Wednesday, October 25, 2017

Shirley Corriher's fluffy biscuits with steak dinner.


I was at Hen House market the other day and when I got some bread flour, I noticed they had White Lily flour too. I had never seen that here before.  They had Martha White flour for a time in the town I lived before I moved back to Kansas City but they didn't have it for very long. It has been years since I had any Southern soft flour and immediately wanted to make some fluffy biscuits that everyone loves.  I made them for dinner tonight.

Georgia Touch of Grace biscuits. 10 biscuits light and fluffy

Cream is the KEY to flaky biscuits. This recipe makes a feather light biscuit.

Non-stick cooking spray
2 C. Southern self-rising flour (Or 1 1/2 C national self rising flour plus 1/2 C Wondra
-or 1/2 C. cake flour- plus 1/2 tsp. baking powder
1/8 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp. salt
1/4C. sugar
4 Tbs. shortening
2/3 C. heavy cream or whipping cream
approximately 1 C. buttermilk, or until dough resembles cottage cheese
1 C. bleached all purpose flour for shaping
2 Tbs. melted butter

1. pre heat oven to 425ºF. and spray 8 or 9-inch round cake pan with non stick spray
2. Combine the self rising flour, salt and sugar in a small mixing bowl. With fingers or pastry cutter, work shortening into flour until there are no lumps larger than a large pea.
3. Stir in the cream and buttermilk and let stand 2 or 3 minutes. This dough is so wet that you can not shape it in the usual manner. It will look like cottage cheese. (YOU do NOT want it to be stiff enough to shape)
4. Pour the cup of all purpose flour onto a plate or pie tin. flour your hands OR spray a 2-inch ice cream scoop with non stick spray and gather a biscuit sized lump of dough and place it the flour. Roll to coat. shake off excess flour. The dough is so soft it will not hold it's shape so place them tightly side by side so they will rise up, not out as they bake. Continue until all dough is used up. 

5. Bake just above the center of the oven until lightly browned. Bake until lightly browned, about 15 to 20 minutes, then brush with melted butter. Cool 1 or 2 minutes in the pan, then dump them out, cut them apart, split and butter while hot. Eat!

Note: you do not want to make a biscuit with self rising flour that you can shape because the outside of the biscuit will likely be bitter from the leavening used.




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