By Kara Kimbrough
Touch of Grace Southern Biscuits are light, flaky and tender…in short, they’re a little bit of heaven on earth.
The homemade biscuit, a beloved American icon, is on the endangered species list. I blame it on supermarket biscuits marketing themselves as “homemade,” with an “old fashioned buttermilk taste.” In reality, they’re pale spheres of sticky dough ready to spring from their cans offering little more than synthetic butter. Here’s the main reason I’m upset about the neglect of the biscuit. I consider an old-fashioned, no-carbs-barred biscuit one of life’s top necessities. It’s a flaky bite of bliss that we all need now and then.
I could go on and on…a homemade biscuit is a soft pillow of comfort that makes eases life’s trials. Only the most hard-hearted Southerner would turn down a piping hot, fresh-from-the-oven biscuit. Plain and unadorned or filled with a little homemade jelly, it just doesn’t get any better than a biscuit.
To satisfy both camps – those who cling to their cans and homemade biscuit-lovers short on time or expertise – I can offer three solutions.
And last, those who are truly serious about making the BEST homemade biscuit you’ll ever taste in your life – Shirley Corrihor’s recipe for “Touch of Grace” Southern Biscuits found in her cookbook, BakeWise, is the only biscuit recipe you’ll ever need.
Quick (and I Mean Quick) Herb Rolls
12 ounce can of Hungry Jack Biscuits
1-1/2 teaspoons parsley flakes
½ teaspoon dill weed
1 tablespoon onion flakes
2 tablespoons Parmesan cheese
In a 9 x 13 Pyrex dish, melt one stick of butter and add parsley flakes, dill weed, onion flakes and Parmesan cheese. Cut each biscuit in half and roll around in the butter mixture to coat. Place halves in the dish and bake at 425 degrees for 12-15 minutes.
Recipe from Quail Ridge Press’ Quick and Easy Cookbook
3 Ingredient Biscuits
(adapted from Best of the Best of Bell’s Best Cookbook)
2 cups self-rising flour
8 ounces sour cream
1 stick butter, melted (do not use margarine)
Mix all together and spoon into greased muffin tins, filling halfway. Bake in a preheated oven at 350 degrees for 25 minutes or until brown.
Kara Kimbrough is a food and travel writer from Mississippi. Contact her at kkprco@yahoo.com