Ingredients:
2 cups flour
1 Tbsp baking powder
2 tsp sugar
1/2 tsp cream of tartar
1/4 tsp salt
1 cup milk
1/2 cup (1 stick) melted butter + 2 Tbsp for pan
Method:
Preheat oven to 450 degrees F and melt 2 Tbsp butter in a glass baking dish in the oven. When butter is almost totally melted, remove pan to have ready for biscuits.
Combine all dry ingredients in a bowl. Melt butter, mix with milk, and pour wet ingredients into the dry ingredients. Mix until just moistened. Drop by large filled tablespoons into the buttered baking dish, or use an ice cream scoop with a trigger mechanism for a rounder, more uniform biscuit. Bake 8-12 minutes til biscuit tops begin to brown and the bottoms are golden brown. Makes about 8 medium-sized biscuits.
Showing posts with label biscuits. Show all posts
Showing posts with label biscuits. Show all posts
Thursday, December 15, 2016
Thursday, November 17, 2016
Pumpkin Sage Biscuits
- Ingredients:
- 1/2 cup pumpkin or butternut squash purée
- 2 cups unbleached white flour
- 2 1/2 tsp baking powder
- 1/2 tsp baking soda
- 2 Tbsp cane sugar
- 1/2-1 tsp salt (I used 1/2 tsp because I'm trying to lower sodium in our diets)
- 6 Tbsp unsalted butter, frozen
- 1 1/2 tsp dried sage (or go fresh!)
- 3/4 cup heavy cream or whole milk (I used milk)
- For the egg wash:
- 1 small egg
- 1 Tbsp milk
How to:
- In a medium bowl, whisk the flour, sugar, salt, baking powder, and baking soda. Using a box grater, grate the butter into the flour mixture. Place this mixture in the freezer, bowl and whisk, while you prepare the wet ingredients.
- In another bowl, mix the chilled milk/cream, pumpkin/squash purée, and finely chopped sage. Whisk together until smooth. In a third bowl, make the egg wash by beating the egg and 1 Tbsp of milk together.
- Remove the dry ingredients from the freezer. With a pastry cutter or your hands, make sure the grated butter is fully incorporated into the flour (it should look like bread crumbs). Gently add the pumpkin/squash mixture to the dry ingredients, stirring just until the dough starts to come together. Using your hands, lightly knead the dough in the bowl, until uniform, but avoiding overhandling it.
- Lightly dust a clean work surface with flour and press the dough out to 3/4 inch thickness. Using a 2 1/2 inch round or square cookie cutter, cut out the biscuits. Place on a lightly buttered baking sheet. Brush the tops with egg wash. Bake for 12 to 15 minutes in a 400F oven, until golden on top. Transfer the biscuits to a cooling rack and serve warm.
This should make about 12 biscuits. Mine were a little thin and I got 15. Make sure your baking powder and soda are fresh to get nice, tall biscuits. Also -- handle the biscuit dough as little as possible -- the butter staying cold is also what makes great biscuits.
I enjoyed these warm with turkey and white cheddar cheese as a sandwich, and also warm with butter and blackberry jam. DIVINE.
Monday, March 28, 2016
Buttermilk Drop Biscuits
I am pretty good at baking a lot of things, but biscuits from scratch is not one of them! I watched a good tutorial recently about making cut out biscuits, which was very enlightening, but I was still afraid to try it. Then I came across a wonderful drop biscuit recipe from Outlander Kitchen and thought, it seems so simple... I could probably do this.
I followed her recipe exactly, using 2 cups all-purpose flour instead of 1 cup all-purpose and 1 cup cake flour. I also clabbered whole milk with lemon juice instead of using buttermilk. This is also the first time I put my cast iron griddle pan in the oven and probably the first time I've ever baked anything at 475 degrees F.
After baking -- minus one because Eric had to taste-test right out of the oven. He was bowled over! Perfect, tender, buttery, restaurant-quality biscuits. It was a great side for a beef stew I made in the crock pot.
Mrs. Bug's Buttermilk Drop Biscuits from "The Fiery Cross" via Outlander Kitchen
I followed her recipe exactly, using 2 cups all-purpose flour instead of 1 cup all-purpose and 1 cup cake flour. I also clabbered whole milk with lemon juice instead of using buttermilk. This is also the first time I put my cast iron griddle pan in the oven and probably the first time I've ever baked anything at 475 degrees F.
Note that my pan has ridges in it -- but it made no difference. The biscuits baked PERFECTLY and did not stick one bit.
Mrs. Bug's Buttermilk Drop Biscuits from "The Fiery Cross" via Outlander Kitchen
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)