Biscuits: Fat & Flavor — Tanorria's Table (2024)

Wanna know what I love about biscuits? You can take kitchen staple ingredients like butter and flour and salt and mix them with buttermilk and create warm fluffy cloud layers of goodness. It is the ultimate “nothing into something” that tastes so dang good!

Social Distancing in light of Covid-19 gave me a chance to do some recipe testing that I have been wanting to do for a very long time. There is no doubt that fat is flavor. I love using bacon fat, duck fat, and of course butter. I consider butter essential for biscuits, but I have been really curious to see how other fats stand up in biscuit making.

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I can now, happily say, that baking off five different batches of biscuits has been one of the highlights of quarantine life. Friends, it was AMAZING! I did the testing for you, friends, and I’m here to tell you which fats are best!

The most important thing you need to know is soft winter wheat flour is best. Biscuits should always be made with White Lily Flour! I grew up knowing this because White Lily originated out of Tennessee. I remember always seeing a bag of White Lily flour on my Grandma Lillie’s counter. White Lily flour is commonplace in southern states, but it’s not so easy to come by here in Indiana. I actually buy 25-50 pounds of it when I’m visiting Tennessee. (Can you believe I went through almost 35 pounds of White Lily All-Purpose Flour between January and May? That’s some serious quarantine cooking!) I finished off my final bag of White Lily Flour by testing these recipes.

Check out the chart below to find out every fat I tested and keep reading to find out how they each turned out!

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Buttermilk Biscuits w/ High Fat Butter

Biscuits with butter are what I consider “Old Faithful”. They are always delicious and every technique I have learned has been based on biscuits made with butter.

High-fat butter, such as Kerrygold Butter, is best. The rich fat from the butter releases water when the biscuits are baking which is what contributes to the beautiful layers and flakiness that we love about biscuits. The fat also creates the softness we love in biscuits, which is my absolute favorite part.

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Sourdough Biscuits

This might be a new favorite, friends! I just happened to test recipes for this particular biscuit because I had plenty of sourdough discard leftover from Quarantina, aka, Tina. I had already played around with sourdough cinnamon rolls and sourdough donuts (recipe coming soon). Biscuits never really crossed my mind until I began testing biscuit recipes.

Oh, my goodness, I’m glad I did! The flavor from these biscuits is so unique. One bite and I immediately think of sweetness from jams and jellies. The sourness from the sourdough pairs so well with it. These biscuits include butter, so the texture is reminiscent of the buttermilk biscuits with high-fat butter, but the flavor stands alone completely on its own.

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Duck Fat Biscuits

Where do I even begin? These biscuits are a savory biscuit game changer! I have always dreamed of making a duck fat biscuit and I finally did it! Every inch of these biscuits deserves a spicy fried chicken thigh between them or some crispy duck bacon for a duck bacon BLT. I imagine this biscuit slathered with spicy cherry jam and start to dance a little in my seat. They are so good!

These biscuits are quite softer than a biscuit made with butter, so they need more flour and less buttermilk. Freezing and cutting the butter into pieces can be a little challenging, but it’s totally worth it. Don’t sell yourself short when you don’t see flaky layers when you pull them out of the oven. Duck fat won’t accomplish that same result, but the flavor and texture will totally motivate you to keep them on your biscuit-making rotation.

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Biscuits w/ LARD and Shortening

I decided to test biscuits with Lard and Shortening as well. While I used butter flavor shortening, the biscuits were just not the same when it comes to flavor. Biscuits with shortening create beautiful layers and flakiness, but nothing compares to the taste of a biscuit made with real butter.

Biscuits made with lard did not impress me at all. I’m happy to fry my chicken in lard, but I don’t want a biscuit made with it. The texture seemed more like a muffin and the flavor was not decadent and rich.

I refrigerated both fats before using them to ensure they were cold and followed the same recipe I used for Buttermilk Biscuits w/ High Fat Butter.

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Biscuits are one of the most comforting foods I know. While they originated from the south, I’m so glad the south reinvented them, and I’m so glad my cooking roots originate there. I hope you make each and every one of these recipes and find comfort, just like I did.

Want the tips for making the perfect biscuit? Click below to download a FREE Biscuit Tip Printable

TIPS FOR THE PERFECT BISCUIT

Tanorria's Table

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Biscuits:  Fat & Flavor — Tanorria's Table (2024)

FAQs

What is the secret to biscuits? ›

Use Cold Butter for Biscuits

When the biscuit bakes, the butter will melt, releasing steam and creating pockets of air. This makes the biscuits airy and flaky on the inside. We default to our Land O Lakes® Salted Butter when baking biscuits.

What fat is best for biscuits? ›

Butter is the winner here. The butter biscuits were moister with that wonderful butter taste and melt-in-your mouth texture. I'd be curious to test out substituting half or just two tablespoons of the butter with shortening to see if you get the best of both.

What makes biscuits taste better? ›

Use good butter and dairy

Because biscuit recipes call for so few ingredients, it's important that every one is high quality—you'll really taste the difference. Catherine recommends splurging a bit on a grass-fed butter or European-style butter (now's the time to reach for Kerrygold!).

What is the answer to the riddle biscuit? ›

Answer: strainer

#Hard #Short #What is It?

Which liquid makes the best biscuits? ›

Just as important as the fat is the liquid used to make your biscuits. Our Buttermilk Biscuit recipe offers the choice of using milk or buttermilk. Buttermilk is known for making biscuits tender and adding a zippy tang, so we used that for this test.

What happens if you put too much butter in biscuits? ›

When you get a lot of butter, you're kind of filling your biscuit with holes, which makes it unable to bear its own weight to rise very far.

How to make biscuits not dry? ›

Yogurt provides both hydration and structure, for biscuits that bake up straight and tall but moist. Baking soda neutralizes some of the yogurt's acidity, helping the biscuits to brown. Patting the dough by hand keeps the biscuits light, as a rolling pin can easily crush the soft dough.

Why are my homemade biscuits heavy? ›

More fat will make softer biscuits, which could be a good thing. Too little fat will result in dry and heavy biscuits.

Should biscuit dough be wet? ›

Biscuit dough is moist and sticky, so much so that it may seem too wet after you've added all your flour. If you do think this about your dough, fight the urge to add more dry ingredients — dough that isn't wet enough will bake into a hard, dry biscuit.

How do you make biscuits rise higher? ›

Most biscuit recipes will tell you to fold or stack the dough in on itself once or twice, rolling it out in between stacking. If your favorite recipe isn't yielding the height that you'd like to see, consider adding an extra fold or two, which will create more layers.

How do different fats affect biscuits? ›

They found that the thickness of biscuits was significantly higher when hydrogenated fat or oil was used, while biscuit produced with bakery shortening had better surface characteristics and higher crispness.

What does milk do in biscuits? ›

Milk is used in many baking recipes, including custards, cookies, cakes and breads. Milk encourages the browning reactions characteristic of baked goods like pastry crusts, cookies and biscuits. Milk contributes to the keeping quality of bread and gives it a soft crust.

Should biscuit dough be sticky? ›

If you add too much liquid, it will not ruin the biscuits, but the dough will be very sticky and more difficult to work with. If you find your dough is too sticky, you may add a bit more all-purpose flour OR you can make them more like drop biscuits (dropping balls of dough on a pan instead of rolling out the dough.

How do you get a good rise on biscuits? ›

Cut off uneven edges and put these scraps to the side; clean cuts on all sides will encourage rise. Pat scraps together to make 1 odd-shaped ninth biscuit. Place biscuits close together in a 9-inch square pan and brush with melted salted butter. Place pan on top of the warm stove for 10 to 15 minutes to rise.

Why my biscuits are not crispy? ›

Don't overwork the dough. For crispy outsides, I brush the pan I bake them on with butter, brush the tops of the raw biscuits with more butter, and bake in a hot (450°-500°F) oven.

What keeps biscuits from falling apart? ›

Fat aside, a common solution to crumbly biscuits is to cut back on the measured amount of dry ingredients. According to Quaker, you should be scooping flour gently with a spoon instead of sticking your measuring cup directly into the bag, which can lead to compacted mis-measurements.

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