Post by Glen Carman aka Delmonico on Jun 11, 2019 20:28:42 GMT -6
Biscuits
For 12 inch shallow dutch or 12 inch skillet
2 cups flour
2-4 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
Or
2 cups self-rising flour
1 teaspoon to 1 tablespoon of sugar (optional)
3 tablespoons of lard or 4 tablespoons of butter
¾ cup of milk (more or less)
½ teaspoon vinegar ( any kind)
Mix the dry ingredients and cut in the butter/lard, add vinegar then the milk and stir with hand, just enough to mix well adding a bit more milk or flour to get slightly sticky soft dough. (If using canned milk and the can is empty, just add a bit more water.) Working it beyond what is needed with toughen the final product, stir as much as possible.
In fact the vinegar is not there for taste, it won't be noticed, it's to keep the gluten from forming long strands that toughen the biscuit, same thing is often done with pie crust.
We are now ready to bake this, have the dutch oven one plans on using ready and very lightly greased or at least make sure it’s well seasoned. (A 12 inch cast iron frying pan will work in the home kitchen. When using the oven at home, preheat to 425-450.) When baking with a dutch oven outside the question is if to preheat or not before baking. I seldom do, for one it’s an extra step and I like to keep it simple because I’m often running several ovens at once, also with coals and the iron it comes up to temperature in about the same time as putting a non preheated cooking vessel in a preheated oven. But like most things where there is more than one way to do it, none of the methods are wrong provided the results are as desired. With these quick breads you just want to bake in a hot oven which is around the same temperature as recommended for the home oven.
Cut Biscuits: Roll the dough or flatten with your hands to between ½ inch and 1 inch thick, cut the desired size with either a biscuit cutter or an empty can. Place on the bottom of the oven and bake 10-15 minutes or till golden brown.
Cathead Biscuits: A common old west term for a biscuit formed with the hand instead of rolled and cut, often bigger and thicker than a cut one, hence the term, depending on the size, these will need to bake longer than the smaller cut biscuits.
Drop Biscuits: Use the above recipe but increase the milk to 1 cup and using a tablespoon, fill it to heaping with the softer dough and drop them in the bottom of the oven and bake as above, these also tend to be thicker and need a little extra baking time over a thinner cut biscuit.
For a little fancier menu sometimes herbs, cheese or citrus rind is added to the biscuits, this also shows up in period recipe books, it can be a nice change of menu.
For 12 inch shallow dutch or 12 inch skillet
2 cups flour
2-4 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
Or
2 cups self-rising flour
1 teaspoon to 1 tablespoon of sugar (optional)
3 tablespoons of lard or 4 tablespoons of butter
¾ cup of milk (more or less)
½ teaspoon vinegar ( any kind)
Mix the dry ingredients and cut in the butter/lard, add vinegar then the milk and stir with hand, just enough to mix well adding a bit more milk or flour to get slightly sticky soft dough. (If using canned milk and the can is empty, just add a bit more water.) Working it beyond what is needed with toughen the final product, stir as much as possible.
In fact the vinegar is not there for taste, it won't be noticed, it's to keep the gluten from forming long strands that toughen the biscuit, same thing is often done with pie crust.
We are now ready to bake this, have the dutch oven one plans on using ready and very lightly greased or at least make sure it’s well seasoned. (A 12 inch cast iron frying pan will work in the home kitchen. When using the oven at home, preheat to 425-450.) When baking with a dutch oven outside the question is if to preheat or not before baking. I seldom do, for one it’s an extra step and I like to keep it simple because I’m often running several ovens at once, also with coals and the iron it comes up to temperature in about the same time as putting a non preheated cooking vessel in a preheated oven. But like most things where there is more than one way to do it, none of the methods are wrong provided the results are as desired. With these quick breads you just want to bake in a hot oven which is around the same temperature as recommended for the home oven.
Cut Biscuits: Roll the dough or flatten with your hands to between ½ inch and 1 inch thick, cut the desired size with either a biscuit cutter or an empty can. Place on the bottom of the oven and bake 10-15 minutes or till golden brown.
Cathead Biscuits: A common old west term for a biscuit formed with the hand instead of rolled and cut, often bigger and thicker than a cut one, hence the term, depending on the size, these will need to bake longer than the smaller cut biscuits.
Drop Biscuits: Use the above recipe but increase the milk to 1 cup and using a tablespoon, fill it to heaping with the softer dough and drop them in the bottom of the oven and bake as above, these also tend to be thicker and need a little extra baking time over a thinner cut biscuit.
For a little fancier menu sometimes herbs, cheese or citrus rind is added to the biscuits, this also shows up in period recipe books, it can be a nice change of menu.