You know how I love a good biscuit.
This recipe is a Southern classic. It's rumored to be the Cracker Barrel recipe. It calls for ingredients all self-respecting Southern cooks have in their kitchen: self rising flour, shortening, and buttermilk. If you're a Yankee, (like me) you probably don't have self rising flour on hand at all times. No worries. You can make your own in a minute with three simple ingredients.
Oh, one more tip, My dear friend Miss Mary (what the kids love to call her) was visiting from Mississippi a few weeks ago. I made a big batch of biscuits for breakfast one morning, and we ended up having quite a few left over. I'm kind of a biscuit snob, so I'm not one to eat a leftover biscuit. I was about to throw them away when she told me the secret to re-heating leftover biscuits. Listen up. Split them in half. Butter both of the insides. Lay them on a cookie sheet and broil just until lightly browned and heated through. Careful not to burn. They taste fresh and almost better than the first baking. We ate up every last crumb.
The rumor about these being the Cracker Barrel recipe? I've eaten a Cracker Barrel biscuit and I can tell you this. This recipe makes a biscuit that's tender and flaky, like CB's. A bit of crunch from being baked at 450, a bit salty, which is perfect with the jam you're going to put inside. If we're comparing, I have to say no restaurant I've ever dined in serves a biscuit this good. It's hard to beat a home made biscuit.
Get baking.
Cracker Barrel Biscuits
adapted from cdkitchen.com found on Pinterest
print recipe
2 cups self rising flour (or you may make your own, recipe below)
1/3 cup solid shortening, I prefer Crisco
2/3 cup plus 2 tablespoons buttermilk, shaken
melted butter
Pre heat oven to 450 degrees, and set rack in middle of oven.
Place the self rising flour into a medium size bowl. Cut the shortening in , using a pastry cutter, or two knives. Add the buttermilk all at once. Gently fold the buttermilk into the flour and shortening, until the
dough gathers together, and the flour is mixed in. I use a large wood spoon for this.
Turn the dough onto a lightly floured surface and pat gently into a disc about one inch thick. Do not over handle the biscuits, this will make them tough, and not tender.
Gently cut the biscuits, using a biscuit cutter or glass. Place onto a cookie sheet.
Brush the tops of biscuits with melted butter.
Make sure the oven is completely pre heated and up to 450 when the biscuits are placed in to bake.
Bake for about 15 minutes, or until golden brown on top and bottom.
Makes 9- 2 1/2 inch biscuits. Biscuit yield will depend on size of cutter.
Self Rising Flour :
1 cup flour
1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
Mix together in a bowl with a fork. Store in a container or Ziploc bag until ready to use.
I double this for the Cracker Barrel recipe, and have a little leftover for the next time I make biscuits.
Measure out 2 cups for the recipe above.
I need to know how to make Popeye's biscuits...or maybe I dont!
ReplyDeleteYum!!
ReplyDeleteOh my goodness I love a good biscuit! And that plate? Toooooo cool!!
ReplyDeleteI'm making these tonight and they look fabulous! Just wondering, is the melted butter just for when we eat them, or do I pour it over the top when they're done?
ReplyDeleteshortening??? no way! you need the real thing, and i don't mean Coke. Lard is where it's at. just like you need chicken fat to make a properly light and fluffy matzoh ball. anything else is like margarine is to butter.
ReplyDeleteThese look fantastic! I'm going to attempt to convert the recipe to gluten-free..wish me luck!😁
ReplyDeleteI called 2 different Cracker Barrel locations to ask them what is in their biscuits...needless to say I was as surprised as the next person would be whenever they actually told me: bagged mix (they said included self rising flour and 100% vegetable shortening) and then they said they thin it with buttermilk and roll them out and bake them. So, maybe the measurements aren't exact, but the ingredients are!
ReplyDelete