One of my favourite memories as a child was eating scones loaded with homemade jam and clotted cream with my Grandma and sister! Grandma always made the best scones and I still have her old scone cutter! Grandma’s other speciality was of course her lemon cheesecake.
I was also recently introduced to the traditional ‘Southern Style’ Biscuits by my friend who grew up in North Carolina. Biscuits in this part of the world are actually more like a savoury scone that you might have with a casserole or Sunday roast (perhaps how the English have dumplings?).
This friend of mine was actually diagnosed as a coeliac later in life and therefore can no longer eat her beloved ‘biscuits’ so I set out to come up with a gluten free recipe that she can use for her ‘Southern Style’ Biscuits, but that I can also modify for my sweeter scones with jam & cream (or butter). And below you have 2 different versions that both yield delicious scones, so you can use whichever suits your dietary preference/what’s available in the pantry!
Recipe Type: DF option
Serves ~10 Scones
Time 30 min
Ingredients:
Version 1:
- 2 C Sorghum Flour
- 1/2 C tapioca flour
- 4 t baking powder
- 1 tsp apple cider vinegar
- 2 free range, organic eggs
- 60g grass-fed, organic butter chilled
- 1-2 T nut milk if needed to bring mixture together into a dough.
- For sweet version – 1/4 C rapadura sugar or honey/maple syrup
- Optional for savoury scones – you can also add grated carrot/pumpkin, sun-dried tomatoes, feta, chives and other herbs
- Optional for sweet scones – you can also add some dried fruit like chopped apricots, sultanas, raisins, cranberries and spices like cinnamon and nutmeg.
Version 2:
- 1 1/2 cups blanched almond meal
- 3/4 cup tapioca flour
- 3 T coconut flour
- 1 T gluten-free baking powder
- pinch salt
- 1 t apple cider vinegar
- 60g grass-fed, organic butter chilled
- 2 free range, organic eggs
- 1-2 T nut milk if needed to bring mixture together into a dough.
- For sweet version – 1/4 C rapadura sugar or honey/maple syrup
- Optional for savoury scones – you can also add grated carrot/pumpkin, sun-dried tomatoes, feta, chives and other herbs
- Optional for sweet scones – you can also add some dried fruit like chopped apricots, sultanas, raisins, cranberries and spices like cinnamon and nutmeg.
Method (for both versions):
- Preheat oven to 180 degC
- Place dry ingredients into a bowl and combine.
- Add butter and bring together with your fingers so the mixture resembles ‘crumbs’.
- Add eggs and apple cider vinegar and combine with a spatula. Add nut milk if needed to bring the mixture into a dough-like texture.
- Roll the dough out onto a floured bench and kneed gently together before spreading the dough out into a shape that’s about 2cm thick.
- Use Scone cutters to cut out scones and place on baking tray lined with baking paper.
- Bake for 20 mins or until golden on the outside.