Enjoying a big homemade breakfast on the weekend is one of my favorite things ever and no weekend breakfast is complete without buttery homemade biscuits. These easy biscuits are my “basic” biscuit recipe that I’ve been using for years. They’re quick, simple, and perfect alongside some fried eggs and bacon on a lazy Sunday morning. Slather on some butter and honey, or maybe your favorite jam, and that’s breakfast heaven.
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Ingredients for Homemade Biscuits
The best part about making homemade biscuits is that you only need pantry staples, which means you can whip up a batch at any time without any planning. Here’s what you’ll need to make this easy biscuit recipe:
- Butter: We use salted butter in our biscuits because that’s usually what we have on hand. If you have unsalted butter, add an extra scant ¼ tsp to the dry ingredients. To make this recipe easier, freeze your butter 30-60 minutes before you begin.
- All-Purpose Flour: Nothing fancy here, just your average everyday flour. If you want to add some whole wheat flour to the mix, you can substitute up to 50% without affecting the texture too much. Or, you can substitute with self-rising flour and leave out the baking powder and baking soda.
- Baking Powder & Baking soda: These two ingredients are responsible for making the biscuits nice and fluffy. Because we’re using vinegar to create a faux buttermilk, we us a combination of baking soda and baking powder to prevent the dough from being overly acidic.
- Salt: The master ingredient that helps every flavor become more bold. Salt is especially important in breads and baked goods that are comprised mostly of bland ingredients, like flour.
- Milk: Whole milk adds moisture and a little more fat to keep the biscuits soft and moist.
- Vinegar: Instead of having to buy buttermilk just for this recipe, we “faked” buttermilk by combining milk and vinegar. You can use any light vinegar, like apple cider, rice, or white vinegar. Lemon juice can also be used in place of vinegar.
Use Buttermilk for More Flavor
The recipe below uses a buttermilk substitute (milk + vinegar or lemon juice) because I don’t often have buttermilk on hand. But if by rare chance you do have buttermilk use that in place of the milk and vinegar and you’ll have the most delicious biscuits ever. While buttermilk substitutes provide the same acidity as buttermilk, they don’t quite have as much flavor.
The Biscuit Method
This recipe uses a cooking technique called The Biscuit Method. This technique involves working butter or another solid fat into flour. When fat is combined with flour in this way the fat prevents the flour from forming a gluten matrix (like you have with kneaded bread), which leaves the dough quite soft and tender. To keep your biscuits as soft and tender as possible, you’ll want to avoid kneading the dough and work with it as little as possible as you shape and cut your biscuits. You can read more about the mechanics of the biscuit method here.
How to Store Leftover Biscuits
If you have a smaller household don’t skip this recipe just because it makes 8 biscuits! You can either freeze the baked biscuits or freeze the unbaked biscuits to cook later. To freeze the unbaked biscuits, simply freeze them on a lined baking sheet until solid, then transfer them to a freezer bag. Label, date, and freeze up to three months. To bake the biscuits from frozen, simply bake them straight from the freezer and add a few minutes to the baking time.
To freeze the biscuits that have already been baked, allow them to cool completely to room temperature. Place the biscuits in a freezer bag and freeze for up to three months. Thaw the biscuits at room temperature or microwave for 15-30 seconds.
What to Serve with Homemade Biscuits
Biscuits go with everything. -Signed, a Southerner.
But in all seriousness, if you’re not used to eating a biscuit with every meal let’s start with the classics. Biscuits are great with fried eggs and bacon, they pair famously well with sausage gravy, and you can use them to make delicious breakfast sandwiches.
Aside from breakfast, homemade biscuits make a great side dish for any dinner, served in place of a classic dinner roll. They’re especially good with thick soups, stews, and chilis.
Homemade Biscuits
Ingredients
- 8 Tbsp butter (salted) ($1.12)
- 2.5 cups all-purpose flour ($0.39)
- 1 Tbsp baking powder ($0.06)
- 1/2 tsp baking soda ($0.02)
- 3/4 tsp salt ($0.05)
- 1 cup whole milk ($0.38)
- 1 Tbsp vinegar* ($0.06)
Instructions
- Freeze the butter for 30-60 minutes before you begin the recipe to make it extra cold and more solid for grating.
- Preheat the oven to 425ºF. In a large bow, combine the flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt. Stir until well combined.
- Use a cheese grater to grate the butter into the bowl with the flour. Once grated, use your hands to work the butter into the flour until it resembles cornmeal.
- Stir the vinegar into the milk. Pour the milk into the bowl with the butter and flour mixture, then stir until a dough forms.
- Place the dough on a lightly floured surface, then press it into a large rectangle. Fold the dough in on itself in thirds, like folding a letter. Then press it into a rectangle once again, about ½ to ¾-inch thick.
- Use a biscuit cutter or a drinking glass (about 3-inches in diameter) to cut biscuits out of the dough. Gather up the scraps, press them down again, and cut a few more biscuits until all of the dough is used up.
- Place the biscuits on a parchment lined baking sheet. For extra brown tops, brush a little milk on top.
- Bake the biscuits in the fully preheated 425ºF oven for 15-17 minutes, or until golden brown on top. Enjoy warm.
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Equipment
- Enamelware Sheet Pan
- Parchment Paper
- Measuring Cups Spoons
Notes
Nutrition
How to Make Homemade Biscuits – Step By Step Photos
Before you begin, freeze 8 Tbsp butter (1 stick) for 30-60 minutes to make it extra cold and solid. This makes it easier to grate into the batter. When you’re ready to start making the biscuits, begin to preheat the oven to 425ºF. In a large bowl, combine 2.5 cups of all-purpose flour, 1 Tbsp baking powder, ½ tsp baking soda, and ¾ tsp salt. Stir until they are well combined.
Use a cheese grater to grate the semi-frozen butter into the flour mixture. Once grated, use your hands to work the butter into the flour until it kind of resembles cornmeal.
Combine 1 cup whole milk and 1 Tbsp vinegar (or lemon juice). Alternatively, you can use 1 cup of buttermilk. Pour the milk into the butter and flour mixture.
Stir until it forms a cohesive dough. Be careful not to over-stir. Don’t worry if there is a little flour left on the bottom of the bowl. If the dough is too sticky, you can add a little flour in the next step.
Place the dough onto a floured surface and press it down into a large rectangle. Fold the dough in on itself into thirds, like folding a letter. This helps create a few layers in the biscuits. Finally, press it down into a rectangle once again, this time about ½ to ¾-inch thick.
Use a biscuit cutter or a drinking glass to cut the biscuits out of the dough. The glass I’m using is 3-inches in diameter. When you’ve cut all you can from the one piece of dough, gather up the scraps, press it down into a rectangle again, and cut a couple more. I got 8 biscuits out of my dough.
Place the biscuits on a baking sheet lined with parchment paper. If you want the tops to get extra browned, you can brush a little milk on top.
Bake the biscuits in the fully preheated 425ºF oven for 15-17 minutes, or until golden brown.
Enjoy your homemade biscuits warm, slathered with butter, and drizzled with honey or a dollop of your favorite jam!
Use a sharp knife to cut your dough into square biscuits. This eliminates scraps and that second set of biscuits which is always a little funky. I like to finish my baked biscuits with a brush of melted butter and a pinch of flaked salt.
One tip I found for grating the butter is to also place the cheese grater and the plate you’ll be shredding on in the freezer as well so the butter doesn’t stick. Also I wear a cloth glove to keep my hands from sticking to your hands. Love these biscuits!
Okay but I put the milk on them and they still didn’t brown.
Could this dough be used for dropped biscuits instead of rolled?
Thanks!
No, this dough is not soft enough to use as a drop biscuit. It would need more milk and fat to be the correct texture.
I personally tried this recipe based on this post and had exciting results. Thanks a bunch, my friend!! I also documented my baking journey on how I made these super delicious crunchy biscuits for my family.
It’s nice that you can freeze biscuits. We just leave the extras on the counter in a ZipLoc bag and they’re gone in two days.
I love it
Excellent
These are great! I made them with buttermilk and am sharing the bounty with friends in the AM! Thank you so much!
Good recipe, reminds me when I was a boy in North Carolina. I’m now 88 years old. Plan on making these twice a week.. Thanks for sharing
These were easier to make than I expected and turned out so well! I ended up with 12 biscuits and they only needed 12-13 minutes to bake. Mine may have been a little smaller or thinner than the recipe. I’m saving this as my go-to biscuit recipe!
Is it possible to substitute half and half for the milk?
I haven’t tried that, but I bet it would just make the biscuits extra rich and delicious. :)
If you buy powdered buttermilk, which keeps in the fridge, you will never be without buttermilk.
This was so easy & had great flavor. My husband & I have been watching The Great British Baking Show on Netflix, & we’ve seen the method on there of freezing butter & grating it in to the dough, then folding in thirds, so it was great to see it in this recipe. I brushed the tops with butter before baking, then again when they came out. I’ve found in the past with recipes, that it gives more flavor than brushing with milk.
If you have sourdough starter, you can use a cup of that as the liquid to make sourdough biscuits. Just let them rise for an hour before baking.
I particularly like that this recipe uses butter–which I always have on hand–instead of the lard my mom always used and made herself. I’ve never warmed up to commercial lard. A brief explanation–I grew up on a farm, and when my dad had a pig butchered, he kept the fat which my mom rendered and canned. The rest of the pig was cut up and went to the freezer, except for the hams which were sent to a local German community to be smoked. Believe me, I also remember the cracklings which she froze and used in small amounts to flavor up a number of things. I don’t like using hydrogenated shortening for biscuits, either. I’m a butter person all the way. I prefer it with buttermilk, but since that’s rarely in the fridge, most often make it with this substitute.
Anyway–this is a terrific biscuit recipe, and I’ve made it a number of times since I first discovered this website. I usually freeze half the batch unbaked to be used later.
Everytime I’ve made these they come out flat :( I’m not sure why.
One of your ingredients like your flour, or your baking powder or soda might be expired. I had the same issue with a different recipe and replacing my expired baking powder fixed it for me.
If you push down only and do not twist, that should help. If I twist when cutting them. they never get the layers.
Thank you so much for this recipe!
I used a food processor to mix the butter, then kneaded a few times (doing the folding method like the freezer biscuits recipe) and cut into twelve pieces instead of doing rounds. Turned out great.
I’m making these for the very first time this weekend, & sawmill gravy!! (I’m English but have lived in South Africa for years, bit of a hybrid now). I can’t wait to try these but I may have some leftovers, so can I freeze them? Unless I half the recipe of course 😁
Wonderful recipe & the teaching is wonderful- thank you😁❤️ GREAT BISCUITS😁👍
Is it possible to use a milk substitute like oat milk? Thank you! Love your recipes!
Unfortunately I think I would need to test that to know just how much that substitution would change the outcome. Because this recipe has so much butter, you might be able to get away with it because the butter should keep things pretty moist, but I can’t say for sure. :)
I’ve used almond milk Everytime I’ve made these, and they always turn out well for me!
These are really good and very easy to make! I didn’t have a biscuit cutter so I used a 1 cup Pyrex dish and ended up making 6 large biscuits. Fantastic and amazing! Thank you for another budget friendly recipe that I’ll make frequently!
I wrote this recipe down on a physical piece of paper. That’s how much I like it. I usually do the folding thing too so I can get the layered effect.
That’s awesome!
Beth, you are a life saver!! It was 11 PM the night before Mother’s Day and I realized I didn’t have enough freezer biscuits left for our Mother’s Day breakfast the next morning. I had two options: drive 15 minutes (one way) to the store OR find a biscuit recipe with basic ingredients that I already had on hand. I quickly got on your website and searched “biscuits” and found this super simple biscuit recipe. This recipe was so easy to make and the biscuits turned out perfect. Best of all, they were homemade!
Great recipe – this the only one that worked for me. I also added one extra tablespoon of butter. Thanks for sharing!
Hi. Sorry if this has already been asked (I did scroll through the first page of comments and didn’t see anything).
Do you think I could safely sub soy milk for the milk (and use vinegar too) and use Earth Balance “butter” for the actual butter? Earth Balance is vegan butter and it comes in a tub and it quite firm, it’s not soft or spreadable.
Hmm, unfortunately those are some pretty big changes and I’ve not testing those substitutions, so I’m not sure how much it will affect the end product.
I made them with almond milk and Earth Balance this morning, and they were delicious!
Thanks for letting us know!
These were perfect! I used regular buttermilk. Worked great!
Made these tonight. The recipe is perfect. No fuss. Just all around great!
This is basic recipe for what in Australia we call scones. We vary the flavour by adding grated cheese or cheese& bacon grilled & to crumbled just before adding milk for breakfast. Fruit foe monrong tea/lunch etc.
Hi Beth! I love this website and have used lots of your recipes! This biscuit recipe was easy to follow and they were delicious. I did have trouble cutting out the biscuits and am wondering if I needed more flour? My dough was wet and sticky as described in the directions but so much so I could not properly pat it down and cut out my biscuits. It did not look like your in the picture when I was ready to use my cookie cutter. I kind of just plopped mounds of dough on the pan and they seemed to come out ok but really lumpy on top! LOL! Any tips? Thanks again for your wonderful website!
Yep, sounds like you might need just a bit more flour. :) And don’t be shy about dusting it liberally on top with flour before you cut them, as well.
I keep “powdered Buttermilk” on hand.
Call them biscuits or scones. Cut them square or press them round. What I loved about these biscuits was the buttery flavor! I know to not over-handle, or knead. Maybe the foil,(or parchment paper) that was recommend, plus greasing the surface made for a more crispy edge, made that buttery flavor hold through. Mine are so delicious. I don’t know if my *homemade buttermilk” affected the rise. I’ve been experimenting with biscuits for months now. These are dense and delicious. Not too heavy. Just hearty. Also I can make a wicked choc cake that’s vegan. I’m not on a vegan diet, I just find vinegar/or lemon juice a seamless alternative to buttermilk. We all under stand how standard buttermilk comes to be, right? Yuck. I like watching the milk curdle. Like 4th grade science, fun! Buy buttermilk, sure. But II prefer to create it. If you’re going to use it all, drink up !
Here is my mother’s secret to even better biscuits. She was so famous for her biscuits at my parents chicken dinner restaurant during the Great Depression that when Fisher’s “invented” biscuit mix, they wanted her to use it and to say that in their advertisements, but she refused. The secret is don’t make round biscuits, make square biscuits. That way, ALL the biscuits are tender, because you don’t have to keep re-rolling the dough from the scraps between the circles. Just pat into a square, cut into 8 or 12 square, depending on the size biscuits you want, and you are done. When I was little, I had a sleep-over with a friend and came home and told my mother, that the friend’s mother couldn’t make good biscuits, and I thought it was so strange that they were round. What a surprise to find out that we were the odd-balls! But great biscuits come from handling as little as possible. Knead very little. Just pat the dough in place, fold over, pat slightly, make a quarter turn, and continue around. Your biscuits will raise like little flaky towers.
In England these are not ‘biscuits’ (which are hard, with no raising agents) but SCONES, a very popular and traditional recipe from the West Country (Devon and Cornwall), where they are eaten with clotted cream and jam. Mmmmm…..!
PS we can buy actual buttermilk in our supermarkets too.
Well in the UNITED STATES theses are called BISCUITS
Surely these are scones..?
In the U.S. we call them biscuits. :)
Thank you for the terrific stirred biscuit recipe. It is our new favorite for biscuits and gravy!
I’ve been baking biscuits for my family for decades and this is the simplest recipe with the most outstanding results I have ever worked with. Biscuits were light, fluffy with just the right amount of crunch in the crust. This is my go-to from now on.
Made these today & they were yummy! Put 5 tbsp cold butter instead of 4 and used powdered buttermilk. Pressed three knuckles into each biscuit like my mother in law did when she made biscuits. These are good with jelly, apple butter, sausage patties, etc. Yum!
Hi,
Just wondering if you think this can be frozen? (before it is cooked)
Thanks
Oops sorry I didn’t see your previous reply that it can be :)
Can I use almond milk in this recipe instead of regular milk?
I haven’t tried using dairy substitutes for this recipe.
Can you freeze this dough?
Yep. :)
For the buttermilk, get yourself a jar of powdered buttermilk. You do have to refrigerate it after you open it, but it works out a good bit cheaper than any variety of fresh milk or buttermilk and it keeps for a very long time.
Just made these this morning and used them with some breakfast biscuits. Holy cow, amazing. Thanks!
Hi Beth! I made these this morning and they were so easy and fabulous! Thank you for this great recipe! I did use real buttermilk and doubled the recipe, but I have used the vinegar/milk combination for a buttermilk substitute in the past and that works just fine….Just a tip for people that don’t like to buy buttermilk for recipes because they never use it all…… I pour 1 cup measurements into ziplock freezer bags, label and freeze….then next time you need some, just get a bag out ahead of time and you have a cup of buttermilk! Easy, handy, & non wasteful!
Tall, light, fluffy, and tasty – even when I substituted white whole wheat for the all-purpose flour.
I’m at high altitude (which can make for iffy results when baking biscuits), and here are my alterations: add 2 T. milk, add 1/2 T. flour, cut back to 3 1/2 t. baking powder and 1/8 t. baking soda, bake for 9 – 10 minutes instead of 15.
This recipe is a keeper!
Made these this morning ! I have a gas oven which isn’t ideal, and the parchment paper burnt ahaha BUT they did turn out really well ! I was afraid they wouldn’t because they didn’t rise as well as yours (I might have made them a little too thick), but they were soft on the inside and absolutely delicious ! I can’t wait to make these again and experiment with my ancient oven.
We don’t have milk OR buttermilk in our house. I substituted 1/2 c of plain greek yogurt mixed with 1/2 c of water and it worked great! Finally a biscuit recipe that doesn’t require lard or crisco (neither of which are staples in my pantry!) Thank you!
Just made these for brunch and they came out wonderfully! I subbed white whole wheat flour and they didn’t rise quite as much as the pictures, but they were fluffy and slightly crispy, and very soft in the middle. They were also done at around 12-13 minutes, instead of the full 15. Tasted amazing with honey and jam. Thanks for the recipe!
Have you ever tried frrezing these before baking them? I was thinking about making a batch of these for my breakfast sandwiches (instead of the store-bought english muffins I normally use) but I only want to use one a day. Can you prepare the dough, cut them out, then freeze them so that I can bake them individually each morning instead of in a batch? Or would it be better to just cook them all at once THEN freeze them and warm them up in the microwave as needed?
You can actually do it either way. :) I find it easier to bake in one batch instead of heating the oven every day just for one, but they’re definitely better fresh out of the oven instead of the microwave. So, there’s a trade off either way!
I thought I had biscuit mix on hand but, when I checked, it turned out it’s only the mix that makes pancakes…so I’m grateful that you had this recipe! I used the dough to top your veggie pot pie, but I was too lazy to roll it out, so I made drop biscuits :-)
I made these tonight and they were fantastic. Mine didn’t puff up like yours did (maybe I flattened the dough out a little too much?), but the flavor was great. So buttery and light. Definitely making these again.
I have made these almost every weekend for the past two months to go with my sausage gravy. The whole family looks forward to me making these! These are the best biscuits I have ever tasted! Turns out perfect every time! Thanks for the recipe!
Perfect biscuits!
Tonight, I used your biscuit recipe to replace canned biscuits in this recipe (http://www.monicawantsit.com/2013/09/rustic-cast-iron-breakfast-pizza-recipe.html). I probably should have used 1/2 of the recipe, but I do love biscuits!
I loved these biscuits! Having a southern Mom, I have eaten a lot over the years. These are wonderful and couldn’t be easier. I found that they were better when I left the dough 2 inches thick and made them larger. I think I got 8 solid biscuits that puffed perfectly and were wonderful with molasses and butter. I’m wondering though if I could use part wheat flour though and oats. Like a somewhat sweet oatmeal biscuit? Maybe I’m better off with oatmeal scones and good old plain biscuits. Thanks a bunch!
I made these this morning and used 1/2 all purpose flour and 1/2 whole wheat and they came out just fine :) No oats, though.
Jessica, Ive been making 1/2 whole wheat biscuits for a long time now, I put a couple teaspoons of cinnamon and a couple tablespoons of sugar in the recipe. They are a favorite around the house
Being southern, I have made biscuits several times a week for 50+ years. I have made them with butter, margarine, Crisco and oil. Biscuits are forgiving. You do need fresh baking powder. If you don’t bake often, your may be stale. You can try increasing by a teaspoon but baking powder contains salt so no more than one extra teaspoon. You don’t have to use paper or oil on the baking pan. I never have and I have never had one stick. Any kind of sour milk will work, buttermilk, vinegar in milk, or yogurt thinned with milk or water. Try them crammed together in a cake pan for a different treat. They can also be turned in to a treat with brown sugar, cinnamon and butter sprinkled over them. (Do this to the ones baking in a cake pan. You can add cheeses, herbs anything your little heart desires and your brain can think of. Biscuits are easy, the one rule is never knead them, the less you handle the dough the better.
These were so good, but mine didn’t get as fluffy, any one have an idea what I did wrong?
Sometimes if you over work the dough, they’ll be more dense and less fluffy. It’s like the opposite of making normal bread where you want to work the dough a lot to develop the gluten. In biscuits if you develop the gluten then it ruins the nice fluffy texture.
Do you use salted or unsalted butter? I only had salted butter on hand, so I went easy on adding extra salt, but they came out bland. I then felt funny salting my already-spread-with-jam biscuit. Delicious though. And I used almond milk.
I use salted butter in everything so that I don’t have to buy two types of butter. :)
I desperately want to make these tonight but i dont have foil or parchment. I normally always do, but my luck. Can i go without or spray the pan? Or will they stick no matter what?
You could probably spray the pan. I usually use the parchment/foil just for easy cleanup. I find that oil is extremely hard to get off of baking sheets!
Vanessa – To be honest, I’ve never cooked with margarine. As long as it has a similar water content as butter and not more, it should be fine (some reduced fat margarines have more water, which wouldn’t work for this).
Could I use margarine instead of butter?
mine didnt puff much either. some did others didnt i may not have mixed the dry ingredients enough is my thought and i cut them quite thin one was almost cracker consistancy the other was fluffy lol. For my first go i consider it a success.
Hmm, there are two possible reasons that i can think of that could have caused them to come out flat. Sometimes baking powder looses it’s efficacy. You can test it by adding a little water. It should fizz. Now that I think about it, make sure that you used 4 tsp of baking powder, not baking soda (there is some baking soda in the recipe, but a majority should be baking powder). Also, not adding enough milk could have caused flat biscuits too. If the dough is too stiff, it will have a hard time puffing up. The baking soda also needs moisture to react, so not having enough could have dampened the effect.
I don’t know if that helped, but I hope they turn out better next time!!
i made these tonight! but for some reason they didn’t rise at all. i don’t think it was because of using too much liquid, because i didn’t even end up using all of the milk to make the mixture come together. they are very delicious either way, just a bit flat!
I made them saturday & they were so good that we made them again on sunday! Sunday’s were a little better because I didn’t use a rolling pin & added a little extra milk.
Thank you! My first time baking biscuits. I’m fairly new to cooking and baking from scratch, and I love how you make it not scary!
I on a whim changed out the milk for coconut milk and they turned out great. Lactose free which is always a bonus for me.
I grew up with a southern Mom who made biscuits on a daily basis. (You know it’s a must with eggs, grits and molasses)! One trick that help makes them rise even higher is to put them close enough together on the pan so that they touch. You can also brush them with a little melted butter when they come out which gives them a nice shine and taste ever yummier! My son’s favorite breakfast is a biscuit sandwich made with scrambled egg and cheese placed between the biscuit. Oh, and if there are any leftovers, don’t throw them out….put them in a plastic ziplock and the next morning, slice open, smear a little butter on each side and add a slice of cheese. Broil at 375 degrees until cheese is melted.
Biscuits split apart and topped with cheese and broiled….oh, the yumminess!! This southern born girl hasn’t had that in years!
Great recipe! I’ve never made biscuits from scratch before and these were easy. I added some parmesan and chopped parsley because I had some left over from pasta. Delicious.
I just made and blogged about these last night and they turned out super amazingly delicious (although not quite as pretty as yours). Thanks so much for this recipe!!
This is the best biscuit recipe I’ve ever used :) Love your blog by the way, it’s very helpful!
Just made these today! DELICIOUS!! Thank you so incredibly much for posting recipes and tremendously helpful step-by-step pictures!! I ABSOLUTELY LLLOOVVEEE BUDGET BYTES!!!
I made these for Thanksgiving this year. I doubled the recipe and split it into two batches, one plain and one garlic-cheddar. They were a huge hit. Thanks for sharing the recipe!
Aha! I found powdered buttermilk at Target, so now I’m just trying to figure out how to incorporate it instead of the juice… Tomorrow morning is biscuit time!
Very tasty and easy! But mine didn’t rise as much as yours and tended to be a bit crunchy on the outside. I’ll have to keep working at it. :-)
oh dear god, ive never really handled dough before and i tried making these it was a catastrophe once step 5 started. i didnt throw down near enough flour and it became unworkable, i ended up just throwing my unworkable globs onto a baking sheet and they still came out pretty good somehow
i guess with a recipe this cheap though this is pretty much the perfect practice for working with wet dough though
Great recipe. I was bored tonight and tried out your recipe. I used lime juice and it worked just fine. Thank-you for starting this blog. I’m going to be living on my own soon and I plan to cook for myself a lot more. =)
Yes, I think lime juice would work fine :)
Can I use lime juice instead of lemon juice? All I have is that little plastic lime juice bottle.
Valerie- I’ve never cooked with whey so I’m not sure… I think it would change the flavor at least because, as far as I know, whey doesn’t contain the lactose that sweetens regular milk.
Jen- Cool! I’ve never seen the powdered buttermilk. I’m going to have to look for it at the store today. Thanks for the tip :D
Powdered buttermilk is the way to go. I love to bake with it and make salad dressings but I never used up the whole carton of buttermilk, Then I found out about the powdered stuff. It keeps forever in your fridge. You can find it at most grocery stores. Much cheaper than a carton of it as well.
Could I use whey instead of buttermilk?
I am super excited to try these biscuits. For some reason my biscuits always turn out not so good. These ones you made look great and easy!
Yes, use any vinegar that is clear and unflavored (no garlic or chili flavored etc.). Also avoid strongly flavored vinegars like balsamic. Hope that helps!
is regular vinegar mild enough?
I have the same affliction! Sleeping in which is something I always loved and was able to do now eludes me too! I am trolling the internet in the early morning hours myself.
Your biscuits look really good…I’ve never tried them from scratch but will have to give it a try. I usually don’t like baking mixes so these look good to me. Thanks.