Tips for better biscuits (2024)

Better biscuits are ahead. If you've ever salivated over flaky, lofty biscuits –the sort that pull apart into buttery layers at the slightest tug –you've come to the right place.

Although biscuits might look as if they require a lot of technique and practice, they're quite simple to make properly. Armed with a few useful tips (and a light touch), you'll be impressing your friends with your baking prowess in no time.

Today we're focusing on texture: How to make biscuits that are light and airy. We'll talk about some of our collective favorite recipes here at King Arthur Flour and how to ensure success with each one.

A word of advice: Start with good ingredients. Biscuits, like many breads, only use a few ingredients so you'll really taste each one. Choosing good-quality butter, milk, and flour will pay off in the flavor of the endresult.

Most of our recipes can be easily adapted to accommodate mix-ins. With blank canvas recipes, play aroundwith adding grated cheese or chopped fresh herbs. If you want to get more adventurous, meats (like finely chopped ham or diced cooked bacon) and vegetables (like chopped shallots or diced bell peppers) are delicious options. Add-ins should equal about 1/3 the amount of your dough. Any more than that and you risk weighing down the biscuits and losing the lofty, flaky texture.

Biscuit Tip 1: Use cold ingredients

In our world, flaky is a good word. To achieve perfect, separate layers in your biscuits, you need to start with very cold fats (usually butter or shortening). When you cut in your fat, you leave it in small pea-sized lumps. Those lumps get coated in flour and melt during baking into layers. If your fats are too warm, the lumps will melt and form a hom*ogeneous dough, resulting in dense, leaden biscuits.

It can be difficultto prepyour butter without warming it with your fingers. A neat trick to help with this is to use an egg slicer. I have an inexpensive plastic version that slices through very cold butter easily. It cubes the butter into tiny piecesand protects it from the heat of my fingers.

Put this tip to use in our Easy Self-Rising Biscuit recipe. Using only three ingredients, this recipe is particularly simple because it starts with our Self-Rising Flour: ablend of soft-wheat flourandbaking powder with a touch of salt. Self-rising flourhas a creamy taste and lighter-than-air texture, and yields an ethereally light biscuit. It saves you some mixing,since thebaking powder and salt are already incorporated.

Tips for better biscuits (2)

Biscuit Tip 2: Be gentle!

So your ingredientsare chilled, you're hungry, and you're ready to make biscuits.As you start mixing and stirring, be sure to use a light and gentle touch.Every time you touch, knead, and fold the dough, you're developing the gluten. The more you develop the gluten, the tougher and more prone to shrinking the biscuits will be.

For example, our Biscuits for Breakfast recipe instructs you to knead your dougha few timesto bring it together into a square. This is no joke! You want to handle it as little as possible: A few folds will make a cohesive dough. You'll still see chunks of butter and sprinkles of flour, and that's a good sign.Asmooth, hom*ogeneous dough is not what you want.

Biscuit Tip 3: Stay fresh

When baking lofty, airy biscuits, you need some way to encourage them to rise. Most often,baking powder acts as the leavening agent. Your baking powder helps the layers puff up beautifully.

Baking powder tends to be an ingredient that sits in your pantry for months. Over time, it will lose its efficacy so it's very important to check that your baking powder is fresh. You can test the freshness by mixing a small spoonful of baking powder with 1/4 cup of hot water. The baking powder should bubble vigorously. If it doesn't, you need to replace it with a new can.

BiscuitTip 4: Sharpen up

Tips for better biscuits (5)

Manyrecipes, like our Savory Cheddar Cheese Biscuits, use a biscuit cutter to slice out rounds of dough.

For non-drop biscuits, it'scrucial to use a sharp-edged circle (a biscuit cutter, cookie cutter, or sharp-edged drinking glass) to slice your dough. In a pinch, a drinking glass with thin sides will work. If you don't have any of those tools, you can always use a knife or bench scraper to cut your biscuits into squares instead of circles. Getting a clean slice on the edge of your doughwill result in a nicely-shaped biscuit with well-defined layers. If you smoosh the sides of the dough, your biscuits will be sloped on the sides and misshapen.

To cut out your dough properly, press straight down instead of twisting. Dip the cutter in flour repeatedly to keep it from sticking. Transfer the circles of dough carefully to your baking sheet without pressing on the sides.

Place the biscuits closer together (about 1/2-inch apart) on the baking sheet to help the biscuits rise taller.

Biscuit Tip 5: A secret for beginner bakers

Tips for better biscuits (6)If the idea of cutting in butter and carefully kneading dough makes you nervous, we've got you covered with ourNever-Fail Biscuitrecipe.All you do is stir together self-rising flour, salt, and cream and drop spoonfuls of the dough onto a baking sheet.

If that sounds too good to be true, we assure you it's not. It's an aptly named recipe, andwill not let you down, regardless of skill level.

With these five simple tips, you'll have a mouthful of warm, flaky biscuits in no time. Just don't forget to slather them with plenty of butter (and maybe some fresh homemade strawberry jam).

If you're looking to boost your biscuit baking, we have additional posts likeHow to make high-rising biscuits andFats and liquids in biscuits to get you started.

Tips for better biscuits (2024)

FAQs

Tips for better biscuits? ›

The secret to the best biscuits is using very cold butter and baking powder. We've made a lot of biscuits, but this easy biscuits recipe is the one we turn to the most (they are so fluffy!). See our easy drop biscuits and cheese drop biscuits for even easier biscuits.

What is the secret to a good biscuit? ›

The secret to the best biscuits is using very cold butter and baking powder. We've made a lot of biscuits, but this easy biscuits recipe is the one we turn to the most (they are so fluffy!). See our easy drop biscuits and cheese drop biscuits for even easier biscuits.

Why aren't my biscuits light and fluffy? ›

The key to making great biscuits is to use cold butter. We dice up the butter and then refrigerate it until ready to use. Cold butter will produce the fluffiest layers in your biscuits. Do not over-mix – once liquids touch the flour, mix just until dry ingredients are moistened.

Which liquid makes the best biscuits? ›

Just as important as the fat is the liquid used to make your biscuits. Our Buttermilk Biscuit recipe offers the choice of using milk or buttermilk. Buttermilk is known for making biscuits tender and adding a zippy tang, so we used that for this test.

Should you chill biscuit dough before baking? ›

And the longer it takes the butter to melt as the biscuits bake, the more chance they have to rise high and maintain their shape. So, chill... and chill.

Are biscuits better with butter or shortening? ›

Crisco may be beneficial for other baking applications, but for biscuit making, butter is the ultimate champion!

Is buttermilk or heavy cream better for biscuits? ›

Buttermilk also adds a subtle tang. Cream biscuits are made with heavy cream. Cream biscuits are beloved because they're incredibly easy-to-make. But, since cream is much milder than buttermilk, they won't be quite as flavorful (unless you incorporate more spices and seasonings).

How long should you knead biscuit dough? ›

DO NOT OVERMIX. Dough will not be completely smooth. Gather dough into a ball and knead on lightly floured surface quickly and gently, about 6 to 8 times, just until no longer sticky. The kneading is meant only to flatten the pieces of fat into flakes, not to blend fat completely with the flour.

What ingredient makes biscuits rise? ›

While biscuits receive some leavening power from chemical sources — baking powder and baking soda — the difference between serviceable and greatness comes from the extra rise that steam provides.

Is it better to make biscuits with milk or buttermilk? ›

The recipe relies on acidity (from the buttermilk) to turn out properly so the biscuits are tender and fluffy. Using plain milk may not yield the same results. But you can sub in half sour cream/half milk for the buttermilk.

Are biscuits better with all-purpose or self-rising flour? ›

I used self-rising White Lily flour which is made from soft winter wheat and it is low in protein and gluten which means that even if you over-work your biscuit dough, it is almost impossible for the biscuits to turn out tough and hard (which can happen when you use standard all-purpose flour).

What makes biscuits taste better? ›

Use good butter and dairy

Because biscuit recipes call for so few ingredients, it's important that every one is high quality—you'll really taste the difference. Catherine recommends splurging a bit on a grass-fed butter or European-style butter (now's the time to reach for Kerrygold!).

What is the key characteristics of a good biscuit? ›

In general, a rolled biscuit of desirable quality has a golden brown, smooth and crisp crust without brown specks, and a tender and flaky crumb; it is expected to be symmetrical in shape with a high height, flat top and straight side (Learning and Food Resource of Oregon State University, 2012, see web references).

What are the two most important steps in biscuit making? ›

The two keys to success in making the best biscuits are handling the dough as little as possible as well as using very cold solid fat (butter, shortening, or lard) and cold liquid. When the biscuits hit the oven, the cold liquid will start to evaporate creating steam which will help our biscuits get very tall.

What kind of flour makes the best biscuits? ›

As far as brands of flour, White Lily “all-purpose” flour has been my go-to for biscuit making. It's a soft red winter wheat, and the low protein and low gluten content keep biscuits from becoming too dense.

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