I hail from a Southerly state, where the flakiness, lightness, and loft of your homemade biscuits are a matter of pride. And bragging rights. But even though I’m a baker, it has taken me years to feel like I’ve mastered these simple little quick breads that aren’t so simple.
With very few ingredients, very little time, and a few tips and tricks, you can make towering biscuits that you might swoon over.
Here’s what I’ve found to be the keys to success:
- Make sure your oven is preheated, and bake at a high temperature in the upper half of your oven.
- Use very cold butter and cold milk (or buttermilk).
- Use a food processor; it makes faster work and keeps your warm hands off the dough.
- Cut the butter into the flour mixture just until it looks like big coarse breadcrumbs or small peas. Do not overprocess it.
- Pour the milk in all at once, pulse a few times, and get the dough out of there.
- Don’t knead the dough (or you will create gluten and therefore tough biscuits) but do press it together, and fold it over at least 4 or 5 times.
- Don’t use a rolling pin, just use your hands to press out the dough on a floured surface.
- Use an actual biscuit cutter, they have sharper edges. Press down but don’t twist.
- Biscuits are best served warm, right out of the oven. (But you can reheat them for a few days after, they just won’t be quite as good.)
If you want to turn these into buttermilk biscuits, just swap out the milk for buttermilk and add 1/2 tsp baking soda along with the baking powder.

Recipe: Baking powder biscuits
Makes 7 to 8 biscuits

