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Tips
For Baking Better Biscuits

- Always use quality, unbleached all-purpose
flour, unless otherwise instructed in a recipe.
- Always make sure your baking powder is
fresh. Place a teaspoon of baking powder in some warm water.
It should foam and bubble quite actively if it is fresh.
- Cold shortening and cold liquid ingredients
will produce the best biscuits.
- "Cutting in" the shortening
means cutting the shortening into small bits in the flour until
it resembles coarse meal. This is usually done with a pastry
cutter or can be done by using two knives. Some use their fingertips
to rub the mixture into the right consistency. The mixture is
then moistened with the liquid ingredients until they just cling
together.
- Always add the liquid a recipe calls for
in steps..the least amount first. Once the mixture is just
moistened, stir the dough into a shaggy-looking mass.
- Do not overwork the dough. The heat of
your hands will begin to warm the shortening and activate the
gluten in the flour. A smooth, elastic dough will not produce
good biscuits.
- Use a cutter dipped in flour and make
the cut in one clean motion. Do NOT twist as you remove the cutter.
This tends to "lock" the flaky layers together.
- You can cut biscuits with inverted glasses,
cookie or biscuit cutters, or with a knife...there's no law that
states biscuits must be round!
- For fluffy layered biscuits, the dough
should be rolled and cut between 1/2-inch to 3/4-inch. Crusty,
thin biscuits (good for soups, dips) should be cut from dough
1/8 to 1/4-inch thick.
- Bake biscuits in a hot oven (400 to 425*
F / 205 to 220*C)
- Always serve biscuits hot...straight from
the oven. If biscuits cool, re-heat them by brushing the tops
with melted butter, wrap loosely in foil and heat in the oven
at 350*F (175*C) or in a microwave oven for 25 to 30 seconds
on HIGH.
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