Best Orange Scones Recipe (Panera Bread) (2024)

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Light, tender, moist, and flaky Orange Scones are a spot-on Panera Bread orange scone recipe! Cream scones are made with fresh orange juice and zest, bursting with bright citrus flavor. Glazed with fresh orange vanilla butter icing, tastes like spring!

Our youngest has had a long-standing obsession with orange scones from Panera and I thought it was high time I made a copycat version we can enjoy at home. Check out the comments for all of the rave reviews on this Panera Bread orange scone recipe.

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One of the best Scone recipe’s I have ever made (AND I have made plenty) they turned out perfectly, as instructed. Anyone who has never made scones before may be intimidated about trying them, BUT they shouldn’t with this recipe! Thank you! My husband Thanks you too!!!

Florence

I enjoy giving precise details in my recipe posts to lead my readers through any questions. If you’re just here for the printable recipe, use the Jump to Recipe to head straight there!

Why You Will Love this Panera Orange Scone Recipe

  • We love cream scones and this orange scone recipe is a delicious cross between a muffin, a biscuit and quick bread.
  • Scones are in a league all their own, less sweet than a muffin, more biscuit than quick bread! Be sure to browse to the bottom for many more fabulous scone recipes!
  • Better-than-Panera | You be the judge, the comments speak volumes!

My favorite Scone Recipe

Have you ever just bit into something and knew immediately you were 100% in love?

This Panera Bread Orange Scone recipe is so easy, made with fresh orange juice, and orange zest, the citrus is literally bursting! You will fall in love too!

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Simple Ingredients for Orange Scones

  • All-purpose Flour | I used organic, unbleached all-purpose flour, or use Gluten Free All-purpose flour along with a small amount of oat flour (¼ cup).
  • Sugar | Not a lot, just enough to sweeten it up a bit, I use all natural cane sugar. You may add up to ½ a cup though!
  • Butter | I believe in real cream butter — if it’s soft coming out of the fridge, it’s not real butter, but a blend. For scones, splurge for European butter with more butterfat and less water added –after all, you don’t make them every day!
  • Heavy Cream | Use the real stuff; this allows the scone to rise, be fluffy and tender.
  • Egg | I use large eggs in all my baking; bring to room temperature (if you forget, you can place the egg in a bowl of warm (not hot) water for 5-7 minutes.
  • Vanilla Bean Paste | Adds beautiful flecks of vanilla bean, aromatic and subtle, enhancing other flavors. You may substitute vanilla extract.
  • Zest & Juice | This is the essence of the orange scone, fresh zested orange peel, and a splash of juice.

Get the full recipe in the recipe card below.

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Zesting Tips

  • Ever grated a knuckle while trying to zest citrus? I have the tool for you! This Microplane zester is one of my most used and favorite kitchen tools! And makes short work to a lot of zest!

You might love these other scone recipes, too: Glazed Berry Scones and Cinnamon Crunch Scone, or these Cinnamon Chip Scones. Be sure to read to the end for many more great scone recipes.

How to Make Panera Bread Orange Scone Recipe

Step 1 | Prep Ingredients and Oven

Line a baking sheet with parchment paper. In a large bowl, whisk flour, granulated sugar, baking powder, and salt together. Preheat oven to 400°F (240°C).

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Grate butter using a box grater, then place in the freezer until ready to use. Or chop into small chunks, also placing in the freezer until ready to use.

Zest orange(s) and juice the orange, set aside.

Step 2 | Make Easy Orange Scones

Toss frozen, grated butter into the flour mixture using a pastry cutter or your hands. Quickly mix until it resembles coarse crumbs.

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In a small bowl or measuring cup, whisk wet ingredients together; the heavy cream, vanilla bean paste, egg, orange zest and a splash of orange juice.

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Make a small well in the center of the dry ingredients and then pour in egg mixture.

Gently mix with a fork until the dough just comes together, forming a shaggy dough.

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Step 3 | Form Scones

Turn out the dough onto a parchment-lined cookie sheet or a lightly floured surface. Using the parchment paper to help shape and bring the dough together into a disc, about ½ – ¾ inch thick. Make one large dough disc or two smaller discs for mini Panera scones.

If the dough is really dry, add a little splash of orange juice or heavy cream (just a few dribbles and work it in quickly). See TIPS below.

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Using a bench scraper or large knife cut the disc in half, then quarters, then again cutting the quarters in half; making 8 large scones (see below for mini scones).

Separate scones away from the other. Keeping them closer to one another will yield a more even-raised scone. Further apart they will appear more rustic, which was what I was going for in these orange scones.

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Step 4 | Freeze Orange Scones to Set

Freeze or refrigerate scones to firm the butter back up for about 10-30 minutes; now is a great time to preheat the oven to 400° F (204°C).

Bake the orangescones until lightly golden brown on the bottom, about 13-15 minutes, 13 will be softer and a little more tender, and 15 minutes will yield a more firm, dryer scone. Remove to a rack to cool completely.

Did you know all ovens heat differently? Many of them are off by 25-50 degrees, be sure to invest in a good (though cheap) oven thermometer, so you know if your oven runs hot or cold, then adjust your temperature accordingly.

How to Make Orange Butter Sweet Glaze

The orange glaze is optional (but amazing), gather the following ingredients:

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In a medium bowl mix together the powdered sugar, orange zest, melted butter, vanilla bean paste and orange juice; whisk until smooth.

You may use ¼ – ½ teaspoon of orange extract in place of the orange juice and orange zest, but I guarantee it won’t taste as good!

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Best Orange Scones Recipe (Panera Bread) (12)

Once the scones are cool, one at a time, carefully pick up and dip the scone top into the orange glaze to coat, then return to the rack to set the glaze.

Alternatively, you can cool the scones completely and pour the orange glaze into a freeze bag, snip off the corner (just a bit), and swirl the glaze on top of your version of Panera’s orange scones.

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Pro Glazing Tips

  • Liquid| Whisk in a few tablespoons of juice at a time until the consistency is thick, yet pourable.
  • Wire Rack| Using your same baking sheet or parchment, set a wire rack over the top then place scones on it to set the glaze.
  • Leftover glaze | Using a spoon or spatula, add a little extra drizzle to each scone!

Variations & Substitutions

  • Food Processor Orange Scones | Combine all dry ingredients in a food processer, and pulse to combine. Add the grated or cubed butter, pulsing just until it resembles a coarse meal. Pour combined wet ingredients in, pulse just a few times to wet dry ingredients, then turn onto a floured surface and proceed with the recipe.
  • Make Ahead | Make the scones, cutting them into wedges, then wrap the dough disc tightly in plastic wrap, place in a freezer bag, and store in the freezer for up to 3 months. Bake from frozen (separating slightly) on a lightly greased baking sheet or parchment-lined cookie sheet.
  • Make Blueberry Scone | Omit the orange juice and zest (replace with a little lemon zest instead) and stir in a cup of fresh or frozen blueberries carefully into the mixture at the same time as adding the wet ingredients.
  • Sweeter Orange Scones | Some like their scones sweeter, add up to an additional ¼ cup sugar if sweet scones are desired.

Gluten-Free Orange Scones

I have had a lot of success replacing regular flour with a good cup-for-cup gluten-free flour (my favorite – Bob’s Red Mill comes in a close second) in my baked goods!

  • Use all gluten-free flour (though I think they sometimes have an off taste), so I will use 1 cup GF Flour and replace the remaining ¾ cup flour with a portion of almond flour and oat flour; not only do I believe they taste better, but the texture is better too.
  • Gluten-free flours tend to soak up more liquid; use good judgment, and, if necessary, add more liquid a teaspoon or two at a time until you have a good consistency.
  • Overbaked gluten-free baked goods are dry and yucky, so I always check my gluten-free scones 2-3 minutes before the lowest time. Keep an eye on them, and when they are puffed and no longer glossy, it’s probably safe to remove them. And if they are slightly undercooked, no worries; it’s much better than overbaked.
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Make-Ahead and Freeze Orange Scones

Scones are fabulous make-ahead treats! You can make the scones up to the point of baking, wrap well in freezer baggie and freeze up to 3-4 months. Bake as directed, possibly adding a little time at the end.

You may also freeze already baked scones, the same way, wrapped well in an airtight container up to 3 months. I recommend that you freeze un-glazed, but if that is your only choice, they will be fine.

Storing Orange Scones

Store scones on the counter in an airtight container up to 5 days, or pretend you are a bakery and wrap them individually and place them in a pretty covered cake stand. Scones may also be frozen for 3-4 months and wrapped well.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I get my scones to rise and be fluffy?

Make sure your baking powder is fresh; most baking powder and baking soda are fresh for about 6 months from opening.

To check place 1 teaspoon baking powder in a cup and add ⅓ cup hot tap water. If it starts to bubble, it’s good to go. If not, by some new!

Can I use baking soda instead of baking powder in scones?

The short answer is yes! However, baking soda is three times more potent than baking powder, so reduce to about ¾ teaspoon of baking soda in this recipe. It also relies on acid to activate the soda; using orange juice, you should be fine.

What can I use besides milk/cream in my scones?

Other replacements might not produce as fluffy and high rise in scones, but are usable: buttermilk (would be good if you are using baking soda), evaporated or dry (reconstituted) milk, canned coconut milk or other plant based milk will work, or you could even try yogurt or even plain water.

Why do my scones spread?

1. Make sure your oven is not too hot and not too cool, many ovens do not accurately. Purchase an oven thermometer to be sure, then adjust accordingly.

2. You may have also overworked the dough, be sure to bring dough together until just combined.

3. Instead of separating the scones completely, cut through them and use the bench scraper to just barely pull the scone away from the other one, this will give structure and rise to the scone, though you may need to bake a few additional minutes.

Why does my glaze fall off my scones?

Two reasons; your scones were not cooled completely and/or you thinned out the glaze too much. Simply add a bit more powdered sugar a tablespoon at a time until the glaze is the right consistency.

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8 Baking Tips for Making Better Scones

  • COLD BUTTER| I grate my butter using a standard box grater and place it in the freezer while assembling the rest of my ingredients.
  • REAL BUTTER | I cannot stress this enough: it doesn’t matter if you use salted or unsalted butter, but make sure it is real, pure cream butter, no blends! It is not real butter if it is soft coming out of the fridge. And the higher quality the butter (e.g. European butter) the better the result. Cheaper butters contain water and that will impact your scones!
  • COLD CREAM OR MILK | Unlike other baking recipes (chocolate loaf cake) that, like room temperature ingredients, scones do not! Keep the cream in the fridge until ready to use.
  • DO NOT OVERWORK| Think of scones as the dainty, delicate cousin to yeast bread; whereas yeast bread thrives on kneading to activate the ingredients, scones will become tough and will not rise as well if the dough is overworked.
  • USE A PASTRY CUTTER | To cut in the butter, using a pastry cutter keeps warm hands out, the beauty of grating the butter and freezing it allows you to quickly mix with your hands without warming the dough too much. And my hands are always cold anyway!
  • LIQUID | Only add enough liquid to bring the dough together, having some extra flour is okay, the dough will look shaggy (see above picture).
  • SHAPING | To quickly and easily shape your scone disc, use parchment paper (or wax paper would work, too) and fold it up on the ingredients, using the paper to press together and smooth the dough into the disc. This contains the floury mess and helps your hands not warm the butter too much.
  • CHILL AGAIN | Once your scones are formed, place the entire pan in the freezer or fridge for 10-30 minutes. This gives the scone time to firm the butter back up, chilling it so the magic happens when it hits the hot oven.
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High Altitude Orange Scone Recipe

  • Decrease baking powder to 1 ½ teaspoons.
  • If above 7,000 feet, add additional 1-2 tablespoons flour
  • You may need to increase liquid, but do not overadd. The scones should really just barely hold together.
  • Bake as directed, but begin checking them 2-3 minutes early.

How to Make Mini Orange Scones

  • When forming the dough discs, split the dough into two even portions on their own parchment sheets.
  • Proceed with shaping into a smaller disc and cutting the same way, yielding 8 smaller petite scones per disc.
  • Baking time and temp will be the same, but check them on the earlier side at about 12 minutes.
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Best breakfast foods to serve with orange scones

Make it a feast! Enjoy this Prosciutto and Gruyere hashbrown quiche, or this easy Chile Relleno Casserole and make these Air Fryer Sausage Links!

Prosciutto & Gruyere Quiche with Hash Brown Crust

Golden and crispy hash brown crust filled with a baked mixture of luscious eggs, cream, gruyere cheese, caramelized leeks, peppers, artichoke hearts, mushrooms and prosciutto.

Read more

Easy Hatch Green Chile Relleno Casserole Recipe

Best Chile Relleno Casserole is an easy, delicious vegetarian dish made with Monterey Jack cheese stuffed whole roasted chiles, topped with an egg, milk batter, topped with more cheese, then baked to fluffy perfection. Easily adapted to be gluten free.

Read more

Easy Air Fryer Breakfast Sausage Links (Fresh or Frozen)

Enjoy perfectly crisp and juicy breakfast link sausage in the Air Fryer. The best part, easier clean-up, no greasy mess! Sausage links or patties are excellent for a quick and easy breakfast. Use pork, turkey or chicken sausages!

Read more

More great scone and baked goods recipes:

  • Eggnog Scones with White Chocolate Glaze | a holiday treat
  • Maple Pumpkin Scones| all the Fall feels!
  • Blueberry Streusel Muffin Cake | it’s the (blueberry) bomb!
  • Cinnamon Swirl Coffee Cake | one of a few made with a boxed cake mix.
  • Lemon Rosemary Scones | Hello bright flavors!
  • Blackberry Scones | a serious spring or summer obsession!
  • Savory Ricotta Scones | be still my Italian beating heart!
  • Chocolate Chip Scones | from a scone lover like me!
  • Gluten Free Coffee Cake | not just for gluten-free folks! Amazing!

When to make this recipe?

Try making these Better than Panera orange scones for Easter, Mother’s day, a luncheon, tea party or anytime a bright, flavorful, low-sugar scone craving hits!

I hope you loved this easy orange scone recipe — if you did, would you share your creation onInstagram,FacebookandPinterest? And be sure to comment below!

Like this recipe?

Don’t forget to give it a ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ star rating and leave a comment below the recipe!

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The Best Orange Scones (Panera Copycat)

Light, tender, moist and flaky Orange Cream Scones are better than Panera! Made with fresh orange juice and zest, these scones are bursting with bright orange flavor while not overwhelming the scone. Glazed with fresh orange vanilla butter icing, bound to bring a smile to anyone!

4.85 from 59 votes

Click stars to rate now!

Print Pin Save Rate

Prep Time: 15 minutes minutes

Cook Time: 15 minutes minutes

Chill Time: 10 minutes minutes

Total Time: 40 minutes minutes

Servings: 8 regular scones, 16 mini scones

Calories: 355kcal

Author: Kathleen Pope

Ingredients

Orange Scones

  • 1 ¾ cups all-purpose flour I use organic unbleached all-purpose flour
  • ¼ cup granulated sugar I use all-natural cane sugar, regular sugar may be used (some say they like sweeter scones, add up to ½ cup total)
  • 2 teaspoons baking powder reduce to 1 ½ teaspoons for high altitude
  • ¼ teaspoon kosher salt
  • 4 tablespoons salted butter cold, grate the butter and place in freezer or cut into small cubes, keep in fridge until ready to use)
  • ½ cup heavy cream might need an extra tablespoon or two for high altitude
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla bean paste replace with vanilla extract
  • 1 large egg room temp is best
  • 1 tablespoon Orange zest grated from one orange | I used large naval oranges
  • 1-2 tablespoons orange juice fresh squeezed

Orange Vanilla Butter Glaze

US CustomaryMetric

Instructions

Scones

  • Line a baking sheet with parchment paper. In a large mixing bowl, whisk the flour (1 ¾ cups), granulated sugar (¼ cup), baking powder (2 tsp) and salt (¼ tsp) together.

  • Toss frozen, grated butter (4 TBL) into flour mixture and using a pastry cutter or your hands quickly mix until it resembles coarse crumbs.

  • In a small bowl or measuring cup, whisk together the heavy cream (½ cup), vanilla bean paste or extract (1 tsp), egg (1), orange zest (1 TBL) and orange juice (1-2 TBL).

    Make a small well in the center of the dry ingredients and pour in the egg mixture. Gently mix together with a fork until the dough just comes together, forming a shaggy dough.

  • Turn out the dough onto a parchment lined cookie sheet, using the parchment to help form the dough into disc, about ½ – ¾-inch thick. If the dough is really dry, add a little splash of orange juice or heavy cream.

  • Using a bench scraper or large knife cut the disc in half, then quarters, then again cutting the quarters in half; making 8 large scones (see below for mini scones).

  • Separate scones barely away from the other, closer to one another will yield a more evenly raised scone, further apart they will appear more rustic. Freeze or refrigerate scones to firm the butter back up for about 10-30 minutes, now is a great time to preheat the oven to 400° F (204°C).

  • Bake scones until lightly golden brown on the bottom, about 13-15 minutes, 13 will be softer, 15 more firm. Remove to a rack to cool completely.

Orange Butter Glaze

  • In a wide bowl (large enough to dunk a scone) mix together the powdered sugar (1 cup), orange zest (1 orange), melted butter (1 TBL), vanilla bean paste (½ tsp) anand whisk in just enough orange juice to get a smooth pourable consistency; whisk until smooth.

    Once scones are cool, one at a time, carefully pick up and dip scone top into the orange glaze to coat, then return to the rack to set the glaze.

  • Store scones on counter in airtight container up to 5 days, or wrap individually and place in a pretty covered cake stand. Scones may also be frozen 3-4 months wrapped well.

Last step! Leave a RatingRate this recipe here. This helps other readers and helps support this website.

Video

Notes

Make-ahead orange scones | Scones are fabulous make-ahead treats! You can make the scones up to the point of baking, wrap well and freeze up to 4 months. Bake as directed, possibly adding a little time at the end. You may also freeze already baked scones, the same way, wrapped well in an airtight container up to 4 months. I recommend that you freeze un-glazed, but if that is your only choice, they will just be a bit sticky as they thaw.

For Smaller Scones (Mini Scones)

  • When forming the dough discs, split the dough into two even portions on their own parchment sheets.
  • Proceed with shaping into a smaller disc and cutting the same way, yielding 8 smaller petite scones per disc.
  • Baking time and temp will be the same, but check them on the earlier side at about 12 minutes.

Glazing Tips

  • Liquid| When adding fresh squeezed orange juice, whisk in a few tablespoons at a time until the consistency is thick, yet pourable.
  • Wire Rack | This makes clean-up and setting so much simpler. Using your same baking pan, and parchment, set a wire rack over the top then use it to place scones on to set the glaze.
  • Glaze falls off| If the glaze falls off or soaks in, it’s one of two things. Your scones are not cooled and/or you thinned out the glaze too much. Simply add a bit more powdered sugar a tablespoon at a time until the glaze is the right consistency.
  • Leftover glaze | add a little extra drizzle to each scone with a spoon or spatula!

8 Baking Tips for Making Better Scones

  • COLD BUTTER| I grate my butter using a standard box grater and place it in the freezer while assembling the rest of my ingredients.
  • REAL BUTTER | I cannot stress this enough: it doesn’t matter if you use salted or unsalted butter, but make sure it is real, pure cream butter, no blends! It is not real butter if it is soft coming out of the fridge. And the higher quality the butter (e.g. European butter) the better the result. Cheaper butters contain water and that will impact your scones!
  • COLD CREAM OR MILK | Unlike other baking recipes (chocolate loaf cake) that, like room temperature ingredients, scones do not! Keep the cream in the fridge until ready to use.
  • DO NOT OVERWORK| Think of scones as the dainty, delicate cousin to yeast bread; whereas yeast bread thrives on kneading to activate the ingredients, scones will become tough and will not rise as well if the dough is overworked.
  • USE A PASTRY CUTTER | To cut in the butter, using a pastry cutter keeps warm hands out, the beauty of grating the butter and freezing it allows you to quickly mix with your hands without warming the dough too much. And my hands are always cold anyway!
  • LIQUID | Only add enough liquid to bring the dough together, having some extra flour is okay, the dough will look shaggy (see above picture).
  • SHAPING | To quickly and easily shape your scone disc, use parchment paper (or wax paper would work, too) and fold it up on the ingredients, using the paper to press together and smooth the dough into the disc. This contains the floury mess and helps your hands not warm the butter too much.
  • CHILL AGAIN | Once your scones are formed, place the entire pan in the freezer or fridge for 10-30 minutes. This gives the scone time to firm the butter back up, chilling it so the magic happens when it hits the hot oven.

Nutrition

Serving: 1scone | Calories: 355kcal | Carbohydrates: 44g | Protein: 8g | Fat: 16g | Saturated Fat: 9g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 1g | Monounsaturated Fat: 5g | Trans Fat: 0.3g | Cholesterol: 175mg | Sodium: 293mg | Potassium: 104mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 22g | Vitamin A: 647IU | Vitamin C: 2mg | Calcium: 97mg | Iron: 2mg

Best Orange Scones Recipe (Panera Bread) (22)

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Best Orange Scones Recipe (Panera Bread) (2024)

FAQs

How much sugar is in a Panera orange scone? ›

Nutrition & Allergens
Nutrition InformationValue
Carbohydrates77 g
Dietary Fiber2 g
Total Sugars39 g
Protein8 g
7 more rows

Why are my scones not fluffy? ›

Not using enough leavening agent. Placing scones far away from each other on the baking tray. Not preheating the oven before putting in the scones. Low-quality ingredients.

Does Panera Bread sell scones? ›

Blueberry Scone. Deliciously crafted, cream-based scone made with dried, infused blueberries.

Should scone dough rest 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.

Should you chill scone dough before baking? ›

Not chilling the dough before baking: to really ace your scones, it helps to chill your dough again before it's baked. Using cold ingredients does help, but your hands will warm up the dough when you're working with it and the extra step of chilling will help you get the best result.

Are scones high in sugar? ›

When comparing sugar per 100g, values were highest for fruit scones at 18g sugar/100g (range 10.6-26.6g sugar/100g), followed by luxury scones at 14.5g sugar/100g and plain at 11.7g sugar/100g (Figure 6b). (g) Scone type and sample no.

Can you freeze Panera scones? ›

Store scones on the counter in an airtight container up to 5 days, or pretend you are a bakery and wrap them individually and place them in a pretty covered cake stand. Scones may also be frozen for 3-4 months and wrapped well.

How much sugar is in a Panera blueberry scone? ›

Nutrition Facts
Calories 470(1965 kJ)
Sugars6 g
Protein8 g
Alcohol0 g
Caffeine0 mg
8 more rows

What is the best flour for scones? ›

The secret is using cake flour instead of all-purpose flour. It's lower in protein and makes for ultra-tender scones. If you don't have any on hand, you can easily make your own using all-purpose flour and cornstarch (see the FAQs below). For a kid-friendly twist, don't miss my chocolate chip scones.

How do you make scones rise higher? ›

To ensure taller scones, start with a thicker dough disc and place the scones on a tray with sides, allowing them to slightly touch one another. This arrangement encourages the scones to push against the pan and each other, promoting height.

Why are my scones heavy and dense? ›

My scones have a dense, heavy texture and poor volume

You may have used too little raising agent or over handled the dough before it was baked. The oven may have been too cool.

Does Krispy Kreme own Panera? ›

JAB Holding Company is the privately-held parent company of foodservice concepts Bagel Brands, Caribou Coffee, Einstein Noah Restaurant Group, Espresso House, Krispy Kreme Doughnuts, Panera Bread, Peet's Coffee and Pret a Manger. It also owns Keurig and Dr.

How many calories are in Panera Bread Orange scone? ›

Panera Bread Scones Orange (1 scone) contains 81g total carbs, 78g net carbs, 20g fat, 9g protein, and 540 calories.

Does Panera bake their own bread? ›

All That Delicious Bread is Baked Fresh Daily

Panera employs over 6,000 bakers who make more than 250 million bagels and 50 million baguettes each year. Every night, fresh dough is delivered to all Panera locations from Fresh Dough Facilities across the country. So their bread is about as fresh as it gets.

How do you get the best rise on scones? ›

To ensure taller scones, start with a thicker dough disc and place the scones on a tray with sides, allowing them to slightly touch one another. This arrangement encourages the scones to push against the pan and each other, promoting height.

What type of flour is best for scones? ›

Use all-purpose flour for a higher rising scone that holds its shape nicely, both in and out of the oven. To make more delicate, lower-rising, cake-like scones, substitute cake flour for all-purpose flour. Reduce the liquid in the recipe by 1 to 2 tablespoons, using just enough to bring the dough together.

How do you make scones rise and not spread? ›

Pack the scones closely on the baking tray so they will support each other as they rise rather than spreading. Make scones the day you need them – they taste far better warm.

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