For special deals and more great content, sign up for the free How To Cook Like Your Grandmother Newsletter.
Email address:


Also receive blog posts via email

Name: (optional)

Not now, thanks

How To Make Sourdough Biscuits

I mentioned yesterday this was going to be my first cross-blog post. Anne made me an offer and I took her up on it. She would make the fish chowder, I would make the biscuits.

Anne has posted the fish chowder, and it looks amazing. I think I could even do it without screwing it up. I plan to find out soon.

I have to apologize to Anne for making a last-minute substitution. I ran out of buttermilk, so I did sourdough biscuits instead. The flavor should actually be really similar. The texture wasn’t quite what I was planning, but I suspect that’s as much because of my rolling technique as the ingredients. I’ll make it up to Anne for the change by doing the buttermilk biscuits real soon. Until then, here are the sourdough.

Ingredients


2 cups sourdough starter
2-3/4 cups flour
1 teaspoon sugar
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon of baking powder
1/4 cup (1/2 stick) butter
1/2 cup milk

Directions

Before mixing the ingredients, place a large pan of water on medium-high heat so that it starts boiling. You’ll be using this to quick-rise the biscuits before they go in the oven.

If your sourdough starter has settled, give it a quick stir.

Add the flour to a sieve over a large bowl.

Add the sugar, baking soda, salt, and baking powder.

Tap the sieve with the heel of your hand until all the the dry ingredients are sifted together.

Cut the butter into cubes, add to the dry ingredients, and cut in using a butter knife or a pastry cutter.

Add the milk to the sourdough starter. I was a little short on the starter, so I added more milk to make up the difference.

Mix the milk and starter. If you have a round-handled whisk like mine, try rolling it back-and-forth between your palms.

Add the wet ingredients into the dry, and mix until it forms a rough dough.

You want the dough to be moist but not sticky. If it’s sticking to the bowl, add more flour and keep mixing.

Turn the dough out onto a clean, well-floured surface.

Hold the dough with one hand, and push the top away from you with the other hand.

Fold the end back toward you and repeat, kneading for about five minutes, until the dough is even and the flour is incorporated.

With a floured rolling pin, roll out to about an inch thick.

Fold in half and roll to an inch thick again.

Double over and roll out four or five times. Add more flour as necessary to keep the dough from sticking. The multiple layers are what makes the biscuits flaky.

If you don’t have a round cookie cutter that’s a good size, cut the biscuits out with a drinking glass. Dip the end of the glass in flour to keep it from sticking.

When you’ve cut as many biscuits as you can, pull up the excess.

Roll the excess out to an inch thick, but don’t double over. At this point you’ve already worked the dough as much as you want to. If you over-work it, the finished biscuits can get chewy.

The last bit of dough was too small to roll out, so I just formed it into a biscuit shape by hand.

Put the biscuits on a greased baking sheet, as far apart as you can.

Put a clean towel over the biscuits and set the baking sheet on top of the pan of steaming water.

Turn the heat off and let the biscuits rise for about 30 minutes.

Obligatory low-angle shot of the dough.

Brush the top and sides with melted butter.

Bake at 400° for 15 minutes, until the biscuits are puffy and lightly browned.

Immediately transfer buscuits to a bread basket.

Hold one up close to your nose as you break it open. That fresh bread smell is worth all the work you’ve put in.

Serve with butter, as a side to any hearty meal. Like fish chowder.

And that’s it.


Come back tomorrow to see what I served these with. Sign up using the form at the right to get it as soon as it’s posted.

BUT FIRST: Go check out Anne’s authentic Maine-style fish chowder, made in a Central American jungle for Pete’s sake, and show her some love in the comments.


Want more like this? For more recipes like this, that you can hold right in your hands, and write on, take notes, tear pages out if you want (Gosh, you're tough on books, aren't you?) you might be interested in How To Cook Like Your Grandmother, 2nd edition, Illustrated. Or to learn your way around the kitchen, check out Starting From Scratch: The Owner's Manual for Your Kitchen.

This entry was posted in Bread. Bookmark the permalink. Post a comment or leave a trackback: Trackback URL.

4 Comments

  1. Anne Lossing
    Posted September 24, 2008 at 6:37 am | Permalink

    These will go with the chowder just fine!! I swear I can smell them from here!!

  2. Kristin
    Posted September 24, 2008 at 9:06 am | Permalink

    There’s that dreaded sourdough again . . . You should go to Alaska. You’d love it.

  3. Anonymous
    Posted July 18, 2009 at 7:10 am | Permalink

    you kneaded and rolled these way too long. You should only knead them five to ten times, not five minutes. Also you shouldn't fold and roll them, the fat in the dough makes them flaky, not folding the dough

  4. Posted July 18, 2009 at 9:13 am | Permalink

    For flaky biscuits, you're absolutely right. These were really early in my experience making yeast bread, so I didn't know the difference between kneading methods.

    These were a really nice dinner roll, but definitely not what most people would call a "biscuit".

» Subscribe to comments on this post

Post a Comment

Your email is never published nor shared. Required fields are marked *

*
*

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

  • Free Online Class

    Sign up now for my free 10-day online course in the basics: Starting From Scratch

  • Buy the Book



    Cooking used to be all about making food that tasted good. But somewhere along the way, we seem to have decided the diet-of-the-week was more important. How to Cook Like Your Grandmother is a return to recipes and techniques that are based on what tastes good, not on junk science and fad diets. You won't find the words lite, low, lean, free or skim anywhere. This is all real food, cooked the way Grandma would have done it.
  • Buy the Other Book



    People have been making and eating food as long as there have been people. And food. But somehow we've let ourselves believe that it's something only experts can do "right". That's where Starting From Scratch comes in. I'm not saying you'll go from zero to hero just by reading it, but at least now you'll know what those self-proclaimed experts are talking about.
  • Follow this blog

     Subscribe in a reader

    -- OR --
    To get recipes in your email
    Enter your email address:
    -- OR --
    Sign up for the weekly newsletter. Email address:
  • All-time Favorites

    Perfect Brownies French Onion Soup Bruschetta Pizza Egg Salad Onion Rings Banana Cake Cheesesteak Peach Cobbler Frozen Chocolate Truffle Pie Emily's Creamy Cheesecake
  • No Awards Please

Page optimized by WP Minify WordPress Plugin