Drop Scones (Scotch Pancakes)
A favourite on Pancake Day, or on any day of the year. Drop Scones (aka. Scotch Pancakes) are delicious little pancakes that are easy to make and even easier to devour! If there’s one type of baking I feel I’ve mastered, it’s pancakes! I’ve even joked about writing my own recipe book solely of different…
A favourite on Pancake Day, or on any day of the year. Drop Scones (aka. Scotch Pancakes) are delicious little pancakes that are easy to make and even easier to devour!

If there’s one type of baking I feel I’ve mastered, it’s pancakes!
I’ve even joked about writing my own recipe book solely of different pancake recipes. And it all started with these little beauties. Drop Scones, also known as Scotch Pancakes, are something I’ve been baking since my childhood and something that Granny has always been on hand to help perfect. Similar to American Pancakes but way simpler, they make a great treat for breakfast or just for snacking.
We best enjoy Drop Scones for breakfast, straight from the griddle with a little bit of butter on top. They also make great snacks for wee ones, topped with fruit, yoghurt or lashings of jam – our boys can’t get enough of them!
Best of all, you can even freeze them, popping them in the toaster for a minute or so to bring them back to life whenever you fancy one. And if you plan on batch baking some Drop Scones, then Granny’s top tip of adding a little oil to the batter is a clever way of stopping them from drying out and tasting stale.
So whatever your preference this Shrove Tuesday, you won’t go wrong with a plate of Drop Scones!
Ingredients for Scottish Drop Scones:
Self-raising Flour
Using self-raising flour as opposed to Plain Flour will help give your Scotch Pancakes a little extra lift, keeping them nice and light.
Pinch of Salt
This works hand-in-hand with the raising agents in the flour, creating a chemical reaction that helps make bubbles in the pancakes, making them rise.
Caster Sugar
These pancakes are definitely sweeter than they are savoury! Try swapping the sugar for Golden Caster Sugar for a more caramel-y taste.
Free-range Eggs
The traditional binder ingredient for Drop Scones. I don’t tend to stress too much about the size of eggs in a loaf cake, as long as they’re free-range. For vegan alternatives, see below.
Milk
The moisture in your batter! You can use whatever milk you have to hand, but for extra indulgent pancakes, opt for full-fat milk.
Oil
A little trick from Granny: pop a little oil into your batter before cooking, as it’ll stop the pancakes drying out, and they’ll keep better if you don’t finish eating the batch in one sitting.

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Drop Scones (Scotch Pancakes)
INGREDIENTS
- 220 g Self-raising Flour
- Pinch Salt
- 50 g Caster Sugar
- 2 Free-range Eggs
- 280 ml Milk
- 1 tbsp Sunflower/Vegetable Oil
EQUIPMENT
- Griddle Pan (or frying pan)
INSTRUCTIONS
- Sift the flour, salt & sugar into a large bowl.
- Whisk the milk & eggs together in a separate bowl with a fork and then gradually add them to the dry ingredients whilst mixing together. Once combined add the oil and mix again until just combined.
- Grease your griddle or frying pan with a little oil. Once hot, spoon a small amount of the batter (around 2 tablespoons) onto the gridle.
- Your pancakes are ready to flip once bubbles have started to pop on top & they appear dry. Using a spatula, flip the pancakes & cook the other side for around a minute or until a golden brown.
- Remove from the heat & enjoy with your topping of choice.
Video
IMPORTANT NOTE:
All my recipes are developed using a digital scale and the metric system (grams and millilitres). Cup measurements are available as a conversion but these, unfortunately, won’t always be as accurate. For best results, I always recommend baking with a digital scale.


Perfect first time – light, fluffy, versatile . Great. Will be using this recipe from now on, thank you! Super easy too.
Such a simple recipe but delicious. Followed your instructions exactly and had them for breakfast in minutes. Thank you again.
Great recipe and so delicious. Will be my favourite thing to make now! Thank You.
This is an addition to my former comment, and apologise : I asked a question about thickness but saw, too late, that someone ask the same. So I apologise and don’t need answer, since I got it.
MC
Great recipe, and an enormous thankyou for using metric system. I’ve no problem with cups for sugar or other ingredients whose density does not differ from a brand to another one, but for flour, cups are a nightmare : flours have different densities according to the the brands, the grind…, so, from one brand to another, a cup won’t have the same equivalent in grams. Going on cooking websites, you read that 1 cup of flour is 120 g,140 g, and even (and frequently) until… 170 g !!! And so, the result may be very different of what it should be (well, just for one cup, there is no incidence, but when you have to use 3 or more cups, that’s a real problem).
If someone gives a recipe in grams (I mean grams really weighted and tested by him, not an equivalence given by a calculator), there won’t be problem, because a gram is a gram, whatever would be the density of the flour, unlike the volume – a cup, for instance – according to this density, may lead to disappointing results (not enough flour, or too much flour).
I’m now going to test your drop scones, but I have a question : on websites I see drop scones really thicker (looking like nearly 2 cm thick). What the thickness come from, and how may I get it ?
Thankyou for answering, thanks to your granny, and have a nice Christmas time
MC