Buttermilk Biscuit Recipe Light and Buttery

 

(Originally published July 1, 2008) I told my mother I was going to do a web tutorial about my buttermilk biscuit recipe, a staple in the south. She said “Oh, you HAVE to do that new recipe!”. Now, admittedly, these are awfully good. So good, the fact, that my mother has abandoned the long taught family method in lieu of this one shows just how good this recipe is.

Light and Tender Buttermilk Biscuits

The finished product is lighter and more tender than our usual biscuit and it is worth the effort. If you have had problems in the past with your biscuits turning out to be more like hockey pucks than our beloved southern staple, this recipe is the one for you.

Buttermilk Biscuit Recipe

The ingredients needed for this Buttermilk Biscuit recipe are:

  • Milk
  • Butter
  • Lemon juice added (because I rarely have buttermilk in the house so this is a homemade concoction)
  • Self rising flour

That’s it! (The actual recipe is at the bottom of this page)

For those of you who have no idea what self rising flour is this is how you make it:

*To make your own self rising flour, simply add 1 1/2 tsp baking powder and 1/2 tsp salt for EACH cup of all purpose flour.

Sift ingredients well to make sure it is uniform.

How to Make The Best Buttermilk Biscuits Step By Step


Put your flour in a bowl (With the salt and baking powder stirred into it if you don’t have self rising) and toss in the butter. Now you need a pastry cutter or just fork with long tines , which is what I use.


Begin by simply cutting the butter into the flour.

Sit down and turn on the tv, this will take a few minutes (make sure your butter is cold).


When it looks like this and you can’t find any lumps of butter, you’re good to go :). Stick this bowl in the fridge for ten to fifteen minutes. If this is your first time making biscuits with this method, I recommend fifteen. The colder it is, the easier the next step is going to be.


Add a tablespoon of lemon juice to your milk before you go get your bowl out of the fridge.

Stir it around and let it sit a minute or two.


Pour milk into flour mixture and stir until just moistened.

This is gonna be much looser than your typical biscuit dough, but it should look something like this.

Flour a surface.

I like to roll out waxed paper or do this on a large baking sheet so I don’t have such a hassle with the counter top.

Most folks just use the counter top though.

Be generous with the flour, you’re going to need it.

Preparing the Dough

Dump out your dough onto the floured surface and sprinkle more flour on top of it.

Brush some flour on your hands and then wipe down your rolling pin really well. This is a family heirloom. My great grandmother bought it with green stamps for my mother when she was twelve. Once you have flour on your dough and on your hands, knead the dough with your hands two or three times. Don’t over knead your dough!

How do you knead your biscuit dough?

If you’ve never done this before. Just place your dough ball  on a flat surface and then press down on it with the heel of your hand. Then fold it over into a bit of a ball again and repeat with the heel of your hand once more. You’ve just kneaded your dough twice. Stop there because we really don’t want to over knead and that is the most common mistake I’ve encountered in people’s biscuits turning out flat.

The second most common mistake I’ve encountered when biscuits turn out flat is someone who has accidentally followed the recipe for self rising flour biscuits using all purpose flour.

Roll it out until it is about 3/4 of an inch. Then lightly square it off with your hands. It should be about 9×5 inches at this point. You are going to have to stop after rolling it the first time and wipe down your rolling pin with flour again, as well as sprinkle some more on the dough to keep it from sticking.

Here is where these little suckers take on a bit of arrogance in my book. Normally, you would just roll it out and cut them, but in this recipe we want tender little pillowy biscuits, so we’re going to put a little more effort in them. Take one side of your dough and roll it over to the middle. Repeat with the next side until you have something like this.

The Buttermilk Biscuit Recipe Makes Dough That’s Wetter Than Other Biscuit Recipes

Now pat or roll that out with your hands back to the original 3/4 inch and gently shape it back into a rectangle.
Repeat this process of folding over and patting out two more times. Don’t be afraid to dust your surface and your dough with a little more flour if need be. Oh, and you didn’t really have to use the rolling pin, you could have just patted it out all along with your hands, but I wanted to show you my heirloom rolling pin!

How To Cut The Biscuits:

Now we’re ready to cut our biscuits. Most folks would use a biscuit cutter for this, but diehard southerners know one of the best way to do it is to use a swanky swig! Tin can is also acceptable as is a drinking glass. I used a smaller mouthed swanky swig because I prefer a bit smaller biscuits. I have small people in my house. 🙂

What is a swanky swig?

Typically, it is a jelly jar which was decorated by the company to add charm and flair, thereby making it “swanky”.

Cut out your biscuits by pushing straight down with your glass, don’t twist it. I didn’t really waste all of this dough but I was trying to make it look a little more uniform for the picture. Normally, we cut them suckers one right on top of the other, then wad up the leftovers, pat it out, and cut again.

A lot of readers have said that they cut their biscuits with pizza cutters and just do a grid pattern. This ends up with square biscuits but no wasted dough! I do this every now and then myself.

Buttermilk Biscuit Dough

Place these on a well greased baking sheet and make sure the sides touch, This helps them rise evenly and higher.

Bake at 450 for thirteen to fifteen minutes.

Buttermilk Biscuits in the oven

Until they look like this.

Brush melted butter on buttermilk biscuits

While still hot, brush with melted butter.

Alrighty then. Now you’re done!

Buttermilk Biscuit Recipe

This Buttermilk Biscuit recipe makes a lighter, fluffier Southern biscuit. Break open and butter it up and your family will wonder where the next batch is.
Prep Time: 30 minutes
Cook Time: 15 minutes
Total Time: 45 minutes
Course: Dessert
Cuisine: American
Keyword: biscuit
Servings: 4
Calories: 353kcal

Ingredients

  • 1/2 cup cold butter or margarine
  • 2 1/4 c self rising soft wheat flour *
  • 1 1/4 c buttermilk or whole milk with a tablespoon of lemon juice added
  • flour for dusting
  • melted butter for brushing baked biscuits

Instructions

  • Cut butter with a into 1/4-inch-thick slices.Put butter slices on top of flour in a large bowl. Cut butter into flour with a long tined fork until crumbly. Cover and chill 10 minutes. Add buttermilk, stirring just until dry ingredients are moistened.
  • Turn dough out onto a lightly floured surface; knead 3 or 4 times, gradually adding additional flour as needed. With floured hands, press or pat dough into a 3/4-inch-thick rectangle (about 9 x 5 inches). Sprinkle top of dough with additional flour. Fold dough over into itself, like you are folding a piece of paper into a letter, in three sections. Repeat entire process 2 more times, beginning with pressing into a 3/4-inch-thick dough rectangle (about 9 x 5 inches).
  • Press or pat dough to 1/2-inch thickness on a lightly floured surface; cut with a 2-inch round cutter, and place, side by side, on a parchment paper-lined or lightly greased cookie sheet. Try to make sure they touch because this will help them rise higher.
  • Bake at 450° for 13 to 15 minutes or until lightly browned. Remove from oven; brush with 2 Tbsp. melted butter.

Nutrition

Calories: 353kcal
Tried this recipe?Mention @southernplate or tag #southernplate!

You may also like these biscuit recipes:

Southern Biscuits Recipe A Classic With Only 3 Ingredients

Pimento Cheese Biscuits

Featherlight Chocolate Biscuits

Garlic Cream Biscuits with Bacon Gravy

 

 

 

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334 Comments

  1. Hello again just wanted to say that I am a bit puzzled , I have made your biscuits recipe for the past 5 months now and have shared your recipe and site and now girl you say do this easy thing with pioneer well, I never but guess I will try it tonight as a matter of fact love the site and the recipes on it
    All My Best
    Bucky Hirschmann

    1. The homemade from scratch ones are the best but some mornings I am just too tired or don’t have the time!
      Most school mornings, I have half an hour to forty five minutes to get two kids fed, dressed, lunches made, and them out the door!
      Pioneer biscuits save my life on those mornings when the kids declare they “have” to have biscuits for breakfast!!!

      Hope you are having a great Friday and have a WONDERFUL weekend!
      Gratefully,
      Christy 🙂

  2. Butter? Margarine? Nonsense! If you’re really Southern you use lard. It keeps better, bakes better and tastes better.

  3. While eating my left over biscuits with melted cheese this AM I realized I forgot one ingredient in the stew.

    Don’t forget to add 2 to 3 bay leaves.

    Mark

  4. BABY ITS COLD OUTSIDE.

    Living in Illinois for the last twenty years, it’s difficult to find good southern cooking, or bad for that matter, but these are the choices we make in life.

    Was dieing for some biscuits to eat with my kicked up beef stew, so I decided to surf the web. This recipe popped.

    My 9 year old daughter Nicolle and I followed this excellent step by step recipe. From the printer to the oven was twenty minutes. I had bought some buttermilk earlier in the day. No Lilly flower in these parts so I used my trusty King Arthur’s general purpose. White Lilly may produce fluffier results. Still had two pounds of butter left over from Christmas cookies; Thank God or I would need new pants.

    The biscuits delivered and I probably ate too many sopping up all the yummy hot gravy.

    Beef Stew:

    *1/4 tsp cayenne, 1 tsp garlic powder, 1Tbs. kosher salt, 1 tsp black pepper, 3 Tbs. flour: mix dry ingredients and coat meat in a bowl or bag. Save extra dry rub for making rue to thicken with 1/2 cup of room temp beef stock.

    *2 lbs lean stew meat, after coating brown in fry pan (or bottom of pressure cooker) deglaze the pan with some beef stock and add to pressure pot before you cook. If you like, deglaze with some brandy then add the beef stock. Set aside the rest of the Brandy for after dinner so you don’t sleep through the buzzer.

    *3 cups beef stock + 2 tsp ketchup or tomato paste. 2 1/2 cups of stock into the cooker (via deglazing) for steam and 1/2 set aside to make rue with remaining dry rub.

    *1 diced green pepper, 3 carrots peeled and cut to 1 inch segments, one diced onion, and three sticks celery minus dental floss: fry in bottom of cooker with some olive oil until onions are translucent, about 10 minutes on simmer.

    *Add meat, and stock to veggies in the cooker, then pressure cook on high pressure for 20 min, Meat can be put up on a trivet or steamer basket in the pressure cooker if you like. If you like herbs, add some thyme, marjoram or sage or all three on top of meat as last step. I grow herbs in the garden and am always looking for places to use them.

    * After 20 minutes, remove the meat and veggies and stir in the rue; keep stirring until it reaches a boil, boil for about four minutes it will still look thin in the pot but its not. Add the meat and veggies back into the broth. It’s ready to eat.

    Good side dish is peeled and cubed sweet potatoes and baking potatoes coated with olive oil, salt, pepper and paprika and baked on 350 for approx one hour, turning every 15 minutes so they dry evenly and don’t stick. Cook on a pan large enough that the potatoes are spread to a layer of one deep.

    Potatoes are good smothered with beef and gravy in a soup bowl, and a batch of these yummy biscuits at the side.

    Suggest loose fitting sweat clothes for dinner wear with expandable waste band, Cabernet or zinfandel wine or sweet tea with diner.

    Oh well, eat today diet tomorrow!

    Ciao!

    PS This biscuit recipe is now hanging on my Pantheon for recipes, the door of my fridge.

    1. My mouth is positively gushing just thinking of this meal!
      Thank you so much!!!

      I’m glad you liked the biscuits and I’m printing your recipe out as well!
      A BIG old Welcome to Southern Plate!
      Gratefully,
      Christy 🙂

      1. P.S. “Baby It’s Cold Outside” is one of my favorite Winter songs. I like the Esther Williams / Ricardo Monteblan version best 🙂 I’m probably not spelling his name right but I know both male and female lyrics to that song!

  5. I love, love, love giant buttermilk biscuits with a big old hunk of melted cheddar cheese in it. Sometimes I’ll make a pan of biscuits and that’s all we’ll have for supper!

    When we were little, my mom would butter a biscuit, then lay the 2 halves open on a plate and sprinkle a little sugar on top … I think my sister still eats hers this way as an adult! And my husband grew up eating his momma’s biscuits with tomato gravy … think white gravy with homecanned tomatoes added. Speaking of tomatoes, in the summertime we’ve also been known to have a biscuit with a fresh tomato slice in it.

    After I cut out biscuits, I’ll let my little ones (3 & 5 years old) use little cutting boards and little biscuit cutters to make one of their own. Sometimes we’ll cook it, or sometimes they’ll just play with it like it’s playdough. I hope it’s something they’ll remember when they’re grown.

    1. So very true about the girls. That is a fabulous idea with the leftover dough!! I am going to have to do that, I know they’ll love it as much as yours do!!!

      Loved hearing your stories and neat way of serving biscuits, too!!!!
      Gratefully,
      Christy

  6. This was my first time making biscuits of any kind and you have helped make my family very happy! Great biscuits! Easy prep and easy baking! Thank you for your step by step directions.

  7. My Father loved biscuits. My husband is from Mississippi and loves biscuits. I have learned that our two boys love them to. This was a grief release project for me being that my father died this past June.These biscuits were just plain easy to make. My husband did not know that this was the first time I made biscuits. Could not be any better tasting and fluffy !! Thank you for the smiles on my boys faces. Would of loved to have had my dad taste them !!

    1. Linda,

      I am so sorry about your father but I completely understand how you feel about the biscuits. My family recipes mean so much, especially if its a dish that I know my Grandaddy loved or that my great grandmother used to make. I know your Daddy is proud knowing you are sharing the biscuit tradition in his honor with your boys now :).

      On a lighter note, I’ve never heard of anyone being able to make biscuits for the first time without their husband realizing it was their freshman run at it! I think your Daddy had a hand in that.
      ~winks~

      I’m honored you used this recipe.
      Gratefully,
      Christy

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