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Buttermilk Biscuits

05/15/06 @ 09:58:42 am, by Kate Hopkins Email 1399 views • Categories: Bread

buttermilk Biscuits

"Americana" is one of the most nebulous of terms, as different people apply different things as examples of the word. Some use jazz, other use rustic needlepoint, still others use baseball as the best reflections of America.

Personally, I think Buttermilk biscuits work quite nicely. We most assuredly did not invent the biscuits, but did perfect. On the frontier, where excessive cooking equipment was a luxury many could afford, or in the south, where families had to make due with less, the buttermilk biscuit became the way that many folks got their grain intake. With only six ingredients, it was a simple recipe to learn.

This recipe is my first attempt at them, and they came out fairly well. I would have prefered for them to be a little fluffier, but I'm still working out the nuances of the stand up mixer.

  • 3 cups All Purpose Flour
  • 2 teaspoons baking powder
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 3/4 teaspoon baking soda
  • 3/4 cup vegetable shortening, diced into 1/2" pieces
  • 3/4 cup buttermilk

Pre-heat the oven to 450 degrees F.

In a large bowl, sift together the flour, baking powder, salt and baking soda.

Mix in the pieces of the vegetable shortening, until the the shortening looks like dough coated peas.

Slowly pour in the buttermilk into the dough and mix well. When thoroughly combined, place dough onto a floured counter top. Knead the dough if necessary, until the dough is the consistency of play-dough.

Flatten the dough, either by hand or by rolling pin, until the dough is about 2" high. Cut out with a cup or circular cookie cutter. Place on parchment paper that has been placed on a cookie sheet. Repeat until all dough has been used.

Place cookie sheet in the oven and bake for 12-13 minutes.

Makes about 12-18 biscuits

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Comments, Pingbacks:

Comment from: Chris [Visitor]
Kate, A couple of things for new bakers out there, don't twist your biscuit cutter as you cut out the biscuits. They rise higher without the twist. And stop mixing just as you think they are coming together, (biscuits will be more tender with less handling) pat together on a floured board and cut out. The biscuits will be fluffy and rise tall. Love your site, keep up the good work.
PermalinkPermalink 05/15/06 @ 10:26
Comment from: Barbara Fisher [Visitor] · http://www.tigersandstrawberries.com/
Always use a sharp cookie cutter, too. If you use a dull edge like a cup or glass, they will not rise as high, because the top edge of the dough will be pressed down, not actually cut, which compresses the dough and keeps it from rising fully.

This is the same reason why you don't twist your cutter--it squishes the dough down.
PermalinkPermalink 05/15/06 @ 10:40
Comment from: Sharon [Visitor] · http://domesticbliss2.blogspot.com
Hi! I've been reading your site for a while and really enjoy it.

I can't make biscuits myself. I overwork them and they come out like hockey pucks, but here in the South, we don't use a mixer to make biscuits. It's all done by hand.

If you continue to have problems, you might want to try it. My grandmother always used a big bowl or the table top. Sifted all the dry stuff together, made a well in the middle of the mound and did her mixing in the well, by hand.

For what it's worth...
PermalinkPermalink 05/15/06 @ 11:25
Comment from: shel [Visitor]
Does anybody know if the hydrogenated fat can be replaced with another fat, butter maybe. Hydrogenated products never make it into my pantry for reasons I'm sure everybody here knows about.
PermalinkPermalink 05/15/06 @ 14:25
Comment from: Chris [Visitor]
Sure my recipe calls for cold butter instead of the veg shortening.
PermalinkPermalink 05/15/06 @ 14:43
Comment from: From Our Kitchen [Visitor] · http://www.fromourkitchen.blogspot.com
I absolutely love buttermilk biscuits! Your's look great. The color seems a bit darker than mine, almost like you used whole wheat flour or something.
PermalinkPermalink 05/15/06 @ 16:45
Comment from: Tony of the Bachelor cooking [Visitor] · http://anthonyskitchen.blogspot.com
looks yummy, very yummy
PermalinkPermalink 05/19/06 @ 22:14
Comment from: Norma [Visitor]
I love reading all the coments now I have a question. While in your country I had the best biscuits, I was in San Diego I have tried to make biscuits but they are not good.
Do you have recipe that full proof for an Aussie
Thank you Norma
PermalinkPermalink 03/01/07 @ 16:12
Comment from: Erin Patinkin [Visitor] Email · http://invertedspoon.blogspot.com/
These turned out well. They tasted very good, though they were less moist and fluffy than I usually like my biscuits.
PermalinkPermalink 12/12/07 @ 05:12

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