5/14 Buttermilk Biscuit 2
From 
Dave Drum@1:18/200 to 
All on Mon May 13 17:43:48 2024
 
 
MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06
 
      Title: Buttermilk Biscuits, Revised
 Categories: Breads
      Yield: 30 Biscuits
 
      4 c  Flour
      2 tb Baking powder
      1 ts Baking soda
      1 ts Salt
      2 ts Sugar
    2/3 c  Butter; softened
  1 1/2 c  Buttermilk; see note
    1/4 c  Butter; melted
 
  Sift flour with baking powder, soda, salt, and sugar. Cut
  in 2/3 cup of butter until mixture resembles coarse meal.
  Add buttermilk, stirring until dry ingredients are
  moistened.
  
  NOTE regarding buttermilk: If you are using commercial,
  cultured buttermilk, use the ingredients as specified.
  Commercial buttermilk is a "sour milk" product and has
  enough acid to activate the baking soda. If you're using
  the buttermilk left over after you make your own sweet
  cream butter you MUST sour it first by adding a tbs of
  white or cider vinegar to the measured buttermilk and
  allowing it to stand for a few minutes. If you don't do
  this, the biscuits will not rise as well or as lightly
  because there will not be enough acid in the dough.
  
  Turn dough out onto a lightly floured surface; knead
  lightly 4 or 5 times. [When you turn the dough out onto
  the board it will be slightly elastic and somewhat
  layered. Knead it simply and quickly by merely folding
  the dough in half and pressing it out with the hands.
  Keep your hands cool as you work with the dough and don't
  fold more than the number of times called for in the
  recipe. Overworking the biscuits will make them tough.]
  
  Roll dough to 1/2" thickness; cut with a 2 1/2" biscuit
  cutter. Place biscuits on a lightly greased baking sheet
  [or on a sheet lined with baking parchment (preferred)].
  Brush tops with the melted butter and bake at 450ºF/230ºC
  for 8 minutes or until golden brown.
  
  When cutting biscuits, never twist the cutter; that will
  seal the edges and prevent proper rising. If the cutter
  is not cutting all the way, consider a new cutter. [Use
  a sharp cutter, not a glass tumbler. The rounded edges
  of a tumbler also press the biscuit's edges closed and
  won't allow proper rising. No biscuit cutter? Try cookie
  cutters for interesting shapes. My daughter *loves*
  heart-shaped biscuits.]
  
  From "Traditions" by Houston A&M University Mother's
  Club.
  
  Shared by Wesley Pitts 11/7/93 [Revisions by Dave
  Sacerdote, 02/97, set off in brackets.]
  
  Uncle Dirty Dave's Archives
 
MMMMM
... A hot dog is barely food, let alone a sandwich.
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 * Origin: Outpost BBS * Johnson City, TN (1:18/200)