Fats and liquids in biscuits (2024)

How do you like your biscuits? Tall and tender, with a golden-brown bottom? Or do you like them a bit flatter and more sturdy, so you can toast and slather them with jam? As the baker, you get to decide how to adjust the fats and liquids in biscuits so they have just the right texture and taste.

When you start with a foolproof recipe like our Buttermilk Biscuits, it’s easy to customize the final result. While it’s certainly important to follow recipes closely while baking, you have some flexibility when it comes to choosing certain ingredients.

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Choosing the fat for your biscuits

Let's start with the base of any good biscuit — the fat. Our original recipe calls for 4to 6tablespoons of butter or shortening. The higher amount will give you a richer, more buttery crumb. I decide to split the difference for testing purposes and use 5tablespoons (2 1/2 ounces).

Whenever we talk about fats in baking, we always hear from a portion of “lard-core bakers” (people who are dedicated to using lard). Customer feedback is something we take seriously here at King Arthur Flour, so we'll incorporate lard (as well as coconut oil) into our fat testing.

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The butter version rises the highest — look at those flaky layers! The shortening biscuit is slightly shorter and a bit drier, too. Butter contains a bit of water, which helps create steam and gives baked goods a boost. (We discovered this to be true in our other explorations of butter vs. shortening, as well.)

The coconut oil biscuits are even shorter than the shortening biscuits, and the lard version is the squattest. Neither the coconut nor lard variationswin the beauty contest, either. They're a bit soft looking and don't have that desirable, craggy exterior that makes biscuits so appealing.

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In addition to rising the highest, the butter version is also the brownest.

Why? Butter contains milk solids, which include sugars that caramelize at high temperatures. Shortening, coconut oil, and lard are all 100% fat. They contain no milk solids or sugars, so they don't caramelize in the same way. Still tasty, just less golden brown.

This preliminary finding of what adjusting fat in biscuits can do is exciting, but it's also just the beginning. On to liquids!

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Selecting the liquid for your biscuits

Just as important as the fat is the liquid used to make your biscuits. Our Buttermilk Biscuitrecipe offers the choice of using milk or buttermilk. Buttermilk is known for making biscuits tender and adding a zippy tang, so we used that for this test.

Choices are important in baking, so we'll also test variations with full-fat sour cream, half & half, and heavy cream. (You can also use plain, full-fat Greek yogurt in place of sour cream if you like.)

Each liquid has a different amount of water, fat, milk solids, and acidity — all of which can change the flavor and texture of your biscuits.

To see the effects of each liquid, we make a batch of all-butter biscuits and change only the liquid —testing buttermilk, sour cream, heavy cream, and half & half. (We leave milk out of these tests since milk and half & half should yield very similar results, with the half & half biscuits just slightly more tender).

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It’s surprising what changing just one ingredient can do! The heavy cream biscuit is slightly paler than the other three, while the half & half version is the evenly brown. The buttermilk and sour creamversions are somewhere in the middle in terms of color: nicely caramelized around the edges.

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You might be wondering, well, what about the height? Surprisingly, all four biscuits are about the same height, with the buttermilk version just a smidge taller than the rest. Turns out that fat affectsthe height and flakiness of biscuits, while liquid impacts the color more noticeably.

Now we have a basic idea of what to expect when adjusting the fat and liquid in biscuits. Time to personalize your biscuits and choose your favorite combination!

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Testing fats and liquids in biscuits

There's a bit of a baking frenzy in the test kitchen as I try out all the possible combinations of fat and liquid in biscuits. Here's what we find:

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Shortening: Abit less flaky than some of the other versions but verytender — especially the heavy cream version: think melt-in-your-mouth texture.None of these has stand-out flavor though; they're a bit bland. Still, not bad overall.

Coconut oil: Slightly sweet flavor (though not coconut-y), most similar to butter in flavor. The texture of some of the higher-fat versions (heavy cream and sour cream) is a bit chewy/gummy.The bestcombination from this batch is coconut oil and buttermilk: delicate crumb and creamyflavor.

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Lard:Savory aroma with a distinct taste (and aftertaste). In full disclosure, I'm a vegetarian so some trustworthy employee-owners taste this batch. They think these biscuits might be nice with a sauce (gravy) or spread. Thelard and half & half version seem to be the favorite here.

Since lard is such a rich ingredient on its own, it might be good to combine it with another fat, like butter, to balance flavor.

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Butter:Slightly sweet, caramelized flavor; nicely browned exterior. All the liquid combinations produce fluffy, springy texture with an impressive rise. The butter and heavy creamversion makes a quintessential biscuit, suitable for all occasions.

But the one I can't get enough of? Butter and buttermilk biscuits. They're delightful in all ways you'd expect a biscuit to be, and a little lighter than their heavy cream counterpart. Butter/buttermilk biscuits are flaky, creamy, and downright comforting.

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Finding your favorite combination

Just because my taste buds prefer aclassic butter and buttermilk biscuit doesn't mean yours will, too.

Don't be afraid to adjust the fats and liquids in biscuits the next time you're called into the kitchen to whip up a batch.

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Gluten-free bakers, feel empowered to experiment, too. Use our Gluten-Free Measure for Measure Flour to replace the all-purpose flour in our Buttermilk Biscuit recipe. Adjust the fats and liquids until you find the perfectbalance of flavor and texture.

You might be surprised to find what your favorite combination turns out to be.Once you experiment with the fats and liquids in biscuits, let us know which you like best in comments, below.

Thanks to fellow employee-owner Seann Cram for taking the photographs for this post.

Fats and liquids in biscuits (2024)

FAQs

Why do you use cold fat and liquids when making biscuits? ›

Use very cold solid fat (butter, shortening, or lard) and cold liquid. When cold ingredients hit the oven they will start to evaporate quickly creating steam which will help your biscuits get very tall. Be careful to mix as little as possible once the liquid hits the flour.

What do fats do in biscuits? ›

Flour, sugar, and fat are the main ingredients used in biscuit production. Fats perform a shortening function in dough. The term shortening refers to the ability of fats to lubricate, weaken, or shorten the structure of food components to provide a food product with desirable textural properties.

What state is the fat in for the biscuit mixing method? ›

The biscuit method requires cutting the fat into the dry ingredients. This is done until the fat and dry ingredients resemble cornmeal, then the liquid ingredients are added. That process produces flaky items such as biscuits. You want your solid fat and your liquids cold.

Which of the following fats would be used to make biscuits? ›

Several fats are used, including vegetable oil, but the fat most appearing in recipes is butter. Solid or semisolid fats are most often used to make American style biscuits. These are quickly mixed with the flour (soft, low protein flour is best) using a pastry cutter.

What kind of liquid is best for making biscuits? ›

Selecting the liquid for your biscuits

Just as important as the fat is the liquid used to make your biscuits. Our Buttermilk Biscuit recipe offers the choice of using milk or buttermilk. Buttermilk is known for making biscuits tender and adding a zippy tang, so we used that for this test.

What is the best fat for making biscuits? ›

High-fat butter, such as Kerrygold Butter, is best. The rich fat from the butter releases water when the biscuits are baking which is what contributes to the beautiful layers and flakiness that we love about biscuits.

What is the purpose of liquids in baking? ›

Liquids are necessary in baked goods for hydrating protein, starch and leavening agents. When hydration occurs, water is absorbed and the chemical changes necessary for structure and texture development can take place. Liquids contribute moistness to the texture and improve the mouthfeel of baked products.

What is the purpose of fat in baking? ›

Fat can blend flavors of ingredients together or enhance the flavor, such as butter. In baked goods, fat also contributes to the tenderness of a product as it prevents flour from absorbing water. Muffins or biscuits with reduced fat are often tougher because the gluten is more developed.

What does cutting in the fat do when making biscuits? ›

Cutting butter into flour or other dry ingredients is an essential part of preparing pastry dough, biscuits and crumbly pie toppings because it gives a light and flaky texture that can't be replicated with any other technique.

Is it better to use butter or crisco for biscuits? ›

Crisco may be beneficial for other baking applications, but for biscuit making, butter is the ultimate champion!

Why is butter the best fat for biscuits? ›

The cold chunks of butter are important because as they melt into the biscuit while baking they create tiny pockets of steam that puffs and lifts the dough. These pockets turn into that beautiful light and flaky texture we crave with biscuits.

What happens when you add more butter to biscuits? ›

Increasing the amount of butter definitely makes the biscuit "taste" softer, more crumbly, and more flaky.

What type of fat is used in the biscuit method? ›

The biscuit method is the process of blending butter (or a fat of some kind) into flour so that it provides a flaky texture. Usually, this is done by combining flour and cold butter that has been broken down into pieces around the size of a pea, and then folding in a liquid to combine it all together.

What is the ratio of fat to flour in biscuits? ›

Ruhlman's ratio couldn't be simpler — 3 parts flour, 1 part fat, 2 parts liquid, with a little salt and baking powder to add flavor and leavening, respectively.

What is the fat replacement in biscuits? ›

Polydextrose and guar gum were successful fat replacers in biscuits at a relatively high level of FR (70%), with an increase in perceived taste, flavour and consumer acceptance [72].

Why is it important to use cold butter when making biscuits? ›

By coating the particles of flour, the melted butter prevents the gluten development necessary for that elasticity. Additionally, the water in the melted butter doesn't evaporate in the same way as cold or frozen butter. The cold butter was better, yielding plenty of flakiness.

What is the purpose of having the butter and milk cold when using the biscuit method? ›

The colder, the better. Why? Well, the whole point of the biscuit method is to keep discrete little pieces of fat dispersed throughout your dough. That way, when they melt in the oven, the steam the little pieces creates assists in with the rise.

Why is it necessary to keep the fat as cold as possible before baking? ›

In order to ensure that the finished crust is super flaky, pie crust always starts with cold butter. That way, the butter will remain in solid chunks in the dough that evaporate into layers during baking. Good!

What consistency of fat do you use when practicing the biscuit method? ›

The biscuit method, where cold solid fats (usually butter or shortening) are cut into the dry ingredients until a crumble-like texture forms, is useful to achieve a flaky, crumbly texture. The biscuit method is used not only in biscuits, but in pie crusts, scones and streusel toppings.

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