Baking Powder Biscuits
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Baking Powder Biscuits
© Denzil Green
Baking Powder Biscuits are a puffy, baked quick bread that can be served in place of bread. The dough is quick to mix, and they are quick to bake.
They are not biscuits as someone from Britain, Australia or elsewhere would understand them to be -- flat, hard and crispy, as the word biscuit (meaning "cooked twice") would imply. In fact, if Baking Powder Biscuits turned out to be like a British biscuit, the cook would be very disappointed indeed.
Biscuit as used here is a North American usage of the word. These are almost like unsweetened scones. They should be light, tender, plump and fluffy, and are really best eaten on the same day as they are baked.
Baking Powder Biscuits consist of flour, baking powder, a fat, and milk. Some people add some salt. Soft or all-purpose flour is preferable to bread flour. Whole wheat flour should be avoided: the texture will be too crumbly and the cooked biscuits won't stay together well.
Baking Powder Biscuits are popular in the southern United States and in the Maritimes area of Canada.
In the Canadian Maritimes, a warm plate of Baking Powder Biscuits can accompany just about any meal -- from a hash cooked for breakfast to a boiled dinner or chowder in the evening. They will be split in half horizontally with a knife, and buttered. In the American south, for breakfast, the main course sometimes has Baking Powder Biscuits covered with "country-style" gravy.
They can also be used as a sweet snack or dessert, buttered and drizzled with maple syrup, pancake syrup, honey, corn syrup, sorghum syrup or molasses, or spread with jam or jelly.
Baking Powder Biscuits can also be used for strawberry shortcake. In fact, purists say that if anything other than Baking Powder Biscuits -- say, sponge cake -- is used for Strawberry Shortcake then it's not a true "shortcake". They maintain that Baking Powder Biscuits have to be used for true Strawberry Shortcake. When doing so, some cooks add a bit of sugar to the dough.
Cooking Tips for Baking Powder Biscuits
You then mix in the fat. The fat used, whether it is butter, margarine or shortening, should be cold. Some advise to rub half the fat into the dry ingredients, so that it is spread throughout in small amounts, then cut the rest of the fat in, but in a bit larger pieces, to ensure flakiness. Others say freeze the fat, and grate it. Most just use their hands or a pastry cutter to mix it all into the dough at once.
You can make this part of the biscuit dough mixture ahead and put it covered in the refrigerator for a day or so; just don't add any liquid until you are ready actually to go. Bisquick, a package mix, is essentially these biscuits made up to this stage.
The milk used should be cold. Some prefer buttermilk to milk.
You mix the milk with the blended flour and fat mixture. You add the milk a portion at a time. You may not need it all, depending on the humidity of the flour, etc. The dough should not be overly sticky. If it is, it has too much liquid in it. If the dough is really gloopy, you can use it for dumplings.
Mix until just until blended, then stop. The dough should just start to cling to your mixing fork, spoon, or hand, and just start to follow you around in the bowl. It is very easy to overwork the dough, and whatever you do, never knead it. The more you handle the dough, the harder the biscuits will be. You do not want gluten to develop.
You can drop the dough on a baking sheet by spoonfuls, or roll out the dough on a floured surface, and cut it with a biscuit cutter to get a more uniform appearance. If rolling the dough, roll it out to about 1/2 inch (1 cm.) Don't twist the cutter in the dough, because it can pinch the edges and stop them from rising. Just use a straight cut down, and pull it straight back up.
Some like to brush the biscuits with melted butter before baking. Some advise to pierce the biscuits with a fork to let steam out. Some like to add grated cheese such as cheddar or Colby to the dough. Some like to bake them in a cast iron skillet. You can let the sides of the biscuits touch if you want softer biscuits.
The oven they are baked in should be quite hot, around 450 F (230 C.)
If you get interrupted, you can store cut but unbaked biscuits in the fridge for up to an hour and still have them turn out.
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See Also:
Baking Powder, Biscuits
Other entries for: Quick Breads
Arepas, Baking Powder Biscuits, Bannock, Barm Brack, Cornbread, Crumpets, English Muffins, Fadge, Farls, Irish Soda Bread, Johnnycake, Libum, Muffins, Pancakes, Pikelets, Singing Hinnies
Other entries for: Bread
Bread Crumbs, Buns, Flat Breads, French Breads
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