Savory Cheese Biscuits
2 cups flour
1 & 1/2 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 cup rendered chicken fat (or palm shortening)
1 cup milk (for drop biscuits - for rolled & cut biscuits use 2/3 C milk)
1 tbsp dill pickle juice
1 cup shredded cheese
1/2 tsp dry mustard powder
1/4 tsp black pepper
Mix flour, soda, salt, mustard, and pepper. Cut shortening into flour mixture. Add milk and pickle juice, and mix enough to moisten all ingredients. Fold in shredded cheese and drop (or roll and cut) onto greased baking sheet. Bake at 425°F (218°C) for 10-12 minutes or until golden brown.
These rose beautifully too!
I used homemade pickle juice and my own goat cheese. Yummy! |
Savory Cheese Biscuits © February 2016 by
they look so good, don't have pickle juice though?
ReplyDeleteNo problem! You can use any kind of vinegar or even lemon juice. :)
DeleteThree of my favorite food-words!
ReplyDeleteAnd all in one food item. A winner!
DeleteMy mouth is actually watering right now!
ReplyDeleteMine too, LOL. Those didn't last long so it must be time for another batch.
Deletethank you for taking a pic of the inside of the biscuits...actually, i take that back! i wish that you hadn't have taken a pic of the inside...i'm drooling all over myself!
ReplyDeletebeautiful biscuits, Leigh! your friend,
kymber
Kymber, LOL, you're one to talk. All those gorgeous food photos at your own blog! They did rise beautifully though, didn't they.
Deletehmmm pickle juice that's interesting.
ReplyDeleteYou'd never even know it was in there.
DeleteI've been out of touch and not sure why you're not using baking powder but these biscuits look amazing. You had me at cheese and biscuit. haha
ReplyDeleteSandra, I've been working on my eBook series and thought an interesting homestead how-to would be baking without baking powder. Folks are always thrilled to be able to make their own, but with only baking soda and a little understanding of the science behind why baking powder works, the possibilities are endless! This is one of my experiments for the recipe section. :)
DeletePickle juice. Amazing.
ReplyDelete:)
DeleteCheese biscuits sound so good any way you make them! Will you stop using baking powder or is this just so you will know how to do it a different way if you ever need to? Nancy
ReplyDeleteNancy, I stopped buying baking powder years ago, once I understood the principle behind it. I don't usually use pickle juice, but it's been fun experimenting with the possibilities.
DeleteOh, these look incredible!! You had me at CHEESE!! :)
ReplyDelete:) Anything cheese!
DeleteThose look & sound delicious! p.s. just learned how to comment w/tablet!
ReplyDeleteThat means you're technologically more advanced than me. :)
Deleteyummy! I made cheddar biscuits a few nights ago...but I probably used too much apple cider vinegar to make the "butter milk" as kiddo wasn't happy. ooopsie! I'll try again and keep a better eye on it.
ReplyDeleteI think it's 1 tablespoon of vinegar to milk(?) If you're like me though, you glug it instead of measure it. :)
DeleteLeigh,
ReplyDeleteYour biscuits look amazing, and I bet taste amazing. Do you taste the pickle juice? I ask because my husband hates anything pickled. I would love to make these biscuits, and not tell him know there's pickle juice in them.
No, no pickle taste at all. If you wanted, you could use either vinegar or lemon juice instead. You won't taste those either, however, because they mostly get used to make carbon dioxide with the baking soda.
DeleteGreat recipe and idea. I love reading about your experiments and how to do without certain staples. Being a 65 yr. old novice to even the idea of homesteading, I must ask, since Google was no help...what's the diff. between plain old Crisco (which I haven't used since I was living with my parents decades ago) and palm shortening? Sorry, but I don't bake that much. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteWell you know, we all start at the same place - the beginning. :) I think homesteading is catching on for all age groups and all walks of life. Anyone who likes doing for themselves is drawn to at least some aspect of it. As I always say, something is better than nothing. :)
DeleteCrisco is hydrogenated (transfat) soy and cottonseed oil. Personally I want to avoid all three of those, so I buy the more expensive palm shortening. From everything I've read, it's a healthy alternative to old-fashioned shortening. It's a saturated fat and so it's a stable solid at room temperature. I like coconut oil too, but it melts at warmer temps. I'm curious, what do you use for shortening? A lot of folks use lard or butter.
P.S. Thank you for the post on rendering chicken fat!!
ReplyDeleteGlad you enjoyed that!
Delete