Southern Biscuits
Southern Biscuits features recipes and baking secrets for every biscuit imaginable, including hassle-free easy biscuits to embellished biscuits laced with silky goat butter, crunchy pecans, or tangy pimento cheese.

The traditional biscuits in this book encompass a number of types, from beaten biscuits of the Old South and England, to Angel Biscuits:a yeast biscuit sturdy enough to split and fill but light enough to melt in your mouth. Filled with beautiful photography, including dozens of how-to photos showing how to mix, stir, fold, roll, and knead, Southern Biscuits is the definitive biscuit baking book.

Homemade Refrigerator Biscuit Mix

Makes 10 cups

If making several batches of biscuits a month, or one biscuit at a time, make a flour-and-fat base mixture to add the milk to at a later time. It will keep several months in a tightly covered container in the refrigerator. Combine one part milk or buttermilk with two parts mix for any quantity of biscuits from 4 to 40! Once again, more salt and baking powder are added. This dough can also be used in making coffee cakes, pancakes, waffles, and the like.

Ingredients:

  • 10 cups self-rising flour
  • 3 teaspoons salt
  • 5 teaspoons cream of tartar
  • 4 teaspoons baking powder
  • 2 cups chilled shortening, lard, or butter,
  • roughly cut into ½-inch pieces

Directions:

Fork-sift or whisk the flour, salt, cream of tartar, and baking powder in a very large bowl. Scatter the shortening over the flour and work in by rubbing fingers with the shortening and flour as if snapping thumb and fingers together (or use two forks or knives, or a pastry cutter) until the mixture looks like well-crumbled feta cheese, with no piece larger than a pea.

Shake the bowl occasionally to allow the larger pieces of fat to bounce to the top of the flour, revealing the largest lumps that still need rubbing.

Store the mix in the refrigerator in an airtight container until ready to use.

1100323522
Southern Biscuits
Southern Biscuits features recipes and baking secrets for every biscuit imaginable, including hassle-free easy biscuits to embellished biscuits laced with silky goat butter, crunchy pecans, or tangy pimento cheese.

The traditional biscuits in this book encompass a number of types, from beaten biscuits of the Old South and England, to Angel Biscuits:a yeast biscuit sturdy enough to split and fill but light enough to melt in your mouth. Filled with beautiful photography, including dozens of how-to photos showing how to mix, stir, fold, roll, and knead, Southern Biscuits is the definitive biscuit baking book.

Homemade Refrigerator Biscuit Mix

Makes 10 cups

If making several batches of biscuits a month, or one biscuit at a time, make a flour-and-fat base mixture to add the milk to at a later time. It will keep several months in a tightly covered container in the refrigerator. Combine one part milk or buttermilk with two parts mix for any quantity of biscuits from 4 to 40! Once again, more salt and baking powder are added. This dough can also be used in making coffee cakes, pancakes, waffles, and the like.

Ingredients:

  • 10 cups self-rising flour
  • 3 teaspoons salt
  • 5 teaspoons cream of tartar
  • 4 teaspoons baking powder
  • 2 cups chilled shortening, lard, or butter,
  • roughly cut into ½-inch pieces

Directions:

Fork-sift or whisk the flour, salt, cream of tartar, and baking powder in a very large bowl. Scatter the shortening over the flour and work in by rubbing fingers with the shortening and flour as if snapping thumb and fingers together (or use two forks or knives, or a pastry cutter) until the mixture looks like well-crumbled feta cheese, with no piece larger than a pea.

Shake the bowl occasionally to allow the larger pieces of fat to bounce to the top of the flour, revealing the largest lumps that still need rubbing.

Store the mix in the refrigerator in an airtight container until ready to use.

25.99 In Stock

Hardcover

$25.99 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Ships in 1-2 days
  • PICK UP IN STORE

    Your local store may have stock of this item.

Related collections and offers


Overview

Southern Biscuits features recipes and baking secrets for every biscuit imaginable, including hassle-free easy biscuits to embellished biscuits laced with silky goat butter, crunchy pecans, or tangy pimento cheese.

The traditional biscuits in this book encompass a number of types, from beaten biscuits of the Old South and England, to Angel Biscuits:a yeast biscuit sturdy enough to split and fill but light enough to melt in your mouth. Filled with beautiful photography, including dozens of how-to photos showing how to mix, stir, fold, roll, and knead, Southern Biscuits is the definitive biscuit baking book.

Homemade Refrigerator Biscuit Mix

Makes 10 cups

If making several batches of biscuits a month, or one biscuit at a time, make a flour-and-fat base mixture to add the milk to at a later time. It will keep several months in a tightly covered container in the refrigerator. Combine one part milk or buttermilk with two parts mix for any quantity of biscuits from 4 to 40! Once again, more salt and baking powder are added. This dough can also be used in making coffee cakes, pancakes, waffles, and the like.

Ingredients:

  • 10 cups self-rising flour
  • 3 teaspoons salt
  • 5 teaspoons cream of tartar
  • 4 teaspoons baking powder
  • 2 cups chilled shortening, lard, or butter,
  • roughly cut into ½-inch pieces

Directions:

Fork-sift or whisk the flour, salt, cream of tartar, and baking powder in a very large bowl. Scatter the shortening over the flour and work in by rubbing fingers with the shortening and flour as if snapping thumb and fingers together (or use two forks or knives, or a pastry cutter) until the mixture looks like well-crumbled feta cheese, with no piece larger than a pea.

Shake the bowl occasionally to allow the larger pieces of fat to bounce to the top of the flour, revealing the largest lumps that still need rubbing.

Store the mix in the refrigerator in an airtight container until ready to use.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781423621768
Publisher: Smith, Gibbs Publisher
Publication date: 05/01/2011
Pages: 216
Sales rank: 258,909
Product dimensions: 9.10(w) x 9.26(h) x 0.90(d)
Age Range: 16 Years

About the Author

Nathalie Dupree has written or coauthored many cookbooks, including the James Beard award winner Nathalie Dupree's Southern Memories and Shrimp and Grits.

She has appeared on more than 300 television shows and specials, which have shown nationally on PBS, The Learning Channel, and The Food Network. Dupree holds an Advanced Certificate from the Cordon Bleu and has also written extensively for magazines and newspapers. She lives in Charleston, South Carolina.

Cynthia Stevens Graubart is an author and former television producer who began her culinary television production career with New Southern Cooking with Nathalie Dupree in 1985. She is the author of The One-Armed Cook, called the culinary version of What to Expect When You're Expecting. Cynthia and her husband, Cliff, live in Atlanta, Georgia.

Read an Excerpt

WHAT I S A BISCUIT?

A biscuit was originally made out of flour and water, the basis of hardtack carried by early travelers. Ultimately, a little lard was added, the dough was beaten hours before shaping and baking, the final product holding a little slivered country ham, becoming a gourmet’s delight called a Beaten Biscuit. (We now make it with a food processor in five minutes.)

Once baking powder was developed in the 1800s—replacing the potash that had been used as a leavening—it was added to the same flour and water and, mixed together and shaped into a round, it became a biscuit. (These are still eaten today as Dorm Biscuits.) Any other addition is an extension of the cook’s imagination, whether whole milk, buttermilk, sour cream, yogurt, whipping cream, shortening, lard, or butter are used. Each adds a different capacity for leavening or flavoring.

The lightest biscuits are made out of delicate white winter-wheat flour, also called “soft wheat” due to its low gluten content. With the addition of a fat and a liquid, usually milk or buttermilk, they are a close cousin to scones, containing sugar and possibly an egg, which the English fill with clotted cream and raspberries and serve for tea, not for breakfast or another meal. The English biscuit, which is a cookie, bears no relation to a scone. The French have a cake-type called “biscuit,” which neither cookie, bread, nor scone. There was no agreement over the years about how to spell, define, or pronounce the name of our bread. It just was.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments 8

Foreword by Terry Kay 10

Introduction 12

Biscuit Basics 16

Easy Biscuits

Julia Regner’s Sturdy Dorm Biscuits 32

Allison’s Easy Sour Cream Biscuits 34

Julia’s Double Ginger Biscuits 36

Jennet Alterman’s Mother’s Shot Glass Biscuits 38

Rachel’s Very Beginner’s Cream Biscuits 40

Busty Yogurt Biscuits 42

Yogurt and Heavy Cream Biscuits 44

Cynthia’s Real Life Pantry Biscuits 46

Homemade Refrigerator Biscuit Mix 48

Traditional Biscuits

Baking Powder Biscuits 52

Basic Southern Biscuit 54

Novice Tea Towel Kneaded Smooth-topped

Sweet-Milk Biscuits 56

Hand-Rolled Extra-Light Biscuits 58

Kate’s Unforgettable Wooden Bowl Biscuits 60

Mishap Skillet Biscuits 62

Shirley Corriher’s Country Buttermilk Biscuits 63

Biscuits Supreme 64

“Bomber” Biscuits 66

Bumpy-Topped Mock Clabber Biscuits 68

James Villas’ Maw-Maw’s Biscuits 70

Double Fluffy Buttermilk Biscuits 72

Food Processor Biscuits 74

Fast Food Biscuits 76

Big Nasty Biscuits 78

The Flying Biscuit 80

Beaten Biscuits 82

Make Ahead Shenandoah Valley Biscuits 84

Mrs. Dull’s “Diet” Soda Biscuits 86

Gullah Biscuits 88

Olive Oil Biscuit 90

Buttermilk-Margarine Biscuits 92

Angel Biscuits 94

Stir ’n Roll Biscuits 96

Leftover Biscuits 97

Embellished Biscuits

Black Pepper Biscuits 100

Goat Butter Biscuits 102

Pimento Cheese Biscuits 104

Benne Seed Biscuits 106

Cracklin’ Cat’s Head Biscuits 108

Parsley Biscuits with Ham and Honey Mustard 110

Buttermilk Raisin Cinnamon Pecan Biscuits 112

Buttery Blueberry Ginger Biscuits 114

Cranberry-Orange Biscuits 116

Sweet Potato or Pumpkin Biscuits 118

On-the-Go A.M. Breakfast Sandwich 121

Coca-Cola Biscuits 122

Party Biscuits

Half Dollar Ham Biscuits 126

Petite Carriage House Biscuits 128

Senator Hollings’ Flaky Appetizer Cream Cheese Biscuits 130

Flaky Pecan Party Biscuits 132

Biscuit Relatives

Butter Dips 136

Cheese Straws or Wafers 137

Chocolate Soldiers 138

Blue Cornmeal Biscuits 140

Cheddar-Chipotle Cornmeal Biscuits 142

Paul Prudhomme’s Southern Biscuit Muffins 144

Buttermilk Rusks 145

Mrs. Dull’s 5 O’Clock Tea Porter Puffs 146

Cheese Sausage Pinwheels 147

Peach Coffee Cake 149

Pancakes 150

Waffles 151

Chicken or Turkey Biscuit Pot Pie 152

Fluffy Food Processor Buttermilk Biscuits for Potpie 155

Rainy-day Thyme Dumplings and Beef Stew 156

Chicken and Dumplings 159

Chicken and Vegetables with Dumplings 160

Tomorrow’s Biscuits

Breaded Tomatoes 164

Tomato Biscuit Soup 165

Biscuit Panzanella Salad 166

Sausage, Fennel, and Apple or Pear Dressing or Stuffing 168

Overnight Biscuit Cheese Casserole 169 Overnight Biscuit Sausage and Apple

Casserole 170

Gilding the Lily

Citrus Butter 174

Onion-Parmesan Butter 174

Norman’s Compound Butter with Lime and Cilantro 175

Nut Butter 175

Orange-Honey Butter 176

Honey Mustard Sauce 176

Orange Glaze 177

Fig Jam Filling 177

Easy Refrigerator Strawberry Jam 178

Lemon Curd (Lemon Cheese) 179

Hot Pepper Jelly 180

Sausage-Bacon Gravy 182

Dumpling Gravy 183

Chocolate Gravy 184

Butterscotch Sauce 184

Caramel Sauce 185

Desserts

White Lily Sweet Cake Biscuits 188

Hayley Daen’s Cranberry Buttermilk Scones 191

Hayley Daen’s Brown Sugar Shortcakes 194

Caramel Bread Sticks 196

Peach Pinwheels 198

Fig Roll Loaf 200

Biscuit Fried Pies 202

Lazy Girl Peach Cobbler 204

Peach Puzzle 205

Overnight Bananas Foster Biscuit Casserole 206

Biscuit Trifle 207

Berry-Biscuit Summer Pudding 208

Biscuit Brown Betty 210

Ginger Banana Biscuit Bread Pudding 211

Cinnamon-Raisin Biscuit Bread Pudding 212

Index 214

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews