On Saturday I had a delicious cheese and sausage scone at Ryebread Café and as I sat contemplating this giant, craggy triangle I started wondering what it is that made this a scone rather than a biscuit. I posted the photo on Instagram, and posed that query. I got a few responses, and decided to do some of my own digging. I compared some recipes, checked my favorite experts Mark Bittman and Shirley Corriher, and found this article in the New York Times. All of which confirmed my suspicions that there isn’t much difference. Scone dough generally has sugar, and egg.
I am already thinking about my next trip to Ryebread for another scone, because theirs are better than any I’ve ever made. They reminded me of the prosciutto bread I used to get on Mulberry St. in New York. They had sweet ones too. I will definitely have to go back.
I didn’t grow up in a biscuit family, and was fairly late to making them. I make them both rolled and dropped. At the Morning Glory in Philly they make really good ones with a crumb topping that mystifies me, but I love them. Recently I have relied on Mark Bittman’s recipe from How to Cook Everything, (which if you don’t have, I highly recommend) and I roll and cut them. Biscuits are one of those things that seem hard to make, but are super easy and a real morning treat. And according to him scones are just a richer biscuit.
Last Christmas I was invited to a friend’s house and she was making ham, so I offered to bring biscuits. I decided I would find a recipe for the flakiest biscuits. The recipe I used even had you laminate the dough, like you would do when making puff pastry, folding cold butter into a dough, then rolling it and folding it a few times to create many layers. the biscuits tasted fine, and certainly looked impressive, but I wouldn’t make them again. It turns out I don’t want my biscuits quite that flaky.
I recall having scones on my first trip to London, and what I got was a small round cake with currants, not biscuit-y at all. British and Irish scones aren’t what Americans call scones. Those are more cake-y and drier than ours. We bake the butter in, they spread it on, we add sugar to the batter, they use loads of jam. To read more about British scones here is a great article from Cook’s Illustrated including a recipe for traditional scones. I like them too, but prefer the American ones, I like the craggy surfaces. Do you have a preference? What do you think of when you think of scones or biscuits?
Quirky Chrissy - I think both have a place in my heart. I love biscuits (flaky, rich, rolled, dropped, covered in gravy, topped with cheese and sausage…) a lot. I also love scones. Especially Irish scones. Brian’s mom made really delicious scones for tea. She was so adorable; whenever we went over there, she insisted on food and tea 🙂
Haralee - I can not make a good biscuit. I can make a scone. I like a fluffy light biscuit and all the rage for brunch around here is the fried chicken breast and bacon on the biscuit with gravy. Tasty. It would not work with a scone because the biscuit need to be split in half.
I don’t like to be served a scone with out butter or jam, I mean really!
nrlowell@comcast.net - Haralee, I think if you can make a good scone, you can make a good biscuit. That brunch sure sounds good.
Little Miss Wordy - I’m more of a scone. Ironically, I just introduced my kids to scones a couple of weeks ago and they’re on board though they still love a good biscuit…not too flaky. 🙂
nrlowell@comcast.net - Leah, I am truly torn, but that savory scone was stupendous!
Jessica Scott - Scone all the way. The only biscuits I like are covered in gravy. 🙂
Bringing Food to Work » Chefs Last Diet - […] written about scones and the scone vs. biscuit conundrum recently, so in the interest of holding your attention I won’t elaborate on […]
B is for Baking » Chefs Last Diet - […] to make beautifully decorated cakes, and limit my baking to the simplest of items such as pies, biscuits, and […]