Audax Artifex was our January 2012 Daring Bakers’ host. Aud worked tirelessly to master light and fluffy scones (a/k/a biscuits) to help us create delicious and perfect batches in our own kitchens!
Until this challenge I didn’t realize that an Australian scone is a baking powder biscuit.
Scones in North American are nearly always triangular in shape have a slightly crisp crust usually covered in sugar and have a soft interior crumb and sometimes are laced with dried fruit (these baked goods in Australia and England are called “rock cakes” since they are usually made to look like “rocky” cakes not wedges), meanwhile biscuits in North American are a round shaped buttery slightly flaky baked good usually eaten with meals (these items in Australia and England are called “scones” and are eaten with butter and jam usually with cups of tea or coffee as a sweet snack).
Hopefully that helps straightens it all out. Scones/biscuits are made from a few simple ingredients they are inexpensive and quick to make, but can be difficult to master.
Last year I posted a Breakfast Biscuit Sandwich and I used my sweet friend Edna’s Cafe Biscuits delicious recipe. This time around I used the wonderful buttermilk version of the challenge recipe. Audax posted lots of great tips on creating tender, flaky biscuits, including using frozen grated butter, the wetter the dough the lighter the scones, not overworking or underworking the dough, not twisting the cutter, and letting the dough rest before cutting so that it’s easier to handle.
I’ve only made biscuits a couple of times and I have a long way to go before I’ve master biscuits. I had hoped to make several batches of biscuits but ran out of time. Visit the Daring Kitchen to see a slideshow of all the creative scones/biscuits the Daring Bakers created for this challenge and the original challenge recipe with all of the helpful tips on how to make fabulous biscuits.
Do you have a great tip for making biscuits?
Buttermilk Biscuits aka Australian Scones
Servings: about eight 2-inch (5 cm) scones or five 3-inch (7½ cm) scones
Recipe can be doubledIngredients:
1 cup all-purpose flour
2 1/4 teaspoons baking powder
1/4 teaspoon salt
4 tablespoons frozen grated butter
1/4 cup buttermilk, approximately
1 tablespoon milk, for glazing the tops of the scones, optionalDirections:
Print Recipe
1. Preheat oven to very hot 475°F.
2. Triple sift the dry ingredients into a large bowl. (If your room temperature is very hot refrigerate the sifted ingredients until cold.)
3. Rub the frozen grated butter into the dry ingredients until it resembles very coarse bread crumbs with some pea-sized pieces if you want flaky scones or until it resembles coarse beach sand if you want tender scones.
4. Add nearly all of the liquid at once into the rubbed-in flour/fat mixture and mix until it just forms a sticky dough (add the remaining liquid if needed). The wetter the dough the lighter the scones (biscuits) will be!
5. Turn the dough out onto a lightly floured board, lightly flour the top of the dough. To achieve an even homogeneous crumb to your scones knead very gently about 4 or 5 times (do not press too firmly) the dough until it is smooth. To achieve a layered effect in your scones knead very gently once (do not press too firmly) then fold and turn the kneaded dough about 3 or 4 times until the dough has formed a smooth texture. (Use a floured plastic scraper to help you knead and/or fold and turn the dough if you wish.)
6. Pat or roll out the dough into a 6 inch by 4 inch rectangle by about ¾ inch thick (15¼ cm by 10 cm by 2 cm thick). Using a well-floured 2-inch (5 cm) scone cutter (biscuit cutter), stamp out without twisting six 2-inch (5 cm) rounds, gently reform the scraps into another ¾ inch (2 cm) layer and cut two more scones (these two scones will not raise as well as the others since the extra handling will slightly toughen the dough). Or use a well-floured sharp knife to form squares or wedges as you desire.
7. Place the rounds just touching on a baking dish if you wish to have soft-sided scones or place the rounds spaced widely apart on the baking dish if you wish to have crisp-sided scones. Glaze the tops with milk if you want a golden colour on your scones or lightly flour if you want a more traditional look to your scones.
8. Bake in the preheated very hot oven for about 10 minutes (check at 8 minutes since home ovens at these high temperatures are very unreliable) until the scones are well risen and are lightly coloured on the tops. The scones are ready when the sides are set.
9. Immediately place onto cooling rack to stop the cooking process, serve while still warm.
Thanks Audax for all of the hard work you did on this challenge, as well as all the help you so generously give on all of the Daring Bakers and Daring Cooks challenges!




I love to bake, especially cookies, cakes, and pies.
{ 37 comments… read them below or add one }
Wish I was enjoying this biscuit right now as part of a hearty breakfast sandwich. With some scrambled eggs and some thick slab bacon. YUM!
Eliana recently posted..Pumpkin Cheesecake with Gingersnap Crust
Those look wonderful and so soft!
Cheers,
Rosa
Beautiful job! Your biscuits look great, I think you have mastered them for sure! :)
Jenni recently posted..The Daring Bakers Make Biscuits!
It is such a delight to come to your blog, so many delicious treats. I love this recipe, I actually have some buttermilk at home that I need to use. Perfect timing.
Kathia recently posted..2 D Valentine Snow Globe Cookie
I’ve never made biscuits, but they are definitely one of my favorite things when I feel like indulging! This version looks especially good.
Kalyn recently posted..Chicken Breasts with Cilantro and Red Thai Curry Peanut Sauce
Your biscuits look so perfect !!!!! Lovely work on this challenge.
zazacook recently posted..Scones (a.k.a Biscuits)
Beautifully baked scones..gr8 recipe…
Vrinda recently posted..Oatmeal Pancakes | Pancakes With Cooked Oats
I’ve tried several different biscuit recipes, and do have a few that are favorites. These do look delicious, though!
Deborah recently posted..Blogger Spotlight | Bake Your Day
These scones sound so yummy!
Katrina @ Warm Vanilla Sugar recently posted..Costa Rican Black Beans and Butter Honey Plantains
I just posted my DBC too! Your biscuits look so tender, flakey and delicious! Good work!
Mercedes recently posted..Classic Biscuits (January Daring Bakers’ Challenge)
your pictures are great Barbara, they really make your biscuits look mouth- watering. Oh, and yes, I do live in Canada! My husband has an uncle (and cousins) who live in Ottowa. Such a beautiful city with great outdoor markets when the weather permits!
Best, Sandie
sandie recently posted..Biscuits (Back to Basics)
Bisquick!
Just kidding….
I’ve also been trying to master buttermilk biscuits because my kids love them for Thanksgiving….
Rocky Mountain Woman recently posted..An Argument for Local Food, Part II
I too, didn’t realise the same name meant two different things! Isn’t that the best about Daring Bakers – learning from each other! I love your golden scones. They look so tasty!
marcellina recently posted..JANUARY, 2012 CHALLENGE: Back to Basics:Scones (a.k.a. Biscuits)
It looks like you’ve mastered these to me! I’m still trying to get it down. My husband LOVES biscuits and gravy, and fortunately for me, he’s not too picky–but maybe these are the answer to my biscuit woes! They look great.
Ashley @ Kitchen Meets Girl recently posted..Thai-Glazed Chicken Lettuce Wraps
I like the rugged look of the scone crust..lovely!
They are also called scones in the UK and served traditionally with jam and cream/clotted cream.
Rock cakes are very different stemming from the 2nd World War when butter was rationed. Rock cakes contain no fat, but do have dried fruits,usually currants/sultanas and sugar. Very different from scones or biscuits in taste and texture. Rock cake, the name being realtive to the texture…….
I enjoy making both biscuits and scones and was delighted to read about the differences in the meanings of the words. I recently learned that scones can also have eggs as an ingredient. Thanks for sharing such an informative post about the delectable “biscuit”.
YAYYY mum! An Australian challenge! I wish I had the time to do this month’s as I love scones and Audax always does so well to do the challenges so quickly :) Hehe yes we do call them scones here and we call cookies biscuits! :P xxx
Lorraine @ Not Quite Nigella recently posted..Win a Mixed Case of McGuigan “The Shortlist” Wines Worth $174!
Une bonne spécialité
Je te souhaite un excellent week-end
Valérie
Valérie ( France ) recently posted..Mélange 7 graines pour pain maison
These look good Barbara! I love scones with jam and clotted cream, but they look great with marmalade. I made cheese scones with a hint of mustard.
Hey….
They are sooooo delish !!!
Love the browning on them !!
Perfect layers…..
Cheers !!
Biscuit success has eluded me for years. I make yeast bread with no problems and I consider myself a fairly good baker, but biscuits?!?! I’ve never made one that I am truly happy with. Thanks for the tips and the recipe, I’ll keep trying.
Coleens Recipes recently posted..CROCKPOT CHICKEN CHILI
It’s funny how different countries call things by different names. I made my first scones last year using a lemonade (7-up) recipe last year and I fell in love. They’re such a lovely treat!
Barb, your biscuits are straight off the cover of any great food periodical. They look beautiful and so fluffy. I love the photo with the bit of jam. Bring on the clotteed cream, and I’m booking my flight to Utah ;)
Lisa recently posted..Cinnamon Goo Biscuits and Bad Boy Love Part Two, Postponed
this was fun to learn, i had no idea. they look great, and i love the marmalade, delicious!
teresa recently posted..Spaghetti Squash and Meatballs
Oh my! Pass the butter and jam please!
Paula recently posted..How To Make a Royal Icing Gazebo
Looks great. I took on biscuit making for first time last year. Maryann Byrd lives in my town and she wrote The Rise of the Southern Biscuit. She contacted me and shared her own recipe which I haven’t blogged yet, but tis divine and she has a youtube of it that you can probably find. Very unusual method. Now scones (American scones) I would love to take on next.
angela@spinachtiger recently posted..Meatballs with Savory Blueberry and Pear Compote
Hi Barbara Just wanted to let you know that I have made and posted your recipe for Snickerdoodle bread. It is very good so thank you for another wonderful recipe. Andi
Since I moved to the south ( and my husband is from the south,) I have tried to master biscuit making. Not that I have mastered yet, but I am definitely trying:-) These look great – especially with the orange marmalade – that is how I like to eat them. My biggest tip is to laminate the dough like yo do in this recipe. That whole process is what gives you those layers. Yum – I want some biscuits now – I will try this recipe next!
Becki’s Whole Life recently posted..Chocolate Chip Blondies
With biscuits like this, I wouldn’t need butter or jam or anything…they are MOUTHWATERING enough!
Angie@Angie’s Recipes recently posted..Soft Whole Wheat Rolls
I can indulge in a few of these scones at one go. They look soft and yummy.
Cheah recently posted..Fish Maw ~ Fa Kau soup
You haven;t had biscuits until you have had buttermilk biscuits. Its one of the first things my grandmother taught me growing up in the south! Your biscuits look AMAZING! Just like they could melt in my mouth. Give me some butter and I am in heaven!
Kitchen Belleicious recently posted..Spicy Pork Burgers
Look good to me!
Blond Duck recently posted..Magical Monday: Four
These look amazing! I’m coming right back here next time I need a good biscuit recipe :)
Becky at VintageMixer recently posted..Wine and Cheese Tasting with Fox School of Wine and Beehive Cheese
These scones (biscuits) look delicious.
Baltic Maid recently posted..Black Forest Dessert
Oh my, these look wonderful! I’m still trying to master the ultimate biscuit.
Susan recently posted..Glazed Asian Drumsticks
Your scones turned out so well. I realised on my last visit to the USA that biscuits are basically scones. Funny how we cook similar things but call them something totally different. In the 80′s I was in a shop near Disneyland in Anaheim and asked if they had any bum bags. She looked at me like I was an alien and then she worked out I was after a fanny bag I was 13 and nearly died. Fanny means something else here in Aus completely!
Sara (Belly Rumbles) recently posted..Monkushun-do Japanese BBQ & Chinzan-so Gardens Tokyo