A delicious breakfast treat. Blueberries or cinnamon and raisins can be added for extra flavor.
TIME
About 35 minutes
SERVING SIZE
Makes 8 scones
A practical note from the Homestead Gristmill kitchen, with the context needed to choose better grain and cook with more confidence.

A delicious breakfast treat. Blueberries or cinnamon and raisins can be added for extra flavor.
TIME
About 35 minutes
SERVING SIZE
Makes 8 scones
Basic Whole Wheat Scones makes more sense when it is connected to the flour behind it. Many of the mill's older recipe posts were written as compact kitchen notes, but stone-ground breads, biscuits, tortillas, and wheat bakes usually need a little more explanation about hydration, tenderness, and flavor carry-through.
Stone-ground flour tends to absorb water more gradually and keep more of the grain flavor intact. That can make doughs feel thirstier, starters more active, and finished loaves or biscuits noticeably more aromatic than the same formula made with standardized grocery flour.
The payoff is flavor and character, but it also helps to give the flour time. Short rest periods, softer handling, and a willingness to adjust with a small splash of liquid usually matter more than forcing the dough to match the first mix.
Readers who land on articles like this are often still deciding between whole wheat, sifted flour, or even the wheat berries themselves. That is why the related links matter. They turn a short article into a clearer path for comparison instead of leaving the reader stuck at a single recipe card.
For Homestead Gristmill, that connection is part of the value proposition. The mill sells ingredients with real identity, so the education around them should help a customer understand why one flour belongs in a sandwich loaf while another is better for biscuits or pastry.
See the whole wheat guide and matching products when you are ready to bake with fresh-milled flour.