By Karrie on | Updated | 35 Comments
This week I pulled out my Great Grandmother’s old recipe boxagain and found herHomemade Buttermilk Biscuits Recipe.
Can you believe I had never actually made homemade biscuits before? I was a little bit nervous. Bread recipes don’t always turn out for me the first time but I wanted to try it out.
I was surprised at how quick and easy they were. SUPER easy! And..my kids absolutely loved them. So much so that at lunch time when I made them, they ate up the entire batch! Then at dinner they wanted some more, so we made another pan full and ate them with my homemade sausage patties and some homemade gravy. The texture was just what one would expect from a biscuit recipe.They were crispy on the outside with a soft and flaky center.
Vintage Buttermilk Biscuits Recipe
Ingredients:
2 cups flour
1 tsp. baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
Shortening the size of an egg
1/2 tsp baking soda
1 cup buttermilk
Method:
Sift flour, baking powder and salt in a medium sized bowl. Cut in shortening 4-5 tablespoons worth or about the size of a large egg, until mixture resembles coarse crumbs.
Don’t you love how the recipe called for a measurement in the size of an egg?This shows the thinking of the homesteaders at that time. I LOVE it!
And yes, you must spend hours shaping the shortening into a perfect egg shape, just like I did in the picture below! 🙂
In a separate bowl or measuring cup add buttermilk and baking soda and mix till combined. Add milk mixture all at once to the bowl of dry ingredients and mix quickly until dough follows fork around the bowl.
Turn out onto a lightly floured surface and knead gently for 30 seconds. Roll or pat dough to about 3/4 inch thick and cut with Biscuit Cutter. I obviously didn’t follow this step very well as you can see below. I cut mine a little thinner. Whoops! They were still good, but would have been even better had I made them thicker.
Bake in hot oven (aka about 425 degrees) for 12-15 minutes on an un-greased cookie sheet or cast iron skillet. Mine weren’t as golden as I would have liked, so I placed them under the broiler for a minute and they browned right up. Perfection!
There is just something awesome about opening up Grandma’s old recipe box and making her recipes.
As I looked at her handwriting, I couldn’t help but imagine who gave this recipe to her. Was it a good friend? A family member? Colonel Sanders?
Did she spend the day making biscuits with her kids and watch with joy as they gobbled them up, just as I did? Making recipes from this old recipe box sure has brought back wonderful memories of my Great Grandma and I can’t wait to make more of her recipes.
Below is a printable version of Great Grandmother’s homemade buttermilk biscuit recipe. Happy baking!
Recipe Card
5 from 2 votes
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The Old Recipe Box: Grandma's Buttermilk Biscuits
Published By Karrie
Course bread
Cuisine American
Keyword vintage biscuits
Servings 8
Prep Time 10 minutes mins
Cook Time 15 minutes mins
Total Time 25 minutes mins
Grandma’s Homemade Buttermilk Biscuits are quick and easy to make!
Ingredients
- 2 cups flour
- 1 tsp baking powder
- 1/2 tsp salt
- Shortening the size of an egg
- 1/2 tsp baking soda
- 1 cup buttermilk
Instructions
Sift flour, baking powder and salt in a medium sized bowl.
Cut in shortening 4-5 tablespoons worth or about the size of a large egg, until mixture resembles coarse crumbs.
In a separate bowl or measuring cup add buttermilk and baking soda and mix till combined. Add milk mixture all at once to the bowl of dry ingredients and mix quickly until dough follows fork around the bowl.
Turn out onto a lightly floured surface and knead gently for 30 seconds. Roll or pat dough to about 3/4 inch thick and cut with biscuit cutter.
Bake at 425 degrees for 12-15 minutes on an ungreased cookie sheet or cast iron skillet.
Nutrition
Serving: 1Biscuit | Calories: 132kcal | Carbohydrates: 25g | Protein: 4g | Fat: 1g | Cholesterol: 3mg | Sodium: 256mg | Potassium: 137mg | Sugar: 1g | Vitamin A: 50IU | Calcium: 66mg | Iron: 1.5mg
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To see more recipes that I have made including ones from my Great Grandmothers old recipe box go here. Also if you love food as much as me, check out some of my boards on Pinterest, you will be glad you did!
About Karrie
Food is my love language. But so is saving money. So I like to combine the two a lot and make thrifty make ahead and freeze meals to save time. Because life is busy, and freezer meals can come to the rescue for all of us. And yes, they actually CAN taste good. Read more...
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Linda Hogue says
This is like my mother used to make except put a little oil in the skillet place in oven for oil to get hot. Take out and take each biscuit and dip in oil and flip it and place it in the skillet. Do each one this way, that way it will brown better
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cate ryan says
This is not only adorable but so lovely that you want to share this with us “serious” bakers. I love everything about the content, the pictures and your comments. I have a recipe for a coconut layer cake on an index card from my grandmother like the one you shared. Can’t throw it away.
Will be back to your website for more.
All best.Reply
Pat says
Love it. No sugar, try to find them without in the grocery store.Reply
Bev says
I made this Grandma’s Buttermilk Biscuits and it was best ever! Super delicious! Thank You very much for sharing the recipe! I will definitely make it again!Reply
Nancy says
Love the “shortening size of an egg”! Thanks for posting!
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kathay says
Is that a 1/4 or 1 stick? lol
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Jess says
Can I use wholewheat flour for this recipe?
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Karrie says
Feel free to give it a try. 🙂
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Tiffany says
Are these biscuits freezer safe? Can you make them ahead of time and then take them out of the freezer to bake?
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Happy.MoneySaver says
Yea they can be frozen but I would cook them first and then package them up to freeze. Then I would take them out to thswsnd then pop them in the oven or microwave to warm them up. Great for a morning breakfast!
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Liz says
Hi,
I love your website! Thank you! So far everything I have tried has been awesome! One question about your biscuit recipe, is it 1/2 or 1/3 tsp of baking soda? Your sweet grandmother’s card says 1/2 tsp. I was wondering if you had modified it to 1/3 tsp?Best,
LizReply
Happy.MoneySaver says
No, just a typo–I fixed it! Thank you!
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Renea says
Thank you for sharing the recipe. I cannot wait to try making the biscuits. Just to be sure. Did you use all-purpose flour instead of self-rising?
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Happy.MoneySaver says
Yep!
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Danielle says
This website is the best
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jessica says
Love these biscuits!! Can they be frozen?
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Happy.MoneySaver says
They sure can!
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elle says
What were the biscuits they used to drop in stew? Any ideas?
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Jennifer says
I think they are just drop biscuits, you can google a lot of different recipes out there, I would look for anything that says for soups or stew on the recipe. Dumplings are another type you can cook directly in soup. 🙂
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elle says
Do you have a good recipe for waffles? I had chemo during the summer and now my taste buds are really out of whack. I can taste yeast. I think I eat two slices of bread a month. Sandwiches are now breadless. Any ideas, kiddo?
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Kristie Mullins says
This website is a new little treasure I have recently found! I made these biscuits for the first time and they were a instant hit. I have the barley red stew invthe croc pot and I’m making the the cornbread recipe tomarrow. Absolutely can’t wait to see how it turns out!!!!
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Happy.MoneySaver says
So glad you like it! 🙂
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Kristie Mullins says
The barley stew was excellent and my kids beg me for the bicuits everyday. They are great with honey and butter and I just found your recipe for honey butter!!!! Ur awesome! Thank you!
Happy.MoneySaver says
Glad you like them!
Jeanene says
I love that you have your Grandma’s recipes and share them. I’m a southern girl, originally from the mountains of NC where buttermilk biscuits were a mainstay. I’ve been making biscuits since age 6 not only from the teaching of my mother but also my Grandma who past away at age 95 a year and a half ago. Some of my fondest memories are waking up early in the morning to the smell of wood smoke and home canned sausage frying in a cast iron skillet on top of her home comfort wood cook stove.
I’d get up before everyone else and hang out with her in the kitchen and watch her make biscuits. She used no pastry blender to cut in the shortening but used her hands and would use her hands for the entire process. She also only used homemade buttermilk. She didn’t use a biscuit cutter as we do but would pinch them off of the smooth dough she had formed into a tube. As she was shaping them, she would gently pat them with her dough and flour covered fingers and lightly place them on the dark patina pan she had used for years. She would pop them in the oven of her wood cook stove and they would come out golden, slightly crispy on top, light as a feather, and melt in your mouth Wonderful! Best of all was when she would make stove top jam to eat with them. It was like breakfast dessert!
Thank so much for sharing! I greatly enjoy it!
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Happy.MoneySaver says
Thanks for sharing that memory! Food is such a great way to connect to our family!
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Coleen says
Jeanene……I would love to have your recipe. I’ve been trying to make my grandmas but she had no recipe, it was all in her head. Haven’t found one that tasted like hers, yet.
Thanks so much
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Kristen says
I’m always looking for different biscuit recipes, this one sounds amazing! I can’t wait to give it a try!
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Linda C says
I have a recipe in my Mom’s old church cookbook that calls for a 5 cent size Hershey bar. I still wonder exactly what size that was.
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Calendula says
I was a chid in the 60’s. At that time, many candies were 5 cents, like Good N Plenty, Bit O Honey, Sweetarts, Lemonheads, Whoppers and 5 stick packs of gum. There were penny candies, like individuality wrapped Jolly Rancher bite sized hard candies, bubble gum, sour balls, and root beer barrels. A 7″ x 3″ chocolate bar was ten cents…Nestle Crunch, Milky Way, Snickers, U-No, and so on. For fifteen cents, you could get a strip of beef jerky from the jar on the counter, artisan rock candy crystals on a stick, or a box of animal crackers.
In 1964, my dad blew my young mind by offering the trivia that we HE was my age, (20 years prior) those fancy dime-each chocolate bars were only a nickel! I suppose your recipe in from the 40’s or 50’s!
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Ashleigh says
Fun, I love the idea of an egg-sized measurement of shortening! I look forward to trying these. Did you think the lack of butter affected the flavor at all?
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Happy.MoneySaver says
Not at all! The shortening did its job because I couldn’t even tell that there wasn’t any butter in them!
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Dana says
But there “is” butter in them…the “buttermilk” has butter! I have my first batch of this amazing recipe in my oven as we speak! My Grandma was 98 years old when she passed and she was a little southern lady from Louisianna who made drop skillet buttermilk biscuits as a staple on a daily basis every morning. What was left over was eaten for “Supper”. Her buscuits were tough on the outside and soft on the inside. I loved them. Only wish I had learned how to make them!
Melissa says
Good job making biscuits! I can’t believe you’ve never made them before – crazy! My kids love biscuits and I just recently made them for the first time with butter instead of shortening and they were so much better. I’m turning into such a butter convert – just call me Mrs. Butterton! 😉
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elle says
I have been a butter freak since I had it in Toronto when I was 17. Couldn’t believe how wonderful it was. I need to try this recipe.
Reply
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