • 342 Recipes
  • 24 Tweaks

I'm a widow, retired, and I love cooking. I live on the coast in South Africa and I love seafood. You're welcome to my recipes (all kinds, definitely not just seafood!) Just remember that no recipe is ever cast in stone -- adjust to your taste! The photo was taken at a rustic seaside restaurant on our West Coast, approx 1 year ago (2016).

View Full Profile

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Real English Scones Recipe  - Food.com (2024)

FAQs

What is the difference between British scones and English scones? ›

British scones are traditionally drier, lighter, plain in flavor, and significantly less sugary than American scones and are commonly served for breakfast or with afternoon tea as a bready snack. America's Test Kitchen claims that butter is one of the major differences between English and American scones.

What is the best flour for scones? ›

We recommend using all-purpose flour. There is some debate as to what flour one should use to go around achieving the perfect scone. This is because within different flours comes different levels of protein.

What to avoid when making scones? ›

5 Mistakes to Avoid When Baking Scones
  1. Using anything but cold ingredients. The secret to the flakiest scones is to start with cold ingredients — cold butter, cold eggs, and cold cream. ...
  2. Only using all-purpose flour. ...
  3. Overmixing the dough. ...
  4. Not chilling the dough before baking. ...
  5. Baking them ahead of time.
May 1, 2019

Is it better to use butter or margarine for scones? ›

In terms of flavour, butter is always king when it comes to baking scones. However, when it comes to texture, a decent block margarine can be just as good.

What is an American scone called in England? ›

A Biscuit (U.S.) Is a Scone (U.K.)

Both baked goodies use flour, fat, liquid and a leavening agent. The main differences are that scones tend to have less butter (because you'll add butter to it when you eating it — or else, clotted cream or jam) while American biscuits tend to have more butter and light layers.

What is the American version of a scone? ›

Biscuits and scones have the same British ancestor, but the early Southern colonists' version included butter, lard, buttermilk, and soft wheat, plentiful in the South. Over time, this fluffy and layered bread evolved into a regional commodity: the Southern biscuit.

What is a potato scone called in England? ›

It seems the Irish call them Potato bread, the English call them potato cakes (Lancashire), Scottish call them potato scones (tottie scones). Irish potato bread is typically made from mashed potato, and either flour or baking soda, and is usually fried.

What are the qualities of a perfect scone? ›

Among the myriad baked goods in the breakfast pastry canon, scones are uniquely delicious in their humble simplicity. The best scones have a crisp, slightly caramelized exterior and a tender, buttery, just-sweet interior. They can be dressed up with a glaze, studded with fruit or nuts, or gently spiced.

What is the secret to making scones rise? ›

Once you've cut out your scone shapes, flip them over and place upside down on the baking tray. This will help them rise evenly and counteract any 'squashing' that happened when you cut out the dough. Perfect scones should rise to about 2 inches high.

Should you rest scones before baking? ›

The resting of the dough helps to relax the dough so everything remains tender, if you kneaded the dough and baked the scones immediately the insides would be great but the outsides would be tough and chewy.

What is the correct way to prepare a scone? ›

Scoop out clotted cream and jams onto your plate, enough for one scone. Break apart a small bite-sized portion of scone with your hands or if using a knife, cut the scone horizontally. Use a knife to slather on cream and jam onto the broken-off piece of scone. The bite-sized piece of scone should be eaten in 1-2 bites.

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