Grain free Sesame Tahini Scones make a lovely paleo friendly tea time treat. Made dairy free, gluten free and grain free using almond meal and coconut flour.
Tahini has endless uses as a topping/spread/dressing/spoon-right-from-the-jar-please, but did you know it also works wonderfully in baked goods? These little scones turn out so well baked with tahini. They’re nutty, delicious and flavoursome enough to eat on their own but they’re equally good spread with your favourite healthy condiments – these scones are perfect paired with my Sugarfree Berry Chia Jam, which is so super easy to make!
A little bit more dense than your standard scone, as is typical with most paleo baked goods, but I like them this way because they make a filling snack; the use of coconut and almond flours makes them higher in protein and fibre. Yum!
Grain free Sesame Tahini Scones
Ingredients
- 1/2 cup almond meal - 50 grams
- 1/2 cup tapioca flour - 60 grams
- 1/3 cup coconut flour - 42 grams
- 1/2 tsp bicarb soda
- 1/2 tsp salt
- 2 tbsp sesame seeds
- 1/2 tsp ground cinnamon - OPTIONAL
- 3 tbsp tahini
- 1 tsp apple cider vinegar or lemon juice
- 2 eggs
- 2 tbsp rice malt syrup or honey
- 2 tsp vanilla extract
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 170 C. Line a small baking tray with baking paper.
- In a large mixing bowl, combine all of the dry ingredients thoroughly, so there are no lumps (use a whisk if your flour is particularly lumpy).
- Crack the eggs in to a separate bowl and whisk together with the tahini, rice malt syrup, vanilla and apple cider vinegar.
- Pour the wet mixture into the dry ingredient mix and stir until combined. It should come together as a slightly sticky, crumbly "dough".
- Dust your hands very lightly with some extra tapioca flour (to stop them from sticking to the mix) and form the dough into one large ball. If it is too wet to bring together, add an additional teaspoon or so of coconut flour until you are able to shape it in to a dough ball.
- Divide and shape the dough as you like. I recommend breaking the mixture into half, then each half into three pieces (so you get six scones). Once in six pieces, roll each into a ball and then flatten slightly to get a scone shape.
- Bake for 15-18 minutes (they take 17 in my oven) until the tops of the scones are a deep golden brown and feel firm to touch. The scones will crack a little - this is normal.
- Allow to cool a little, and then serve with condiments of choice. Store them in an airtight container (on the countertop, 2 days, or up to a week in the fridge), or you can freeze them.
Notes
Lex
Anyone tried to make them with some kind of eggsubstitute? Any recommendation wich one that would work best?
Monique
Hi Lex! I’ve not tried to use an egg substitute in these myself, but you could try a few things, perhaps (1) 2 flax eggs, or (2) about 1/2 cup mashed banana. Coconut flour can be quite crumbly and egg does have pretty strong binding power so I’m not sure how easily they will swap in, but the tahini should help hold them together too! Let me know how you go if you try it 🙂 Monique
Ceri Jones
Yes! WE love Tahini! I imagine it would give these such an interesting flavour!
moniquec
Tahini is life 🙂 And yes you are right these do have quite an unusual – but delicious – sesame-y flavour! The last batch I made I used this really dark toasty coloured tahini I bought from Ottolenghi and they turned out so very good, which is what inspired me to update this recipe. They’re a bit fiddly shaping the dough together but so yum!
Sally | The Fit Foodie
Mon, these look amazing! Can’t wait to make these at the weekend. Might add a bit of pumpkin and spice for a sweet version. Drool! x
moniquec
Thanks so much Sal! Let me know if you try them out, I would love a pumpkin spice variation! Always love adding some veggies 🙂 xx