Fluffy Southern Biscuits Recipe - Tasting Table (2024)

Recipes Baking Bread and Biscuit Recipes

Fluffy Southern Biscuits Recipe - Tasting Table (1)

Jessica Morone/Tasting Table

ByJessica MoroneandTasting Table Staff/

The South is known for numerous culinary contributions, many of them comfort foods such as hush puppies, fried chicken, and pimento cheese. No true southern meal would be complete, however, without a side of biscuits. Recipe developer Jessica Morone is sharing with us what she calls fer favorite biscuit recipe, one that she assures us "makes the softest, fluffiest biscuits."

As Morone tells us, these biscuits of hers contain a no-longer secret ingredient: they are made with cornstarch. While she admits that "it is not typical for cornstarch to be in biscuits like this," she explains, "I find that it really makes a difference in how tender and soft they are." Meanwhile, Morone doesn't use self-rising flour, which often is a common ingredient in biscuits. "A lot of people don't already have that in their pantry so I think its easier to use all-purpose flour," she explains. Odds are that you do have all-purpose flour sitting in your pantry, so these fluffy biscuits will come together with ease.

Gather the ingredients for these southern-style biscuits

Fluffy Southern Biscuits Recipe - Tasting Table (2)

Jessica Morone/Tasting Table

In addition to all-purpose flour and cornstarch, the dry ingredients for these biscuits include baking powder, baking soda, salt, and sugar. You will also be using quite a bit of dairy: butter, heavy cream, and buttermilk.

Make the biscuit dough

Fluffy Southern Biscuits Recipe - Tasting Table (3)

Jessica Morone/Tasting Table

For starters, set the oven to 450 F. Now mix up the dry ingredients, then grate the frozen butter into the mixture. "Using frozen, grated butter," Morone tells us, "helps to make the biscuits light and flaky." Mix the butter flakes into the flour, then stir in the buttermilk until you have a dough that Morone describes as "shaggy."

Shape the biscuit dough

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Jessica Morone/Tasting Table

Sprinkle some flour over a work surface, then dump that shaggy dough down and spread it out a bit. Fold it over four or five times, then shape it into a rectangle about 8x10 inches. The dough should be about ¾-inch thick at this point.

Take a biscuit (or cookie) cutter or even a drinking glass that's about 2 ½ inches in diameter and use it to cut out circles of dough. Once you've cut out all of the circles you can, squish the remaining dough into a smaller rectangle and keep on cutting. When you get down to the last bits of dough, you may have to hand-form the final biscuit into a circle as best you can to avoid any square edges going to waste.

Bake the biscuits

Fluffy Southern Biscuits Recipe - Tasting Table (5)

Jessica Morone/Tasting Table

Line a baking sheet, then arrange the biscuits so they are touching one another. Brush the tops with the cream at this point. Morone does say that, "If you don't have heavy cream you can use milk or half and half ... all three will help make the tops of the biscuits a nice golden brown." If you like salty stuff, go ahead and sprinkle some flaky sea salt onto the un-baked biscuits, as well.

Bake the biscuits for 12 to 15 minutes until they are golden in color, then let them cool off a bit before you dig in. Morone says "I love to eat [these biscuits] with butter and honey on them, but they are great topped with anything you like."

Fluffy Southern Biscuits Recipe

5 from 102 ratings

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See all our tips and tricks in getting perfectly flakey southern-style biscuits.

Prep Time

15

minutes

Cook Time

15

minutes

Servings

12

Pieces

Fluffy Southern Biscuits Recipe - Tasting Table (6)

Total time: 30 minutes

Ingredients

  • 2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 1 tablespoon baking powder
  • 1 ½ teaspoon sugar
  • 3 tablespoons cornstarch
  • ¼ teaspoon baking soda
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 10 tablespoons unsalted butter, frozen
  • 1 cup buttermilk, cold
  • 2 tablespoons heavy cream

Optional Ingredients

  • flaky sea salt, for garnish

Directions

  1. Preheat the oven to 450 F.
  2. Combine the flour, baking powder, sugar, cornstarch, baking soda, and salt.
  3. Grate the frozen butter, then stir it into the flour mixture.
  4. Mix the buttermilk into the flour mixture until it forms a dough.
  5. Sprinkle a work surface with a light coating of flour. Press the dough down onto the floured surface, then fold it 4 to 5 times.
  6. Form the dough into an 8x10-inch rectangle, about ¾-inch thick.
  7. Using a biscuit or cookie cutter, cut the dough into 2 ½-inch rounds. Re-form the remaining dough into another rectangle and continue cutting until you've used all of it up.
  8. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper and arrange the biscuits so that they are just touching.
  9. Brush the tops of the biscuits with the cream, and sprinkle the biscuits with flaky sea salt if desired.
  10. Bake the biscuits for 12 to 15 minutes, until they appear golden.
  11. Let the biscuits cool slightly before you eat them.

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Fluffy Southern Biscuits Recipe - Tasting Table (2024)

FAQs

What are the secrets to fluffy biscuits? ›

For flaky layers, use cold butter. When you cut in the butter, you have coarse crumbs of butter coated with flour. 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.

What is the best flour for Southern biscuits? ›

If you start asking around, any Southern chef, Southern Living Test Kitchen pro, or biscuit-making family member will swear by White Lily flour. Generations of bakers have claimed it as the secret to the perfect, flaky biscuit.

What's the difference between a Southern style biscuit and a buttermilk biscuit? ›

There are many theories about why Southern biscuits are different (ahem, better) than other biscuits—richer buttermilk, more butter, better grandmothers—but the real difference is more fundamental. Southern biscuits are different because of the flour most Southerners use. My grandmother swore by White Lily flour.

How can I get my biscuits to rise higher? ›

Bake them close to each other.

Biscuits are an exception to this rule: Placing them close to one another on your baking sheet actually helps them push each other up, as they impede each other from spreading outward and instead puff up skywards.

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