New Gluten-free Vegan Scone Recipe
I have been spending the last several weeks working on a few new recipes: gluten-free vegan scones and gluten-free pancakes. I have now produced a scone recipe that I can't wait to share.
This recipe is incredibly simple. I was resistant to the idea of vegan scones until I found a few recipes for cream scones, which don't take butter or egg. Therefore there is only one dairy product to substitute: the cream.
In a cream scone recipe, the fat in the cream is the substitute for the fat in the butter that has been omitted. Therefore I couldn't use a low-fat substitute like rice milk.
I have found that coconut cream is the best vegan substitute for regular cream, especially in cooking. I love coconut soup, coconut curry, coconut everything. It's the only non-dairy cream I've found that has somewhere close to the right fat content to substitute for cream. To make sure the coconut cream was really rich, I first scooped the dense part out from the top of the can into my liquid measure to make sure I got most of the good stuff in. Then I filled the measure to the appropriate line with the thinner liquid in the bottom of the can. There may be a bit of thin liquid at the bottom of the can that you can set aside in case you need it. Once separated, stir the cream until smooth. A 14-oz can of unsweetened coconut cream will yield enough thick, rich cream for one recipe.
For a dairy version, simply use real cream or see my famous scone recipe. If you are a wheat eater, you may certainly enjoy my scone recipes too. Just substitute your wheat flour 1:1 for the gluten-free flour listed here.
The trick with this recipe is to handle the dough as little as possible. In regular scones, the cold butter that has been cut into the flour melts as it cooks and leaves pockets of air. These air pockets are expanded by the baking powder and leave the dough light and flaky. Since this recipe doesn't call for butter, the lightness of the dough depends on you not compressing it by over-handling.
My best gluten-free tip is to use a flour mix that doesn't have xanthan gum, guar gum, or any gluten substitute. Besides being somewhat unnecessary in a quickbread recipe in general, they could render this delicate dough tough. Coconut seems to be a pretty good binder, so the use of xanthan gum can easily be overdone. If you try this recipe and find the scones too delicate, try using 1/8 tsp xanthan gun in your next batch.
Use a flour mix that you like the flavor of, and which substitutes well for wheat flour in other recipes. Coconut cream does not brown well, so make sure you use a flour mix that contains tapioca starch for color.
NEW! Don't want to mix everything yourself? I now have a Scone Mix available.
Lemon Coconut Cream Scones Recipe
Heat oven to 425 degrees farenheit.
2 C All-Purpose Gluten-free Flour
1 Tbsp baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
1/4 c sugar
1 1/4 C (unsweetened) coconut cream or coconut milk
zest of one lemon or orange
Combine all the dry ingredients. Add the citrus zest to the liquid. Mix the coconut cream into the dry ingredients until it barely holds together. (If the dough seems at all dry, or it isn't coming together quickly, add more coconut cream and quickly mix it in.) Flour your hands with white rice flour. Pour out the dough onto a floured surface, then press it together as gently as possible until it just comes together in a thick disk. Cut into eight equal pieces, carefully transfer them to a baking sheet, sprinkle with sugar, and bake for 8 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted into them comes out clean.
Enjoy your gluten-free dairy-free scones! Feel free to top the scones with a citrus glaze, but I think these stand well on their own.
Need a new zester? I recommend this microplane. It gives you a really fine zest, and it's easy to hold.
This recipe is incredibly simple. I was resistant to the idea of vegan scones until I found a few recipes for cream scones, which don't take butter or egg. Therefore there is only one dairy product to substitute: the cream.
In a cream scone recipe, the fat in the cream is the substitute for the fat in the butter that has been omitted. Therefore I couldn't use a low-fat substitute like rice milk.
I have found that coconut cream is the best vegan substitute for regular cream, especially in cooking. I love coconut soup, coconut curry, coconut everything. It's the only non-dairy cream I've found that has somewhere close to the right fat content to substitute for cream. To make sure the coconut cream was really rich, I first scooped the dense part out from the top of the can into my liquid measure to make sure I got most of the good stuff in. Then I filled the measure to the appropriate line with the thinner liquid in the bottom of the can. There may be a bit of thin liquid at the bottom of the can that you can set aside in case you need it. Once separated, stir the cream until smooth. A 14-oz can of unsweetened coconut cream will yield enough thick, rich cream for one recipe.
For a dairy version, simply use real cream or see my famous scone recipe. If you are a wheat eater, you may certainly enjoy my scone recipes too. Just substitute your wheat flour 1:1 for the gluten-free flour listed here.
The trick with this recipe is to handle the dough as little as possible. In regular scones, the cold butter that has been cut into the flour melts as it cooks and leaves pockets of air. These air pockets are expanded by the baking powder and leave the dough light and flaky. Since this recipe doesn't call for butter, the lightness of the dough depends on you not compressing it by over-handling.
My best gluten-free tip is to use a flour mix that doesn't have xanthan gum, guar gum, or any gluten substitute. Besides being somewhat unnecessary in a quickbread recipe in general, they could render this delicate dough tough. Coconut seems to be a pretty good binder, so the use of xanthan gum can easily be overdone. If you try this recipe and find the scones too delicate, try using 1/8 tsp xanthan gun in your next batch.
Use a flour mix that you like the flavor of, and which substitutes well for wheat flour in other recipes. Coconut cream does not brown well, so make sure you use a flour mix that contains tapioca starch for color.
NEW! Don't want to mix everything yourself? I now have a Scone Mix available.
Lemon Coconut Cream Scones Recipe
Heat oven to 425 degrees farenheit.
2 C All-Purpose Gluten-free Flour
1 Tbsp baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
1/4 c sugar
1 1/4 C (unsweetened) coconut cream or coconut milk
zest of one lemon or orange
Combine all the dry ingredients. Add the citrus zest to the liquid. Mix the coconut cream into the dry ingredients until it barely holds together. (If the dough seems at all dry, or it isn't coming together quickly, add more coconut cream and quickly mix it in.) Flour your hands with white rice flour. Pour out the dough onto a floured surface, then press it together as gently as possible until it just comes together in a thick disk. Cut into eight equal pieces, carefully transfer them to a baking sheet, sprinkle with sugar, and bake for 8 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted into them comes out clean.
Enjoy your gluten-free dairy-free scones! Feel free to top the scones with a citrus glaze, but I think these stand well on their own.
Need a new zester? I recommend this microplane. It gives you a really fine zest, and it's easy to hold.
Comments
Thanks for sharing, this sounds great! It is hard to find the thick, rich quality of cream in dairy substitutes, so coconut cream is a great choice - scones need that kind of fatty goodness : ) I'm thinking a blend of amaranth, millet or sorghum, and tapioca might work well. Have you tried using brown rice syrup or agave to sweeten instead of sugar?
best, Ellen
www.Iamglutenfree.blogspot.com
And, love your blog!
I just made these this morning with a brown rice, tapioca, potato starch, sorghum and coconut flour mix. I did add a squeeze of lemon juice though because I really like the lemon flavor to come through.
I was also kind of tired so instead of making them round and slicing them I just used my humongo cookie scoop and flattened them a little.
They are incredibly tender and good with some tea or coffee. I guess that's why the English like them so much.
Thank you.
I am not ready to publish my GF flour mix, which I blend myself from seven different flours. this recipe seems to work well with lots of different flour combinations, although I try to steer clear of any mix that contains bean flours for scones or other pastries. This is certainly you a recipe that you can use as a traditional cream scone with dairy and regular wheat flour if you choose. My mix substitutes nicely by volume and weight for wheat flour (as a gluten-free flour mix should).
this blog of yours is amazing and much appreciated : )
Can you tell me what a good texture outside and in for scones that are done?
I am working on trying to perfect the scones I tried making a few weeks back. Having never really been raised around scones, I am totally lost on what the appropriate texture should be. I work in a doctors office with some people who are vegan, gluten allergies, and soy allergies so my cooking for them is limited.
Thanks, & Love your blog!
~Willow
I am experimenting with chesnut flour (just roasted some chestnuts, then peeled & whirred in my seed grinder!) in pumpkin scones - found the recipe on 'daring to thrive' blog.
I love using coconut oil & milk in recipes, & yes, coconut flour! I used my brown rice mix (with potatoe & tapioca), 1/3 C coconut flour, & 1/3 C chestnut flour - & 2 T buckwheat flour - Oooh yes!! (recipe over at the Vale . . .)
Thanks for the feedback! I'm glad you liked them. I have also done vanilla instead of lemon zest, and I like it. It gives the dough a more pastry-like flavor.
I used a mixture of rice flour, corn flour and corn starch and it was great. Thank you for this fantastic recipe :)
My flours included sorghum, millet, and tapioca starch. The flavor was really nice and buttery.
I used coconut sugar instead of regular.
I added some flaxmeal for nutrition and a pinch of xanthan gum for better binding, but I think it could use a pinch more xanthan next time. It had a great crumb, but I worry that it would dry out and get crumbly over the next few days, so having a little more xanthan would be nice.
Since I didn't have coconut cream, I used a combination of canola oil and unsweetened vanilla almond milk to provide the fat and liquid.
Generally I'm used to seeing scones use coconut oil, so I would like to try coconut oil next time.
I made these with added almond extract and chopped almonds.
I ended up baking these in muffin tins at 400F for about 12 min.
These were really tasty! Buttery almond! And turbinado sugar sprinkled on top. Yum.