Biscuit
Crusty Buttermilk Biscuits
The cliché, in this case, turns out to be true: Biscuits benefit from TLC. Peacock recommends White Lily flour, one of the lightest available, along with lard for a flaky texture so fluffy and airy that the biscuits almost float off the plate. One bite may well move you to tears—either with memories of your southern grandmother, or with regret for not having had a southern grandmother.
By Scott Peacock
Orange-Almond Shortcakes with Cranberry Parfait
If you end up with a few extra shortcakes, they're great for breakfast.
By Selma Brown Morrow
Dipping Biscuits
Flavored with traditional stuffing herbs, these are great for mopping up gravy. They also make a tasty snack sandwich with leftover turkey.
By Susan Reid
Chocolate Strawberry Shortcakes
Serving the berries and cream on top is easier than splitting the biscuits, and it's a fun and pretty twist.
By Lori Longbotham
Scallion Biscuits
These bread-basket staples are as good with eggs as they are with the grilled "barbecue" beef and slaw.
Chicken and Biscuits
Homey and old-fashioned, this comforting dish can be on the table in a flash, thanks to store-bought rotisserie chicken and biscuits made with self-rising flour.
Uncle John's Moon Rock Biscuits
Astronaut or not, anyone can enjoy these raisin-studded drop biscuits. Eat them while they're warm, because they lose their stellar appeal when cool.
Sesame-Citrus Crackers
Evelyn Herring of Laguna Woods, California, writes: "My mother was raised in Scotland and learned to cook at a time when quality ingredients were hard to come by. She had to be imaginative, often substituting ingredients and improvising recipes. My own cooking has become Americanized over the years, but I still rely on her recipes. They're easy and always taste as good as the first time I tried them."
These savory treats, called biscuits in Scotland, go well with cocktails or tea.
By Evelyn Herring
Peach and Blackberry Shortcakes with Blackberry Cream
Shortcakes are biscuit-like cakes that have more butter (or shortening) than many other types of cake. In fact, pastry chefs often describe especially buttery doughs as "short."
Astypalaian Yellow (Saffron) Biscuits
KITRINA KOULOURIA ASTYPALITIKA
Editor's note: This recipe is excerpted from Aglaia Kremezi's book The Foods of Greece.
To read more about Kremezi and Greek Easter, click here.
I first saw these biscuits on Holy Thursday in Astypalaia (an island of the Dodecanese). In a bakery there I saw pan after pan full of yellow biscuits about to be baked for the second time. I thought they were the baker's specialty and asked if I could buy some. To my astonishment I learned that they belonged to the women of the village, who had brought them there to be baked. I was offered one to taste, and tried to figure out what was giving them their strange flavor. I had never seen or tasted anything like those biscuits anywhere in Greece.
The week before Easter it is customary throughout Greece to bake Easter biscuits, but the ones I was familiar with were sweet and contained many eggs. These were savory — I could taste pepper in them — but I could not figure out the rest of the flavors. When I asked, I was told their main flavoring was saffron.
In the fall, after the first rains, the women of the island climb the rocky hills of Astypalaia in search of the crocus flowers from which they collect about 1/3 ounce of saffron threads — enough to color and flavor the dough made from 28 pounds of flour that they usually bake. Astypalaian women don't like commercial saffron, believing that the saffron gathered from their own hills is best. And, of course, they are right.
As I learned later, these saffron biscuits are found only on this tiny island. In Athenaeus, bread with saffron is described as one of the foods served during ancient symposia, but in modern Greece — although we now cultivate and export a lot of the precious spice — we use hardly any saffron in our cooking.
I believe that this recipe must be a very old one, and that is the reason it contains no sugar. The women of the island keep the tradition and bake a lot of these yellow biscuits every Easter. They send some to their relatives in Athens and keep the rest in large tin boxes to eat with fresh farmer's cheese or with their coffee for the rest of the year.
Adjusting the recipe given to me by Virginia Manolaki for 8 cups of flour was quite an ordeal. Commercial saffron seems to be weaker than the Astypalaian variety, so I had to use more. Finally, I came up with the version that follows, which is very near the real thing. Serve the biscuits with fresh cheese or with coffee.
By Aglaia Kremezi
Cornmeal Biscuits with Cheddar and Chipotle
By Kristine Kidd
Maple Sugar Ragamuffins
For a gentle boost of sweetness, these buttery biscuit roll-ups feature maple in both the dough and the filling.
Dog Biscuits
Neither overtly salty nor sweet, and with a pleasantly grainy texture, these biscuits won a loyal following among staff dogs — as well as humans.
Buttermilk Biscuits
By Kemp Minifie
Cheddar Buttermilk Biscuits
These drop biscuits are as tender as they are easy; since the dough isn't rolled out, there's no chance of overworking it. <p>
This recipe is an accompaniment for <epi:recipeLink id"230464">Turkey Sloppy Joes on Cheddar Buttermilk Biscuits</epi:recipeLink>.