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I need a good biscuit recipe. The past two Sundays I've tried random biscuit recipes with our Sunday breakfast -- the first was too dense, the 2nd had better consistency, but lacked flavor.
I need a good biscuit recipe. The past two Sundays I've tried random biscuit recipes with our Sunday breakfast -- the first was too dense, the 2nd had better consistency, but lacked flavor.
Thanks in advance!
I make a *great* (if I do say so myself) buttermilk biscuit, based off of Alton Brown' (Good Eats) show he did with his grandma, Ma Mae. He was born and raised in Georgia, so I assume they're decently "southern".
He made some more complicated ones, but his grandma's were simple, so that's what I do:
I start with 1 cup of self-rising flour, add a few tablespoons of shortening, mix it up with a fork, then add buttermilk till it's still doughy, but sticky and loose (usually about half a cup). Put it out on a heavily floured surface, pat it gently down to about 3/4" depth, cut into rounds (I use a small glass dipped in flour, but anything about 2 inches around works fine), and bake at 425 or 450 until golden brown (anywhere from 5-15 minutes, depending on the oven, etc.) I actually use powdered buttermilk and water instead of real buttermilk, because I don't make them all that often, and the powder lasts a lot longer in the freezer.
Here's a link to the transcript of the show; worth reading (even more worth watching, if you can catch it):
and on the official foodnetwork.com recipe page for that show, Ma Mae says to start with the biscuit recipe off the White Lily self-rising flour package...and here's that one:
Wow. Ma Mae says 475 and that one says 500 degrees. :huh: Musta remembered wrong when I first made them.
Both the show and the flour-package recipe start with 2 C of flour, which will make a more reasonable amount. When I start with 1 C I usually end up with between 8-10 smallish biscuits (and I can make them in our toaster oven), which is perfect for the two of us, but might not be enough for more people. They're *excellent* with butter and honey.
Sandy
Wife of EM Attending, Web Programmer, mom to one older lady scaredy-cat and one sweet-but-dumb younger boy kitty
Jenn - I have a family recipe for "Angel Biscuits" that is my great aunt's (she lives in Elizabethtown, KY ). It is a little different in that it uses both baking powder and yeast for leavening. Makes a very light biscuit. You mix up a batch and let it refrig for atleast overnight. Then take out how much you want to use - lasts for a few weeks in frig. Let me know if you want it; I'll dig it out.
Laura - I'd love to try it before I go out and buy self-rising flour. I've already got yeast on hand. Something that lasts for weeks in the fridge would be great, too.
Thanks!
I'm not into sausage gravy. I like my biscuits w/honey and butter. YUM!
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