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Our Best Fluffy Biscuits

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The most delicious fluffy homemade biscuits we’ve ever made! Our easy recipe calls for flour, butter, baking powder, and milk (or buttermilk). Our recipe makes biscuits that are big, tall, fluffy, and delicious.

Watch the Video

Best Homemade Biscuits Recipe Video

Related: We love these easy drop biscuits.

What is The Secret For The Best Homemade Biscuits?

We’ve made a lot of recipes, but this easy biscuits recipe is the one we turn to the most! It incorporates two secrets for the best, fluffiest biscuits: cold butter and (lots of) baking powder.

To make them, we cut very cold butter into all-purpose flour, salt, baking powder, and a bit of baking soda. The butter makes these biscuits taste incredible. It also helps to make the crumb light, airy, and tender. The baking powder keeps them extra light and fluffy in the middle.

Cold butter and flour for biscuits

Some recipes for biscuits call for self-rising flour, but for this recipe, we choose to mix baking powder and all-purpose flour ourselves instead. Self-rising flour is pre-mixed flour, baking powder, and salt. There’s nothing wrong with it, and when you use the right recipe, it cuts down on adding extra ingredients.

In this case of these biscuits, we add more baking powder than usual. If you use self-rising flour, there won’t be enough baking powder added to the biscuits dough. If self-rising flour is all you have, use it, but whisk in 2 extra teaspoons of baking powder.

We use 5 teaspoons of baking powder in this recipe. I know that seems like a lot of baking powder, but trust me. The extra baking powder in this biscuits recipe is a game-changer for making the fluffiest and most tender homemade biscuits.

Baked Biscuits in a Skillet

More: If you love biscuits, please take a look at these Cranberry Scones or these Blackberry Lemon Scones. The dough for scones is similar to biscuits!

How to Make the Best Biscuits

You have two options for making these. My preferred method is to get out my food processor. It’s an excellent tool for cutting the cold butter into our flour mixture since it’s quick. We use it to make our favorite All-Butter Pie Crust for the same reason. When cutting the butter into the flour, you want to be as fast as possible so that the butter does not warm up.

If you don’t feel like getting your food processor out, you can use your hands or a pastry cutter to work the butter into the flour — we do this when making our easy Drop Biscuits and these Cheese Biscuits.

Tip: If your butter starts to warm up, place the bowl with flour and butter into the fridge for 5 to 10 minutes.

When the butter and flour are dealt with, we mix in the milk and then form the dough. Pretty simple.

Adding milk to the biscuits dough

We don’t use a rolling pin when preparing the biscuits. Instead, we press the dough with our fingers. You can see us work the dough in our video.

First, we push the dough into a rough rectangle and then fold the sides into the middle, like a letter. Then we rotate the new rectangle, press it out, and do it again.

Folding the biscuits dough

If the dough needs it, we will do it for a third time before pressing it into a final rectangle and cutting out our biscuits. If any of that seems confusing, please watch our video. I promise it isn’t difficult.

Cutting out biscuits

Frequently Asked Questions

What type of flour is best for making biscuits from scratch? We use all-purpose flour since that’s what is available where we live. However, some stores sell soft white wheat flour (lower protein), like White Lilly, Martha White, and Bob’s Red Mill Fine Pastry Flour. These are all excellent options for biscuits since their lower protein content shuts down gluten formation, which means they will be light, fluffy, and tender. I should note, though, that with this biscuit recipe, all-purpose flour is perfectly adequate. Thanks to the extra baking powder, the biscuits are light and fluffy no matter what flour you use.

What type of butter is best for making homemade biscuits? Most often, in our baking recipes, we call for unsalted butter. In this recipe, though, I love reaching for European salted butter, like Kerrygold or Plugra, since they make the biscuits tender and delicious. Now, if you don’t have European salted butter on hand, plain butter works (salted or unsalted). I love the slightly more salty flavor when salted butter is used in our recipe, but you can always hold back on some of the salt called for in the recipe if you aren’t looking for more savory/salty biscuits.

Tall Fluffy Biscuits

Our Best Fluffy Biscuits

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These are the most tender and fluffy homemade biscuits we’ve ever made. Our recipe calls for flour, butter, baking powder, baking soda, and milk. These biscuits are big, tall, tender, and delicious. My preferred method is to get out my food processor. It’s an excellent tool for cutting the cold butter into our flour mixture since it’s quick. If you don’t feel like getting your food processor out, you can use your hands or a pastry cutter to work the butter into the flour (tips are provided in the notes section).

Makes 7 to 8 biscuits

Watch Us Make the Recipe

You Will Need

2 cups (260 grams) all-purpose flour, see notes for self-rising flour

5 teaspoons baking powder

1/4 teaspoon baking soda

1 tablespoon sugar

1 teaspoon fine sea salt

6 tablespoons cold butter, see notes

3/4 cup + 2 tablespoons (207 ml) whole milk or buttermilk

Directions

    1Heat the oven to 425° Fahrenheit and set aside an oven-safe 10-inch or 12-inch skillet like a cast iron pan or, if you do not have one, set aside a baking sheet instead.

    2Combine the flour, baking powder, baking soda, sugar, and salt in the bowl of a food processor. Pulse three to four times so that it is mixed.

    3Cut the cold butter into cubes or thin slices, then scatter it over the flour in the food processor. Pulse 5 to 7 times or until the butter turns into tiny bits — see our photos and video for reference.

    4Empty the butter-flour mixture into a large bowl. Make a well in the middle, and then pour in the milk (or buttermilk). Stir until a shaggy dough forms.

    5Transfer the dough onto a lightly floured work surface. Sprinkle a little flour on top, and then bring the dough together with your hands. It might be a bit sticky, so add flour as needed.

    6Without working the dough too much, pat it down into a rectangle about 3/4 inch thick. Fold the dough into thirds, like a letter — see our photos and video for reference. Rotate the rectangle 90 degrees, and then repeat this process two more times.

    7Pat the dough into a rectangle between 1/2 inch and 3/4 inch thick. Then use a biscuit cutter to cut out your biscuits — we use a 3-inch round cutter. Do not twist the cutter, as this will seal the edges of the biscuits and prevent them from rising.

    8Place the cut-out biscuits into the skillet (or onto a baking sheet). Keeping them close to each other helps them rise.

    9Gently press together the scraps and use them to make more biscuits, but be careful not to overwork the dough, or else they will be tough.

    10Bake the biscuits until golden brown and have risen, 10 to 15 minutes. Serve warm.

Adam and Joanne’s Tips

  • No Food Processor: Whisk or sift the dry ingredients together. Cut the butter into small cubes. Scatter the cold butter cubes over the flour mixture, then use a pastry blender or your fingers to cut or rub the butter in until the mixture looks like coarse crumbs.
  • Milk or Buttermilk: Use milk or buttermilk in this recipe. Buttermilk adds a tangy flavor to the biscuits and makes them slightly more tender.
  • Butter: We use salted European butter in this recipe. It will work with unsalted or salted butter. I like the extra saltiness of salted butter, but you can reduce the salt to 3/4 teaspoon if you prefer.
  • Self-rising flour: If you use self-rising flour, there won’t be enough baking powder added to the biscuit dough. So, if self-rising flour is all you have, use it, but whisk in 2 extra teaspoons of baking powder. Use 1/2 teaspoon salt instead.
  • Recipe inspired and adapted from Sam Sifton’s All-Purpose Biscuits as well as our Buttermilk Biscuits
  • Nutrition facts: The nutrition facts provided below are estimates. We have used the USDA database to calculate approximate values.

If you make this recipe, snap a photo and hashtag it #inspiredtaste — We love to see your creations on Instagram and Facebook! Find us: @inspiredtaste

Nutrition Per Serving
Serving Size
1 Biscuit (8 total)
/
Calories
211
/
Total Fat
9g
/
Saturated Fat
5.5g
/
Cholesterol
23.4mg
/
Sodium
279.4mg
/
Carbohydrate
29.6g
/
Dietary Fiber
1g
/
Total Sugars
2.9g
/
Protein
4.2g


AUTHOR: 

Adam and Joanne Gallagher



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