Recipe Of The Week: Hungarian Sour Cream Scones

  • 7 Mar 2017 6:01 AM
Recipe Of The Week: Hungarian Sour Cream Scones
Accroding to historians scones (or pogácsa in Hungarian) are one of the oldest biscuits that were already baked in the time of the Hungarian conquest. Scones are small, round biscuits popular mainly in the Carpathian Basin and on the Balkans. Their name derives from the word focacea (baked dough), which is derivative of the Latin word “focus” that means fire. The word pogácsa was taken over from the South Slavic languages (it’s called pogača in Serbia, Croatia and Slovenia).

Ingredients:

500 g (~4 cups) flour
150 ml (~2/3 cup) milk
25 g fresh yeast (2 1/2 tsp dry yeast)
1 tsp sugar
1 egg
60 g (~1/4 cup) sour cream
100 g (~1/2 cup) lard
15 g (~3 tsp) salt
250 g (~1/2 lb) ground cracklings
2 tsp black pepper
1 egg for egg wash

In lukewarm milk dissolve yeast with half teaspoon of sugar.

Sift the flour in a bowl and rub lard in with your fingertips. Add egg, sour cream, salt and activated yeast, and knead into a smooth dough until pliable and soft.

On a floured surface roll out the dough into a 5 mm thin rectangel. Spread ground cracklings evenly all over the top and sprinkle with black pepper.

Cover dough and let it rest for 30 minutes.

Repeat the procedure: roll out & fold -> rest for 30 minutes -> roll out & fold -> rest for 30 minutes

Roll out the dough to 2 cm thickness and score the top with a knife (don’t cut through).

Cut out the scones with a small biscuit cutter.

Reroll the dough scraps and cut more rounds.

Place the scones on baking sheets lined with parchment paper.

Spread the tops with beaten egg. Leave the scones to rise for 20 minutes.

Preheat the oven to 220 °C.

Bake the scones for 15 minutes.

Crackling scones are the best on the day they were made.

Source: puszta.com

  • How does this content make you feel?

Explore More Reports

  • Hungarian Recipe Of The Week: Christmas Gingerbread

    Hungarian Recipe Of The Week: Christmas Gingerbread

    • 16 Dec 2025 5:40 AM

    Gingerbread originated in ancient times with Egyptians and Greeks baking honey-sweetened spiced breads for rituals, but it reached Europe around 992 AD via Armenian monk Gregory of Nicopolis, who taught French Christians the recipe after fleeing persecution.

  • Hungarian Recipe Of The Week: Hortobágyi Palacsinta (Stuffed Crepes)

    Hungarian Recipe Of The Week: Hortobágyi Palacsinta (Stuffed Crepes)

    • 27 Oct 2025 5:05 AM

    The Hortobágyi palacsinta is a savoury Hungarian pancake, filled with meat (usually veal). The meat is prepared as a stew; minced meat is fried with onions and spices like the pörkölt or the paprikás dish, using, veal, veal with mushrooms, chicken or Hungarian sausage.

  • Recipe Of The Week: Hungarian Stuffed Pepper

    Recipe Of The Week: Hungarian Stuffed Pepper

    • 27 Aug 2025 6:53 PM

    What can you see on this picture? Do you have any idea? This is the Hungarian Stuffed Pepper the 'Töltött paprika'. Recipe is originated from the Serbian culture (like lecsó).

  • Hungarian Recipe of the Week: Asparagus With Sour Cream

    Hungarian Recipe of the Week: Asparagus With Sour Cream

    • 24 Apr 2025 10:46 AM

    Baked, deep-fried or creamed, vegetables seasoned Hungarian style are a gourmet’s delight, especially with a touch of rich sour cream, which lends that special accent note for a true Hungarian dish. Surprise your family and friends with the often forgotten treasure of the vegetable gardens: asparagus!