HOME Gardening Decorating Holidays Recipes Kids Crafts Teatime Books 4 Mom

 

Granna's Attic

Around the Front Porch:
Community Clatter
Join Us for Tea

Behind the Garden Gate:
The Flavor of Herbs
Flowers & Vegetables


Comforts of Home:
Create your Own
Organize Tips & Tools
Building Your Nest

Home Baked Holidays:
Seasonal Creations
Holiday Recipes

Home Baked Kitchen:
Family Recipes
Treasured Tips

Peanut Butter & Confetti Club:
Children's Crafts
Family Fun

Stitching Basket:

Crafted with Love
Nestled in Quilts
Free Quilt Patterns

Studying Our Roots:
Reaching into the Past
Memories worth Sharing
Family History

Tea for Two:
Special Occasions

Time for Books:
Book Reviews
Gentle Thoughts & Rhyme

You're The Mom:
Taking Time For You


victorian scroll
Relax and Chat on our Front Porch
front porch
Have Tea With Us!

 

 

Home Baked... Kitchen

Grandma's (Handmade) Homemade Buttermilk Biscuits

Buttermilk Biscuits

Here's a Homemade Buttermilk Biscuit recipe from my friend WIllie Crawford, author of "Soul Food Recipes  - Learned On A North Carolina Tobacco Farm "

Grandma's (Handmade) Homemade Buttermilk Biscuits

I used to really enjoy hot fresh homemade buttermilk
biscuits. Split one open and spread some fresh butter
(actually, we always used margerine), or slip in a
fresh sausage patty. There's nothing better!

After I learned to make them I also enjoyed just getting
my hand dirty as I kneaded the dough. Kids have fun in
the strangest way. Anyway, here is how my grandma used
to make them. I don't think the store-bought, canned
biscuits will ever even begin to compare.

Ingredients:

3 cups all purpose flour
3 teaspoons baking powder
3/4 cups buttermilk
1 teaspoon salt
3/4 teaspoon baking soda
3/4 cup Crisco shortening

Sift the flour to make sure there are no lumps. Add in
the baking powder, salt, and baking soda. Add the
Crisco slowly, working it into the dry ingredients.
You can use a large spatula or spoon, but I preferred
using my hands.

Next add the buttermilk, working it into the mixture
too. After everything is thoroughly mixed, plop it
down on a floured counter top or cutting board.

Turn you oven to 450 to allow it to preheat. While
it's heating up knead your dough until it is about
the consistency of clay that kids play with in
grade school. You can make it a little dryer
if need be by sprinkling more flour on your
counter or cutting board. As you knead your dough
it will pick up more of the flour.

After you have it the right consistency you can
shape your biscuits by hand or using a cookie
cutter. I preferred pinching off a chunk, rolling
it into a ball, and then patting it a little flat.
It takes a little practice to get you biscuits all
about the same size. If you want them more perfect,
you can roll out your dough using a rolling pin and
then cut them with a round cookie cutter. That
would look neater when you have company over.

Anyway, place you biscuits on a cookie sheet that
is either lightly greased or lightly sprinkled with
flour. If you use the flour option, be sure not to
put too much.

Bake these biscuits for rougly 18 minutes on the
middle rack in your oven (depends upon how hot
your oven is and how far this rack is from the
top). If the rack is too low you can move the
biscuits to the top rack the last minute of so
to get them browned just the way you want. Leave
them on the middle rack and thy should turn out
lightly browned.

Pop them out of the over and eat them while still
piping hot. That's the only way to get the butter
to melt just right.

Enjoy!


recipe from "Soul Food Recipes  - Learned On A North Carolina Tobacco Farm " - author Willie Crawford. The Chitterling Site - www.chitterlings.com.

..and more wonderful recipes and ideas...

 
chef shakers
 
 
Subscribe to HomeBakedMemories
Powered by groups.yahoo.com
Google

victorian scroll

VISIT OUR NEIGHBORS~ KitchenProject.com
Back to HomeBakedMemories


Copyright 2000-2006 Home Baked Memories
Contact the Webmistress: Granna@HomeBakedMemories.com
Last Updated: April 11, 2006

Site Map II Privacy Policy II Links

Google

Sign Up for
Tips from Granna's Table
Newsletter...

receive a FREE
Quilt Block Pattern
and HomeBaked
Recipe

Name :
Email :



(We keep your
email private)


See our current
Newsletter

  April 11, 2006