Jump to content

Cookbook:Buttermilk Biscuits

From Wikibooks, open books for an open world
Buttermilk Biscuits
CategoryBiscuit recipes
Yield12 ea. 3-inch biscuits
Servings6
Time40 minutes
Difficulty

Cookbook | Recipes | Ingredients | Equipment | Techniques | Cookbook Disambiguation Pages | Recipes

Buttermilk Biscuits are a variety of biscuits using cultured buttermilk as the primary liquid. Other biscuits use milk, or a combination of milk and cream, or powdered milk and water as the liquid. Since buttermilk is an acidic ingredient, typically an increased amount of baking soda is used, and baking powder is reduced or eliminated. This recipe is for one variety of Southern-style (U.S.) hand-rolled biscuits, which are formed in the hands as opposed to being rolled and cut, but the shaping style is optional. These biscuits are incredibly light and fluffy.

Ingredients

[edit | edit source]
Ingredient Count Volume

[note 1]

Weight Baker's %
Self-raising flour (preferably low-protein biscuit flour), sifted 2 cups 250 g 80%
Baking soda ¼ tsp 1.15 g 0.37%
Salt ¼ tsp 1.5 g 0.48%
Sugar (optional) 1 Tbsp 12.6 g 4.03%
Shortening ⅓ cup 68.33 g 21.87%
Cultured buttermilk 1 cup plus 2 Tbsp 275.62 g 88.2%
All-purpose flour ½ cup 62.5 g 20.00%
Butter, melted (optional) ¼ cup 56.75 g 18.16%
Total n/a 728.46 g 233.11%

Procedure

[edit | edit source]
  1. Move oven rack to highest position, and preheat to 450 °F.
  2. Grease the bottom of a cookie sheet with shortening or butter.

Dough

[edit | edit source]
  1. Mix sifted self-rising flour, soda, salt, and sugar (if using) in a bowl.
  2. Using a pastry blender or fork, cut in shortening until evenly distributed, with no flakes of shortening bigger than a green pea remaining. It will look like cornmeal but coarser.
  3. Using a large spoon, fold in ½ cup buttermilk, then another ½ cup to moisten the flour evenly. Stir only long enough to moisten the mixture sufficiently. If dry flour remains after a few stirs, add the remaining 2 Tbsp buttermilk.
  4. Let mixture rest and rise 3–5 minutes. The mixture should be quite moist, but not pourable. If the mixture seems too dry, add more buttermilk.

Shaping

[edit | edit source]
  1. Pour ½ cup all-purpose flour in a plate.
  2. Assuming you are right-handed, grab a teaspoon or so of the all-purpose flour in your left hand, and make sure your inner palm is mostly covered.
  3. With your right hand, using a soup spoon, scoop about 3 Tbsp of the biscuit mixture in your left hand.
  4. Working over the flour plate, Grab some flour with your right hand and sprinkle on top of the scoop of biscuit mixture. The wet mixture will not stick to your hands if enough flour is used.
  5. Begin gently tossing the biscuit back and forth between your floured hands until the outside of the biscuit is coated lightly with flour. The excess flour will fall off your hands back into the plate.
  6. Gently shape the dough into a fairly smooth ball, place on the greased biscuit sheet with sides touching, and press to flatten slightly to about 1-inch high.
  7. Grab a little more flour and continue with the next biscuit.

Baking

[edit | edit source]
  1. Delicately but generously brush the biscuits with melted butter.
  2. Bake in the preheated oven for 12–16 minutes, depending on the biscuit size, until tops and bottoms are nicely browned.
  3. Serve immediately with softened butter. See notes section for additional ideas.

Notes, tips, and variations

[edit | edit source]

Ingredient notes

[edit | edit source]
  • If cultured buttermilk is not available, similar results can be obtained by mixing 2 Tbsp lemon juice with enough milk to make 1 cup, and letting it stand 10 minutes.
  • Lard or butter may be used instead of shortening.
  • If self-rising flour is not available, substitute all-purpose flour and add baking powder and salt. An alternative is to add baking soda and cream of tartar. If desired, use only baking soda as leavening. This is acceptable since the buttermilk is acidic.
  • Cream may be substituted for ¼ cup of the buttermilk.
  • Use all-purpose flour for rolling to avoid tasting the leavening in self-rising flour.
  • The preferred flour is Southern "biscuit" flour, a soft wheat flour with a protein content of 2 g per ¼ cup. Non-Southern flours, at 3 g protein per ¼ cup, are acceptable.
  • For a traditional Southern topping, mix equal parts softened butter and molasses.

Procedural notes

[edit | edit source]
  • If your hands become sticky when rolling biscuits, wash and dry your hands and use more flour.
  • Biscuits do not need to be kneaded. In fact, if you knead the biscuits, you will likely incorporate too much flour to get a high, fluffy biscuit.
  • If using a convection oven with the fan on, the oven rack may be in the center position.
  • Do not skip the resting step, as the flour needs a brief period to accept the moisture.
  • The sugar and salt may be dissolved into the buttermilk if desired. The sugar may be omitted altogether.
  • If you are unsure if a biscuit is done, use an instant read thermometer and remove when internal temperature reaches 205–210 °F.
  • Butter the baked biscuits immediately so the butter melts. Always used softened or melted butter as refrigerated butter is too hard and will tear the biscuit.
  • Low-protein flours require less buttermilk than higher protein flours. You will have to adjust the liquid in the recipe according to the protein content of the flour, the type of fat used (butter is part liquid), the humidity of the flour, and the desired texture of the final biscuit. In general, the mixture you roll should be quite moist, but not pourable.
  • If the dough isn't moist enough to stick to your unfloured hands, the dough mixture isn't moist enough for this style of biscuit. The biscuits will taste fine, but will not be as fluffy.
  • Instead of brushing the butter on the biscuits before baking, you can pour the butter slowly over each biscuit, letting the excess drip between the biscuits. Use your fingers to evenly coat each biscuit top with butter.
  • Thin biscuits can be made with the same recipe, except you will use less buttermilk and roll out ½ inch thick on a floured board. Cut with a floured biscuit cutter.
  • To save time, spread out all the biscuit mixture onto the pan using a spatula, and with floured hands, pat the "cake" to an even 1-inch height. Bake as usual.

Alternative dough mixing procedure

[edit | edit source]
  1. Mix dry ingredients in a large bowl. Make a well in the center.
  2. Put all the shortening in the center of the flour. Add ¾ cup buttermilk, and using one hand, cream the buttermilk and shortening until mostly smooth.
  3. Gradually pull in flour from the sides, until the appropriate the flour has been incorporated. Add more buttermilk and flour as needed.
  4. Shape dough by hand or roll out on floured surface and cut with biscuit cutter, dipping cutter in all-purpose flour when cutting each biscuit.

Warnings

[edit | edit source]
  • Biscuits are best consumed immediately. However, left-over biscuits can be heated or toasted. Buttering immediately helps for a better-tasting left-over biscuit.
  • Do not use bread flour (protein content 4 g per ¼ cup) as the biscuits will not be light and fluffy.

Conversion notes

[edit | edit source]
  1. Weight conversions from USDA National Nutrient Database. Original recipe text and ingredient order preserved. It is presumed the 1/2 cup all purpose flour is all used in coating biscuits, and thus is part of the formula flour.