Alert: pumpkin treats are back at Starbucks for the season, and I am THIS excited about it!
I’ll admit that I tend to get irrationally irritated at the sight of unseasonably early Halloween decorations, costumes, and candy out in stores (which doesn’t even make sense because fun-sized Snickers are my favorite) but fall-inspired pumpkin drinks, breads, and baked goods? Can’t come soon enough.
Especially Pumpkin Scones from Starbucks.
Dense and not too sweet, the cinnamon and nutmeg-spiced pumpkin-flavored treats coated in a thick layer of glaze with a spiced drizzle on top are the epitome of fall deliciousness. Being able to make a spot-on version of ’em at home? EVEN BETTER.
Moist and caky rather than dry and crumbly, these Starbucks Clone Pumpkin Scones absolutely melt-in-your-mouth, are super easy to whip together, and are made with 100% fridge and pantry staples. I didn’t have to buy a thing!
Bake a batch for a sweet morning treat, to be the office hero, or to share with close friends. You, they, and y’all will devour them.
Start the Pumpkin Scones by pulsing together the dry ingredients including flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt, with warm, pumpkin pie-esque spices like cinnamon, nutmeg, cloves and ginger in a large food processor. If you don’t have a food processor, just whisk them together in a big ‘ol bowl.
Next, pulse in 6 Tablespoons cold, cubed butter until the mixture is the consistency of cornmeal.
If you don’t have a food processor, use a pastry cutter or your fingertips to incorporate the butter. It will take a little bit of time, but it’ll work just fine. It’s the same way I make my apple crisp topping!
Next, bust out the star of the pumpkin scones – PUMPKIN, of course! 100% pure pumpkin puree is what we’re using to flavor and color the yummy pumpkin scones, not pumpkin pie FILLING, which is already sweetened and spiced.
Combine the wet ingredients including 1/2 cup pumpkin puree, 3 Tablespooons half & half, and 1 egg in a small bowl.
Add the wet ingredients to the flour/butter mixture, then pulse until just combined. If you’re going the big ol’ bowl route, stir with wooden spoon until the mixture comes together in a ball.
Turn the dough out onto a lightly floured surface, knead a few times to get the dough to come together, then press it into a circle about 1″ thick. (NOTE: I made a 1/2 batch for these pics, so I just did a half circle!)
Next, bust out your trusty pizza cutter. Ben and I have FOUR. Why, I have no idea, but this one is Ben’s favorite. Watch it glide through without squishing the cheese out the side! he exclaimed while gliding through a cheese quesadilla the other night. ;)
Cut the full circle in half, then cut each half into 3 wedges.
Place the wedges onto a parchment paper-lined baking sheet, then pop into a 425 degree oven to bake for 14-16 minutes, or until they’re just starting to turn golden brown. Your kitchen will smell heavenly, btw!
After pulling the scones from the oven, cool them completely on a wire rack. I placed mine in front of our back door so the cool breeze would help them along. Worked like a charm!
Once the scones are cool, stir together the plain white glaze that coats the outside of each scone. Simply stir together 1 cup + 1 Tablespoon powdered sugar, with 2 Tablespoons half & half in a bowl.
Spoon the glaze on top of the scones then gently spread to cover. Looking like Starbucks’ version already, no?!
While the glaze hardens for 10 minutes, whisk together the spiced drizzle that goes on top which includes 1 cup + 3 Tablespoons powdered sugar, 2 Tablespoons half & half, and the same spices we used in the scone batter – cinnamon, nutmeg, ginger, and cloves. I used the same bowl as the glaze to cut down on dishes to wash.
Drizzle the spiced, well, drizzle, on the scones with a spoon – or if you want to get all fancy, spoon the mixture into a ziplock or piping back then drizzle neatly in a zig-zag pattern. Mama was HUNGRY, ergo the spoon drizzle. :)
Let the scones harden for 1 hour (or 30 minutes if they’re planted in front of a cool breeze!) then pour yourself a cup of hot coffee, kick back, and devour these sweet, dense, Starbucks Clone Pumpkin Scones!
free email bonus!
Dinner Made EASY!
simple yet flavorful recipes that take the stress out of dinnertime
Starbucks Clone Pumpkin Scones
Description
Starbucks Clone Pumpkin Scones taste exactly like the real thing. Cakey vs crumbly, these sweet, spiced scones are a real treat!
Ingredients
- 2 cups flour
- 7 Tablespoons sugar
- 1 Tablespoon baking powder
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
- 1/2 teaspoon ground nutmeg
- 1/4 teaspoon ground cloves
- 1/4 teaspoon ground ginger
- 1/2 cup canned pumpkin puree (not pumpkin pie filling)
- 3 Tablespoons half & half
- 1 egg
- 6 Tablespoons cold butter, cubed
- For the plain glaze:
- 1 cup + 1 Tablespoon powdered sugar
- 2 Tablespoons half & half
- For the spiced drizzle:
- 1 cup + 3 Tablespoons powdered sugar
- 2 Tablespoons half & half
- 1/4 teaspoon cinnamon
- 1/8 teaspoon ground nutmeg
- pinch ground ground ginger
- pinch ground ground cloves
Directions
- Preheat oven to 425 degrees then line a baking sheet with parchment paper and set aside.
- In the bowl of a large food processor (or in a large bowl) combine the flour, sugar, baking powder, salt, cinnamon, nutmeg, cloves, and ginger. Pulse or whisk to combine. Add cold butter and pulse until well incorporated and mixture is the texture of cornmeal. Alternatively, use your fingertips or a pastry butter to blend butter in.
- In a separate bowl, whisk together pumpkin puree, half & half, and egg. Add to flour mixture and pulse until just combined. Alternatively, stir until the dough comes together in a ball. Turn the dough out onto a lightly floured surface and gently knead 4 or 5 times to bring the dough together, then flatten into a circle 1" thick. Using a pizza cutter, cut the dough in half, then cut each half into thirds.
- Place the wedges onto the prepared baking sheet and bake for 14-16 minutes, or until just starting to turn golden brown. Remove to a cooling rack to cool completely.
- When scones are cool, whisk together the plain glaze ingredients, then spoon on top and spread slightly. Let harden for 10 minutes, then whisk together the spiced drizzle ingredients and drizzle on top. Let harden completely, about 1 hour, before serving. Store in an air-tight container for 1 day.
Notes
From Todd Wilbur
This recipe is courtesy of Iowa Girl Eats, http://iowagirleats.com.
If – this is a big IF – you have any leftovers, store them in an airtight container for up to a day. I also love the idea of making these petite-sized, like Starbuck’s Petite Vanilla Bean Scones!
[…] Original Recipe at Iowa Girl Eats 3.2.2708 […]
Disappointed. Batter extremely wet. Wasted all these ingredients
[…] not at the times and locations that I frequent. And I would be really upset IF I hadn’t found this recipe! (I know, another found recipe, #thethingsIdofor Fall Frezy Week). I’ve made more batches of […]
[…] guys – I made these scones and they are even better than the Starbuck’s version! […]
I just wanted you to know that this is my most favorite recipe in the whole entire world. no joke. :)
[…] the ones you can buy for more than $2 a piece at that coffee house…I found a similar recipe here and this recipe yields 12 and cost less than $5. […]
[…] Glazed Pumpkin Scones, adapted from Iowa Girl Eats […]
[…] wait to try this recipe […]
[…] tastier and just, the best. They are also very photogenic, I must say. Recipe adapted from Iowa Girl Eats, who adapted it from Todd […]
[…] tastier and just, the best. They are also very photogenic, I must say. Recipe adapted from Iowa Girl Eats, who adapted it from Todd […]
[…] enabling a habit I know I’m not alone in. If there’s a possibility of a lonely Pumpkin Scone sitting in the glorious lit up pastry display at Starbucks, I’m all over […]
WOW! These are super delicious! My now favorite scone recipe……you must make both of the icings, they really make them perfect.
NOOOOOOOO! Starbucks doesn’t have my favorite, pumpkin scones, anymore! I am in mourning. I found this blog while looking for a recipe and I’m making them tonight for morning Bible study. Thank you for posting
I made these replacing half the flour with whole wheat pastry flour, and they came out perfectly. Now I have an excuse to make them again and try 100% WWP flour!
[…] butter cake. It looks simple – and absolutely delicious! Iowa Girl Eats shared her recipe for Starbucks clone pumpkin scones. I haven’t ever tried pumpkin scones at Starbucks, but these look to be worth a […]
I realize this is a good year later, but my glaze dripped off e scones, I couldn’t get more than a very thin layer to stay on them for the life of me. Any suggestions?
You could add some more powdered sugar to thicken it up a little more. I had this problem with some cookies I made that had a powdered sugar glaze. Adding more powdered sugar did thicken it up a little, but it was still quite runny in the end.
If you look at the author’s pictures in this post, you see the glaze dripping off the scones. The glaze isn’t going to be the texture or thickness of frosting, it’s just a glaze. :) If you still don’t like a runny glaze, try them without it. They still taste delicious! I have yet to put the actual glaze on my scones.
I’d just add less liquid/more powdered sugar to get the glaze a bit thicker!
[…] LINK: Starbucks Clone Pumpkin Scones | Iowa Girl Eats. […]
Made these for breakfast this morning (doubled the recipe to freeze)–DELICIOUS! Although, I have to admit…I was too hungry to put the icing on top of them. :)
[…] original recipe was meant to be a copy of Starbucks’ yummy pumpkin scones, which have two glazes, one plain […]
[…] ago and have been saving it for the cooler months to come back. After a lot of anticipation, the Starbucks Clone Pumpkin Scones found on Iowa Girl Eats blog, and Todd Wilbur did not disappoint. In fact, this may be my […]