Layered Almond Oat Scones
There are some recipes that just smell good while they bake…
…and then there are these.
The kind where your whole house fills with warm vanilla, toasted oats, and buttery almond, and suddenly it feels like you’re in a cozy bakery instead of your kitchen. It’s the kind of smell that makes people wander in asking “what are you making?” before they even see them.
And somehow — they taste even better than they smell.


What Makes These So Good
These aren’t your typical tall, cakey scones.
They’re softer. More tender. Slightly layered. A little rustic in the best way.
Inside, they’re fluffy and moist with just enough structure, with a thin ribbon of almond paste that melts into the dough as they bake. On top, you get that golden oat-almond crumble texture and a light glaze that melts right into every crack.
They’re not overly sweet.
They’re not heavy.
They’re just… perfectly balanced.
Why These Aren’t Super Tall & Fluffy
If you’re expecting a super tall, bakery dome scone, these are a little different — and that’s intentional.
A few things are happening here:
- The oats add texture and a little weight
- The lamination folds create soft layers instead of a straight vertical rise
- The almond paste adds richness without making them dense
So instead of rising straight up, they spread just slightly and bake into:
✨ soft, fluffy centers
✨ light layers
✨ a more relaxed, bakery-style shape
Honestly, it’s what makes them feel extra cozy and homemade — but still elevated.


The Almond Flavor (Subtle but So Good)
The almond here isn’t overpowering.
It’s soft, warm, and just noticeable enough to make you go “what is that?” in the best way.
- Thin almond paste layer inside
- Just a touch of almond extract
- Light glaze with a hint of almond
Everything works together instead of competing.




The Texture
This is the part that really makes them.
- Soft and fluffy inside
- Lightly layered (not dense)
- Slightly crisp edges
- Crunchy oat-almond top
- Glaze that melts into the surface
They’re the kind of scone you break open warm… and immediately go back for another bite.
If You Love Almond Desserts…
If almond is your thing, you have to try my
👉 Vanilla Bean Sugar Almond Cream Donuts
They’re soft, pillowy brioche donuts filled with almond pastry cream and coated in vanilla bean sugar — honestly one of my favorite things I’ve made.
When to Make These
- Slow weekend mornings
- Spring baking days when it’s still a little chilly
- When you want your house to smell unreal
- Or honestly… just because
These are one of those recipes that feel simple, but end up being something really special.
They’re cozy, a little elevated, and just different enough to stand out — which is exactly what I love in a recipe.
And once you make them once… you’ll understand why.


Layered Almond Oat Scones
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- In a small bowl, combine 3/4 cup (60 g) oats with 2–3 tablespoons (30–45 g) heavy cream (taken from the total).
- Let sit for 10 minutes.
- Roll 85 g almond paste between parchment into a very thin 6 x 8-inch rectangle (~1/16 inch thick).
- Freeze for 10 minutes.
- Grate 10 tablespoons (140 g) cold butter and place it in the fridge to stay cold.
- In a large bowl, whisk together:
- 2 cups (240 g) flour, 1/3 cup (65 g) sugar, 2 1/2 tsp baking powder, 1/2 tsp baking soda, 3/4 tsp salt
- Add the soaked oats to the dry mixture.
- Use your hands to break up any clumps and evenly distribute the oats throughout the flour.
- Add the cold grated butter from the fridge.
- Use your hands to work it into the flour until you have evenly distributed, pea-sized pieces.
- Place the bowl in the fridge while you prepare the wet ingredients
- In a separate bowl, whisk together:
- remaining heavy cream, 1 large egg, 1 tsp vanilla, 1/4 tsp almond extract
- Remove the dry mixture from the fridge.
- Pour in the wet ingredients and gently mix until a shaggy dough forms.
- Do not overmix.
- Turn dough onto a lightly floured surface and press into an 8 x 12-inch rectangle.
- Place the almond paste over the bottom third of the dough only.
- If needed, break the almond paste into pieces and gently press to fit
- Keep the layer thin and even
- Fold:
- bottom third up (over almond paste)
- top third down
- Dough will now look like a horizontal log
- Rotate dough 90 degrees so it becomes a vertical log.
- Do NOT press it out
- Fold again:
- bottom third up
- top third down
- Rotate dough 90 degrees again
- Gently press into a thick rectangle (~1 to 1 1/4 inches thick)
- Cut into 8 squares or rectangles (not wedges).
- Place slightly close together on a parchment-lined baking sheet.
- Place scones in freezer for 20 minutes.
- Preheat oven to 400°F
- Position rack in upper third
- Stack a second baking sheet underneath (double pan)
- While scones chill, mix:
- oats, almonds, brown sugar, salt, melted butter
- until clumpy.
- Remove scones from freezer.
- Brush tops lightly with heavy cream
- Add crumble
- Bake at 400°F for 20–24 minutes
- Whisk glaze ingredients until thin and drizzleable.
- Let scones cool slightly, then drizzle glaze over the tops.
Notes
How to tell when they’re done
These scones are easy to overbake. Look for:- Golden tops (not dark brown)
- Set edges
- Centers that feel soft but not wet
- No glossy/raw dough line
Why these aren’t super tall scones
These scones are designed to be:- soft and fluffy
- lightly layered
- slightly rustic
Baking tips
- Double pan prevents dark bottoms
- Upper rack helps control browning
- Keep everything cold for best texture





