Saturday, April 29, 2023

Fluffy Biscuits

 


I had made a roast chicken for Sunday dinner and had chicken leftover (always a bonus, don't you think?) I decided to make a chicken in cream sauce with peas and carrots.  And I wanted to serve it over biscuits so I went searching for a suitable recipe.  I thought this one was interesting because you use a box grater to grate the butter before cutting into the flour.  Supposedly my great-grandmother made the best biscuits in the world. Unfortunately that was before my time and there was no written recipe.  Apparently my great-uncle George repeatedly tried to duplicate them but relatives agreed hers were still superior. I don't know if these would hold a candle to hers but I thought they were very good--light and flaky.  I found the recipe at sugarspunrun.com.

2 cups all-purpose flour

1 tablespoon baking powder

1 tablespoon granulated sugar

1 teaspoon salt

6 tablespoons unsalted butter, very cold

¾ cup milk or buttermilk

 


Chill butter for 20 minutes in freezer.

 

Heat oven to 425 degrees.  Line a cookie sheet with parchment paper.

 

Combine flour, baking powder, sugar, and salt and mix well.

 

 


 

Use a box grater to shred the chilled butter.

 


 

 

Add butter to flour mixture and stir.

 

 


 

Add milk and stir just until combined.

 


 

 

Place dough on a lightly floured surface.  Use your hands to gently work the dough together. Add more flour as necessary.

 

Fold dough over on itself and with your hands, gently flatten it. Rotate 90 degrees and fold in half again.  Repeat 5 or 6 times.

 

Using your hands (do not roll) flatten dough into a rectangle 1 inch thick.

 

Flour a biscuit cutter or small juice glass and cut out as many biscuits as possible. Flatten scraps into a rectangle and cut out as many more biscuits as possible.

 

Place on cookie sheet less than ½ inch apart.  Bake for 12 minutes or until tops are golden brown.

 


 

 

 



Serve as is with butter or use as a base for creamed chicken.



Treat yourself to some armchair travel to England with my 

Open Book Series!


 Coming August 1

Barnes & Noble

Amazon

When murder taints writer-in-residence Penelope Parish’s charming British bookshop, she must follow the clues to catch a killer before tempers boil over.
 
Penelope Parish thought she’d turned the page on her amateur sleuthing days but when the owner of Upper Chumley-on-Stokes’ proposed first high-end gourmet shop is poisoned, the American novelist starts to wonder if she and her quaint British town are in for another rewrite. It turns out that not everyone was a fan of Simeon Foster’s farm-sourced charcuterie and imported pastries—many of the locals were outraged by the potential new competition.
 
With a full menu of suspects on her hands, this just might be Penelope’s toughest case yet. Luckily, her friends at the Open Book are there to help with every twist of the poisoned pen.

 

 

 

 

 

 

5 comments:

  1. Who doesn't love fresh hot bread - and that definitely includes biscuits!

    Thanks for the recipe.
    2clowns at arkansas dot net

    ReplyDelete
  2. Jeepers does that sound delicious!

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  3. Shredding the butter is one of the best tips I've ever tried. I keep butter in the freezer, and sometimes forget to take it out in time. Butter needs to be cold for pastry, too, so it actually works better to shred it frozen.

    Thanks for the biscuit tips! I used to be able to make light and fluffy ones, but have lost the knack. Maybe I can get my biscuit mojo back with this recipe.

    ReplyDelete
  4. You read my mind! I've been thinking about biscuits for a week or more.
    The trick of grating the frozen butter and then folding the dough over itself several times really works. Sometimes my biscuits get so laminated that when they rise they tip over to one side.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. PS If you're going to pat the dough into a rectangle anyway, skip the biscuit cutter and cut the dough into squares or rectangles. That way you don't have odd bits left that have to be re-handled for cutting.

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