Nothing beats warm flaky old-fashioned biscuits straight from the oven. Comfort food of comfort foods! Warm, flaky biscuits that pull apart in the middle for a little pat of butter are so yummy. That is why they are a staple of southern cooking and once you make them, this will be one of your favorite go-to recipes as well. No need to buy a mix or can ever again!ย Now you can make biscuits quick and like a pro, with this easy, 6-ingredient recipe.
Why Our Recipe
- Fool-proof recipe using just 6 pantry staple ingredients.
- Flexible guide for the fats you can use to make biscuits including butter, shortening, coconut oil, and lard.
- Use milk for traditional biscuits, or buttermilk for buttermilk biscuits with a slightly higher rise to them.
Warm, flaky, old fashioned biscuits are the best! These biscuits go with almost any meal and are easy to throw together in a hurry.
Methods for Biscuit Making
Homemade biscuits require you to cut fat (like butter or shortening) into a flour mixture until it resembles coarse meal or sand. There are several options to do this.
- GRATER: The easiest way to cut fat into flour is to grate it using a cheese grater. This works particularly well for cold butter.
- PASTRY CUTTER: A traditional, old fashioned way to cut fat into flour is to use a pastry cutter. This specialized kitchen tool has 3 to 4 curved blades attached to a handle so that you can cut the fat into the flour using a rocking motion.
- FOOD PROCESSOR: A food processor is a great modern small kitchen appliance that makes it really easy to cut fat into flour. Simply place your flour mixture into the bowl of the food processor along with your cold fat. Using the S-blade, pulse the mixture together until it resembles coarse meal or sand.
- TWO KNIFE METHOD: The hardest method uses two knives to cut the solid fat into the flour by cutting the knives parallel against each other. Hold one butter knife in each hand. Criss cross the two knives to form an X-shape, with the flat sides of the blades touching each other. Place the knives in this shape into the fat and flour and slice the blades against each other in an outward motion repeatedly, similar to how scissors work.
Best Fats for Biscuits
Like many pastries, biscuits require a solid fat source to achieve their flaky texture. Every source of fat will yield a slightly different result as they have different flavors and result in a different texture.
PRO TIP: Always ensure that whatever fat you use in your homemade biscuits is as cold as possible. Cold fats that haven’t softened yield the flakiest biscuits.
- SHORTENING:ย For the tallest biscuits, use shortening because it has a higher melting point. As they bake, the flour and shortening are forced apart until the shortening melts. By this point, the biscuit will be set, creating that highly sought-after flaky texture.ย For the best flavor, use butter-flavored shortening, as regular shortening often lacks a little bit in the flavor department.ย
- BUTTER: Butter provides a great flavor for your biscuit recipe, but has a lower melting point than shortening. Because butter contains somewhere around 15% water, you’ll notice some shrinkage as the water evaporates during baking, resulting in a shorter biscuit.
- COCONUT OIL: A popular trend in baking today is to use coconut oil. Coconut oil can be used to make flaky biscuits, but you’ll want to measure and freeze the coconut oil first.ย Because coconut oil has such a low melting point, it’s best to make smaller biscuits so that the baking process happens faster and more evenly, forcing apart the fat and flour as quickly as possible.
- LARD: If you want to make these the way our not-so-distant ancestors did, use lard. Lard is very similar to shortening,ย but usually comes from pig fat. It has a distinctive flavor that many enjoy.
Using Baking Soda
Baking soda has 3 to 4 times the strength as baking powder so you’ll need to reduce the amount called for in this recipe when making a substitution. To replace the 1 tablespoon of Baking Powder in this recipe, use 1 teaspoon of Baking Soda instead. That’s it, and it will still make some delicious, warm, flaky, old-fashioned biscuits.
Using Self-Rising Flour
Self-rising flour contains flour, baking powder, and salt. While it is hard to predict the exact ratios of flour to baking powder to salt in the mixture, you will most likely still get great results.ย Be sure to leave out adding any additional baking powder or salt until you’ve seen how it turns out with your particular brand of self rising flour. For best results, simply follow the recipe using all-purpose flour.
Serve your biscuits with…
Watch the video belowย where Rachel will walk you through every step of this recipe. Sometimes it helps to have a visual, and weโve always got you covered with our cooking show. You can find the complete collection of recipes onย YouTube, ourย Facebook Page, or right here on our website with their corresponding recipes.
This recipe first appeared on The Stay At Home Chef on March 12, 2013
Love them and easy to make… although I don’t think I mixed the dry ingredients thoroughly, since I can taste the baking soda! ๐คชโค
You used baking soda instead of baking powder? Up at the beginning, Rachel explained about using 1 tsp. baking soda instead of 1 T. baking powder.
The whole family loved them
These turned out amazing. Will so totally make them again.
This was the easiest biscuit recipe Iโve ever had. Thank you so much, they are flipping yummy.
Made these bisquits today and were delicious. I found that the dough was too wet with 1 cup of milk & had to add more flour. Next time will try 3/4 cup.
I can’t believe how wonderful this biscuits are. I really don’t like biscuits, but I do love sausage gravy. I tried your recipe yesterday. I tried a tiny bite when they cooled, and proceeded to eat two wedges, PLAIN. I didn’t do something correct, as they were globby, but I just proceeded. Maybe I shouldn’t have used the whole cup of buttermilk. I used frozen butter, and I keep frozen flour in the freezer. These are absolutely the best ever biscuits. I have lots of gravy left, so we are looking forward to more of these buttery wonders today. I see your recipes first every morning and they help me plan my day. I appreciate you very much.
Loved it; great recipe!
I used baking soda instead of baking powder; expired milk, instead of buttermilk. The biscuits came out great!
Just finished baking these and they came out so yummy! I followed the recipe exactly, with butter and buttermilk and they are so tasty. I highly recommend!
Love Love all her recipes!!
Oh my goodness! My first time making biscuits from scratch. I tried the Bisquick ones and they came out hard and not very tasty. This recipe is a keeper. My two little girls and myself loved your biscuits! They are flavorful and flaky. We enjoyed eating them with grape jelly. I had to stop myself after the 3rd one.โบ๏ธ