honey substitute
in scones.

Scones rely on Honey for a restrained sweetness that does not make them too cake-like. Overdoing a liquid sweetener here makes the dough too wet to handle.

top substitutes

01

Brown Sugars

10.0best for scones
1 cup : 3/4 cup

Use 3/4 cup brown sugar plus 1 tbsp molasses per cup honey; reduce liquid in recipe by 3 tbsp

02

Vanilla Extract

10.0best for scones
1 tsp : 1 tsp

Adds sweetness and floral notes, reduce other sugars

03

Molasses

10.0best for scones
1 cup : 1 cup

Very dark and bitter; use half the amount and add sugar to balance, best in gingerbread and BBQ

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04

Maple Syrup

10.0
2 cup : 1 cup

Closest liquid sweetener swap; slightly more caramel-woody flavor, use 1:1 in baking and glazes

05

Cane Syrup

10.0
1 cup : 1 cup

Similar viscosity and sweetness; slightly less floral than honey

06

Turbinado Sugar

7.5
3/4 cup : 1 cup

Add 1/4 cup liquid since it's dry; light molasses flavor works in baking

07

Fruit Syrup

7.5
1 cup : 1 cup

Sweet and fruit-forward; works well in dressings, glazes, and marinades

08

Maple Sugars

7.5
3/4 cup : 1 cup

Granular — add 3 tbsp water per cup; maple flavor pairs well with baked goods

09

Dates

7.5
1 cup : 1 cup

Blend pitted dates with a splash of water to make a paste; whole-food natural sweetener

10

Applesauce

7.5
3/4 cup : 1 cup

Less sweet and adds moisture; reduce other liquid in recipe by 2 tbsp

11

Prune Puree

7.5
3/4 cup : 1 cup

Rich dark sweetness; great in chocolate bakes but will darken the crumb

12

Jams

7.5
1 cup : 1 cup

Fruit jam works as spread or glaze swap; reduce added sugar elsewhere in recipe

13

Granulated Sugars

5.0
1 cup : 0.81 cup

Use 1 1/4 cup sugar plus 1/4 cup water per cup honey; loses floral flavor and browning speed

14

Powdered Sugars

2.5
1 1/4 cup : 1 cup

Add 3 tbsp water per cup to match honey's moisture; best for glazes and frostings

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