File: DeezBiscuitsAYYYYYYYYYY.jpg (1.1 MB)
Can someone help me why do I suck at making biscuits. They never taste right.
Recipe called for
2 cups flour
1 stick butter
1 Tablespoon Salt
1 Tea spoon sugar
1 1/2 tablespoon baking powder
1/2 tablespoon Baking soda
1/2 cup Buttermilk
1/4 cup whole milk
I froze the butter. Shredded it with a cheese grater. Mixed everything up. Rolled it out then folded it onto itself like 4 times. Then one final roll and cut out the biscuits with a cup.
But the taste is all wrong as is the texture. What am I doing thats so bad
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Is that your biscuits there or some random picture? Post yours if those aren't yours. There are a few things I do that I don't see you typing that you're doing. Don't know if you're doing any of these differently or not but I'll post them:
When I do these sorts of biscuits I'll grate the butter into a small bit of the flour I'll eventually use to keep it from sticking to itself, toss it briefly, and fridge it again. Ensures that the butter is cold and will incorporate with the least amount of mixing possible.
I also make sure the buttermilk is in the fridge until I use it. Everything wants to stay cold here.
When you put everything on the table it should not look like it's together at that point. If it's looking like a proper dough before you fold it then you'll be overmixing.
When you're doing the folding on the counter, use a larger pastry cutter so you're not doing much hand contact.The two things that fuck most people up with these are letting things get too warm for too long, and overmixing.
When you're portioning out the final biscuits, lightly flour your cup rim so that it's not trying to stick to the biscuits or squish them. Really you should use a circular mold that you probably have around the house. You want to cut through the layers, not smash them and the ring mold will do that a lot better.
If you've not made these too much then as you get more efficient at bringing the dough together, you'll end up with better biscuits because you'll be mixing them less and giving them less time to warm up.
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>>22047474
That is my picture.
As for overmixing how can I know. Because I stop as soon as everything sticks together. Usually there will be like a 1/6th of a remaining dough that looks like tattered ribbons not stickign to the main ball and ill like try to smash that into it
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>>22047477
It should look like you're not close to done mixing because you're not. A lot of it should be trying to crumble away and your dough should be more a pile of half-stuck crumbs than being properly together. Unironically check some baking channels and see what stage they get it to before rolling it out, because it's not intuitive.
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>>22047461
skill issue and wrong flour.
450° oven
100% 300g white lily or other soft winter wheat self rising flour
60% 180g milk
15% 45g lard (or 60g cold butter)
add lard to flour and break up in to pea sized pieces.
add milk just bring together and do not knead.
fold and flatten 5 times (no more).
on last flatten make the thickness of biscuits you want.
place on baking sheet.
push thumb in center of each biscuit
place butter in thumb print.
bake until tops are medium brown.
wait 30 minutes to eat. if you eat them too soon they will be slightly gummy inside.
recipe can be increased by increasing flour and percentage of other ingredients. if you use buttermilk the amount will be different and I do not have an amount for that.
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>>22047461
>2 cups flour
>1 stick butter
seems high
>1 Tablespoon Salt
way too high
>1 Tea spoon sugar
not needed unless you are making scones
>1 1/2 tablespoon baking powder
this seems WAY to much.
>1/2 tablespoon Baking soda
>1/2 cup Buttermilk
>1/4 cup whole milk
this recipe looks like a troll or fake recipe that someone would post of facebook.
your biscuits look like a child made them. you did not roll them out thick enough. you over pressed them, and it looks like you just wadded the dough several times to make half the biscuits. no proper browning and your oven is probably not hot enough.
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>>22047461
Too much salt, try 1/2 Tsp to that much flour. Also, important to clarify it's all-purpose flour. Sugar is unnecessary.
Double the baking powder.
1/2 Tsp baking soda.
3/4-1 cup buttermilk.
86 the whole milk.
Mix as described earlier, minimizing the chance for the butter to get warm and fold to create layers. When cutting, regardless of cup or cutter used, do NOT twist. Straight down only. Twisting seals the edges.
Also, when placing on the pan, touching eachother will allow them to rise higher.
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>>22047461
Dang man. Personally I just use self rising flour and the recipe on the bag.
2 cups self rising flour
1/4 cup lard
2/3 cup milk
I also brush milk on top of the biscuits before putting them in the oven. That's pretty much it
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>>22047477
>everything sticks together
That's your problem right there, it should be barely holding together with obvious, visible chunks of butter. If it feels wet or sticky you fucked up and the butter is melting. if you keep working it beyond that and it turns into something really coherent like bread dough then it's really over.
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>>22047461
>>22047507
>white lily
This. OP just use white lily, way easier and better results.
I don't measure so I can't give you exact measurements.
I use white lily, frozen butter grated (a stick for the amount of biscuits you have pictured), and enough (very cold, put in the freezer while grating the butter) whole milk buttermilk to bring most of the flour together. It shouldn't be tacky or sticky. Mix it gently and as little as possible, just until it's together. Flour work surface, roll out gently, fold in thirds, rotate 90°, fold in thirds again, roll out gently and repeat. Cut with a sharp cutter so you don't pinch the edges closed, brush tops with melted butter, bake 400° until golden brown
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>>22047461
One of the problems is that flour in most of the U.S. is from hard wheat. To make fluffy soft biscuits, you need to use flour from soft wheat. I'm not making a joke here, this is actually a thing.
White Lily flour works well if you can find it. If you aren't in the Deep South you won't find it. They don't sell it to Yankees (which is only half a word).
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>>22047670
you don't understand bakers percentages do you idiot?
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>>22047461
>1 1/2 tablespoon baking powder
>1/2 tablespoon Baking soda
That's WAY too much. You only need 1/2 tsp of baking soda total for 2 cups of flour, OR 1/2 tbsp of baking powder. So you have too much of both. If it has a weird salty soapy kind of taste then this is why.
>1/2 cup Buttermilk
>1/4 cup whole milk
I think you might need a little more of this too since they look a bit dry. I'd add 1/4 cup more of either one.
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>>22047461
>butter
>not lard
Make bannock instead, when the dough comes together roll it out to about an inch thick, and use circle cutter
https://www.food.com/recipe/native-cree-bannock-bread-21818
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>>22048901
Where the fuck do you live that it's that much? I live in Florida and I can get it for about 20% less than King Arthur Baking flour at Walmart or other general stores. Methinks that the "free delivery" amazon is offering there aint actually so free.
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>>22048906
>>22048970
Walmart has this. All purpose isnt available for me
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>>22048917
That's a little more than necessary but still within the range of normal. It might alter the taste a bit but not enough to make it seem bad. OP's equivalent would be 16 tsp of baking powder for 3.5c flour.
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biggest issue nobody mentioned is the spacing and consistency
if they're spread all far apart in all different shapes and sizes your oven is going to cook them at different speeds and most likely burn them
you should prob stick to pre-made jiffy biscuit mix OP it's like a dollar a packet
at the very least it should teach you what you're doing wrong with your recipe by taste alone
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>>22047513
>>22047816
90% sure this is an AI hallucinated recipe.
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>>22047461
they look like pretty good scones anon
then, again, this is what we call biscuits so what do i know
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>>22054120
>egg wash
Odd choice.
Instead of taking a few hodgepodge tips you should just find and follow one good recipe. Unless you're happy with these, but they look weirdly flat.
But the real question is how do they taste?
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>>22047461
Ingredients for 10-12 Cream Biscuits:
2 cups self-rising flour (You can make you own by sifting together 2 cups of all-purpose flour with 1 tablespoon baking powder, and 1 teaspoon fine salt)
1 tbsp sugar
1 1/2 cups heavy cream
2-3 tbsp melted butter
Bake at 500 F. for 10 to 12 minutes, or until well-browned
Combine the self rising flour with sugar mix. Then combine the heavy cream to the mixture. Roll out once you have a wet dough and take your cutter to make 1'-2' inch thick circular pieces. Once baked brush the melted butter on the biscuits. These taste just as good as the traditional recipe and are much easier to make.
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