Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Hot and Fluffy Buttermilk Biscuits

This is one of my favorite ways to make buttermilk biscuits. It's fast and easy, and gives consistently good results (light and fluffy). It does require the use of a food processor, but I think you could probably use a pastry blender and get good biscuits from that method also. If you work fast you can have the dough ready to bake in perhaps 15 minutes, which is wonderful. There's no rolling or cutting involved, which I find is what takes up the most time when making traditional biscuits (though there's certainly nothing wrong with that -- it's just harder to be spontaneous).



I also have a confession: I love the feeling of super soft dough in my hands. The step where you shaping the wet dough into mounds with flour is probably my favorite part of this method; the blobs of dough are so soft and pliant in my hands -- love it!

The before and after shots:





It's like night and day, isn't it? Who knew this ugly duckling could turn into such a beautiful swan? :-)

The resulting biscuits aren't uniform, but that's what gives them their charm, in my opinion. They'd look awesome nestled in a napkin that's been tucked into a basket. (Note to self: Buy a basket.)



Biscuits have so many uses: slather them with butter and jam (what I did the night these were baked). Eat them plain. Drizzle honey or syrup on them. Use them to sop up juice from your steak. Or eat them for breakfast, smothered with cream gravy (what I did the next morning). The sky's the limit!



Mile-High Biscuits (recipe slightly adapted from Cook's Illustrated)

Ingredients

For the dough
  • 2 cups (10oz) unbleached all-purpose flour
  • 1 tablespoon double-acting baking powder
  • 1 tablespoon granulated sugar
  • 1 teaspoon table salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
  • 4 tablespoons unsalted butter (cold), cut into 1/4-inch cubes
  • 1 1/2 cups buttermilk cold, preferably low-fat

To Form and Finish Biscuits

  • 1 cup (5 oz) unbleached all-purpose flour, distributed in rimmed baking sheet
  • 1 1/2 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted

Method

  1. Adjust oven rack to middle position and heat oven to 500 degrees. Spray 9-inch round cake pan with nonstick cooking spray; set aside. Generously spray inside and outside of 1/4 cup dry measure with nonstick cooking spray.
  2. For the dough: In food processor, pulse flour, baking powder, sugar, salt, and baking soda to combine, about six 1-second pulses. Scatter butter cubes evenly over dry ingredients; pulse until mixture resembles pebbly, coarse cornmeal, eight to ten 1-second pulses. Transfer mixture to medium bowl. Add buttermilk to dry ingredients and stir with rubber spatula until just incorporated (dough will be very wet and slightly lumpy).
  3. To form and bake biscuits: Using 1/4 cup dry measure and working quickly, scoop level amount of dough; drop dough from measuring cup into flour on baking sheet (if dough sticks to cup, use small spoon to pull it free). Repeat with remaining dough, forming 12 evenly sized mounds. Dust tops of each piece of dough with flour from baking sheet. With floured hands, gently pick up piece of dough and coat with flour; gently shape dough into rough ball, shake off excess flour, and place in prepared cake pan. Repeat with remaining dough, arranging 9 rounds around perimeter of cake pan and 3 in center. Brush rounds with hot melted butter, taking care not to flatten them.
  4. Bake 5 minutes, then reduce oven temperature to 450 degrees; continue to bake until biscuits are deep golden brown, about 15 minutes longer. Cool in pan 2 minutes, then invert biscuits from pan onto clean kitchen towel; turn biscuits right-side up and break apart. Cool 5 minutes longer and serve.

(Shown here with Julia Child's 20-second French omelette.)

2 comments:

Gens and Annie Linton Family said...

AMAZING Biscuits! We've tried so many recipes to try and get that fluffy "restaurant" style. Yours are the BEST we have ever had! Thanks sooooo much!

Gregory Horwitz said...

These are the best biscuits that I've ever made. I'm so glad that I found them in Cooks Illustrated years ago. I'm equally glad that I've found them here. Thank for posting them.

* For anyone reading this, the rule of letting them rest is critical!!! If you don't, they'll crumble to pieces and you'll miss out on the joy of eating them as the whole, wonderful bites of heaven that they're meant to be.