These delicious sourdough scones are the perfect master scone recipe. They have a tender crumb on the inside and are the perfect base for all of your favorite add-ins. From blueberries to chocolate chips and everything in between, this will be one of your favorite recipes.
Have I ever told you how much I love sourdough? Iโm kind of kidding. If you have been around here for more than one minute, you will surely know my deep passion for sourdough. This blog alone has over 60+ sourdough recipes… with more to come.
There are so many reasons to love sourdough, from its easier digestion to its heightened nutrition due to the fermented grains; it can also make life much easier.
Sometimes I donโt have the time to make a whole recipe from start to finish at one given moment. With sourdough, you can start it the night before and the bulk of the recipe is done until the next day. All you have to do is add a few remaining ingredients, if needed, and bake.
Such is the case with this basic scone recipe made with extra sourdough discard. You can whip them up right away or ferment them for better digestibility. You can even make them up to three days in advance, just shape them, cut, and bake.
So if you know you have a brunch coming up, a special breakfast, or just an afternoon tea, you can be super prepared and ready for easy baking that makes it look like you were up really early laboring away.
Or, let’s say you’re about to have a baby, and you want to prep some of these yummy scones for a one-handed snack that you can eat while nursing a sweet baby. Just looking into my near future.
These are the best scones for just that (and a great way to use up extra discard starter).
Tips For Making Sourdough Scones
- The key is to keep the scones very cold before baking so they donโt spread out. I put mine in the fridge for at least 30 minutes before baking.
- Also, it helps to use frozen butter, cold cream, and cold eggs. This also helps to make the scones more flaky.
- If you want to long-ferment these scones, there are two ways to go about this. See below for two examples.
- Freeze them totally baked for an easy and special breakfast any day of the week. Just pop them into the oven to reheat.
- Place the dough in the freezer for 5-10 minutes (or the refrigerator for about 30 minutes) before baking. This will help the scones keep their shape and not spread out so much.
This post contains affiliate links, which means I make a small commission at no extra cost to you. See my full disclosure here.
FAQ
Yes! Since this recipe doesnโt need the sourdough to actually give it height (it uses baking powder to do so), you can use sourdough discard or active sourdough starter for this recipe. Use discard to make sourdough discard scones.
Over-kneading the dough will leave you with a tough and chewy texture rather than light and flaky.
This scone dough should be in between wet and dry. It shouldn’t be too crumbly, but it also shouldn’t be too wet where it is too hard to shape.ย
Ingredients:
Dry Ingredients
All purpose flour
Granulated sugar
Baking powder
Salt
Unsalted butter– frozen. You want to use really cold butter to make tender scones.
Mix ins (chocolate chips, blueberries, dried cranberries, etc)
Wet Ingredients
Sourdough starter discard – You could also use an active starter, but it is not necessary to give this sourdough scone recipe rise.
Egg
Vanilla extract – Homemade or store-bought
Heavy cream – Milk can be substituted)
Topping (optional)
This gives it a nice golden color and crunchy sugar crust. Yum.
Heavy whipping cream
Coarse sugar
Tools:
Food processor or pastry blender (optional). You can also just use a fork.
Large mixing bowl
Measuring cups and spoons
Cutting board
Knife
Rolling pin
Kitchen scale (optional)
Bench scraper is very handyCheese grater for grating the frozen butter.
Parchment paper or silicone baking mats.
How To Make Sourdough Scones:
In a large bowl, combine flour, sugar, baking powder and salt.
Grate frozen butter into the dry ingredients with a cheese grater and cut in with a pastry cutter. (You can also use your hands or a food processor). Add in the mix-ins and coat with flour. Set the bowl aside.
In a separate bowl, combine the wet ingredients.
Add any add-ins desired into the butter flour mixture and mix gently.
Fold the wet ingredients into the flour mixture. Be careful not to overwork the dough. Fluffy scones that have the perfect texture are created by lightly mixing the dough.
On a clean, lightly floured surface, roll the dough out into a circle about 8โ in diameter. Cut the circle into 8 equal parts.
Place on a prepared baking sheet lined with parchment paper about 2โ apart.
Put in the fridge for 30 minutes up to 3 days for a longer fermentation. They will not ferment much at 30 minutes, but after 3 days the grains should be nicely fermented. If fermenting for longer period, wrap in plastic wrap so they don’t dry out.
When ready to bake, preheat the oven to 400ยฐ.
Brush the top of the scones with cream and sprinkle with sugar. (Optional)
Bake for 20-25 minutes or until golden brown.
Serve with a glaze if desired. A lemon glaze is delicious.
Long Fermented Scones
There are two ways to go about long-fermenting scones. You can make them as directed above, but before swapping and cutting, place them in a bowl with a lid in the refrigerator for up to 3 days. The longer they are in the fridge, the more the grain gets fermented. My friend has done this and finds that 3 days was the perfect amount of refrigerator fermentation for her family to tolerate grains.
Another way to make them is by mixing flour, salt, and sugar together in a large bowl.
Cut in butter using a fork or pastry blender.
Combine sourdough starter and cream.
Add the mixture to the flour mixture and mix until combined, being careful not to over mix.
Cover with a towel and allow to ferment at room temperature for 8-12 hours.
Sprinkle over baking powder, add egg, and any add-ins you would like. Knead together until just combined.
Shape and cut into equal slices.
Brush with cream.
Bake 400 degrees for 20 minutes until the edges start to turn golden.
Allow to cool for 10 minutes. Serve.
Scone Add-In Ideas:
- Chocolate chips
- Coconut
- Lemon zest
- Orange zest
- Dried fruit
- Nuts
- Cheddar cheese for a more savory scone. You could even chopped cooked bacon.
- Berries: blueberries, raspberries, strawberries, blackberries, or other fresh fruit.
Storage:
Score leftover scones in an airtight container at room temperature for 1-2 days or store in the fridge up to a week. You can also freeze unbaked scones for about 3-4 weeks. A better option is to freeze after baking the scones. They will last up to 3 months.
Find More Of My Favorite Sourdough Discard Recipes
- Sourdough Cheddar Waffles
- Fluffy Sourdough Biscuits
- Sourdough Blueberry Muffins
- Chocolate Chip Sourdough Scones
- Pizza crust: Makes a wonderful breakfast recipe
- Sourdough Discard Bagels
- Discard Sourdough Bread
If you try this recipe and love it, I would love if you could come back and give it 5 stars!
Sourdough Scones
Video
Ingredients
Dry Ingredients
- 2 cups all purpose flour, 280 grams
- 1/2 cup granulated sugar, 100 grams
- 1 tablespoon baking powder
- 1/2 teaspoons salt, 2.5 grams
- 1 stick unsalted butter, frozen, 113 grams
- 1 cup mix ins, chocolate chips, blueberries, dried cranberries
Wet Ingredients
- 1/2 cup sourdough starter discard, 142 grams
- 1 large egg
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract, 5 grams
- 3 tablespoons heavy cream, 45 grams (milk can be substituted)
Topping (optional)
- 2 tablespoons heavy cream, 30 grams
- 3 tablespoons coarse sugar
Instructions
- In a large bowl, combine flour, sugar, baking powder and salt.
- Grate frozen butter into the dry ingredients with a cheese grater and cut in with a pastry cutter. (You can also use your hands or a food processor).
- Add in the mix-ins and coat with flour. Set the bowl aside.
- In a separate bowl, combine the wet ingredients.
- Fold the wet ingredients into the flour mixture. Be careful not to overwork the dough.
- On a clean, lightly floured surface, roll the dough out into a circle about 8โ in diameter. Cut the circle into 8 equal parts.
- Place on a prepared baking sheet lined with parchment paper about 2โ apart.
- Put in the fridge for 30 minutes up to 3 days for a longer fermentation. They will not ferment much at 30 minutes, but after 3 days the grains should be nicely fermented.
- When ready to bake, preheat the oven to 400ยฐ.
- Brush the top of the scones with cream and sprinkle with sugar. (Optional)
- Bake for 20-25 minutes or until golden brown.
Notes
- The key is to keep the scones very cold before baking so they donโt spread out. I put mine in the fridge for at least 30 minutes before baking.
- Also, it helps to use frozen butter, cold cream, and cold eggs. This also helps to make the scones more flaky.
- If you want to long-ferment these scones, there are two ways to go about this. See below for two examples.
- Freeze them totally baked for an easy and special breakfast any day of the week. Just pop them into the oven to reheat.
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
Hi Lisa,
I have made this recipe multiple times and we absolutely love it! However, I am wanting to try making it with honey instead of sugar. How do you recommend I make this adjustment?
That is a good question. I’m not sure since it contains 1/2 cup of sugar. If you were to replace it with honey you would need to add more flour.
Hi Lisa, made these yesterday and baked today. I put dark chocolate chips as my add in. Even my husband,who doesn’t like to try new things absolutely lived them. Thanks for another wonderful recipe.
I just made the dough but haven’t baked yet! First time making scones. I used a cup of frozdn blueberries, raspberries, and blackberries that I slightly defrosted. Also added some orange zest. I cut them in with a pastry cutter which I am now thinking was a mistake โ they released so much juice that the dough became more of a sticky batter. I added a touch more flour and dropped them onto a baking sheet to ferment for 3 days. We will see how they turn out โ at least the “batter” tastes fantastic! Just curious about the texture.
Do you have any advice / adjustments for baking scones with berries?
That sounds amazing! If using frozen berries, I would recommend waiting to add them to the dough after the long fermentation and without thawing them. They may be slightly difficult to incorporate, but the scone texture will stay the same.
Thanks so much for the tip! I just baked these this morning and brought them to a class at church. Hardly any left, so they must be good!!! The texture is a little more chewy since I had all that extra water, but still delicious.
These turned out amazing! I did blueberry scones and they will definitely be added to our favorite sourdough recipes! Highly recommend!
I love your site, love your sourdough recipes! I have a bunch of apples I’m cooking and baking my way through, I’m going to use this recipe for the first apple scones batch tonight. I am curious, have you ever created scones using your active starter as the leavening agent rather than adding baking powder or baking soda? I am hesitant to try one of the recipes I have seen on other unfamiliar SD sites…your recipes are always so dependable! (I’m a chicken to experiment, afraid I will end up with something that isn’t flaky and is hard as a hockey puck). Thanks, Melanie
I have not tried it without the extra leaveners. I think because of the nature of this recipe, it can’t really be left out.
How much pumpkin should I add to make a pumpkin scone? Don’t want to mess up the consistency since pumpkin is a bit wet.
Here is my pumpkin scone recipe: https://www.farmhouseonboone.com/sourdough-pumpkin-scones
Hi Lisa – I’d like to try the long ferment and saw that you mentioned for help with this to see below for two examples. I’m having trouble finding them.
Thanks for any help!
It is under the long ferment section in the blog post. Basically, you can make them as directed the quick way and place them in the fridge for up to 3 days to ferment. Or there is separate instructions for long fermenting at room temperature.
These were super easy to make! My only issue was when I put my mix ins in the dough. I used fresh raspberries and they just became purรฉe when I tried to form the dough into a circle. Then I had to add more flour because all the juice made the dough a mushy mess. Iโm waiting for them to finish baking now, but Iโm sure theyโll taste amazing! Iโm wondering if maybe next time I should put the raspberries in after I have the dough formed? Not sure since it became mush after I tried to form the dough into a circle to cut. If anyone experienced this, Iโd appreciate some feedback!
I would wash, dry, then freeze the raspberries on a baking sheet for several hours…put them in a baggy if they will stay in there longer. I would toss them in the dry ingredients immediately before I combined everything and quickly throw it in the fridge…in fact I might just toss it in the freezer for 15 minutes, and prepare my worksurface to be able to form a quick circle, cut into pieces, plop onto parchment and rush it into the preheated oven.
Wow what an easy but delicious recipe, will be a staple in my home. Thank you for these discard recipes. I hate wasting things
Same here! So glad you enjoyed the recipe!
Can you freeze them prior to baking?
I don’t see why not. I’ve never done it. You can also freeze after baking.