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Southern Pinch Biscuits (aka Squeeze Biscuits)

April 18, 2006 by Andrea   Print This Post Print This Post
Filed under Breads, Breakfast

Comments

12 Responses to “Southern Pinch Biscuits (aka Squeeze Biscuits)”
  1. Honey says:

    My mom made her biscuits the exact same way…and the knuckle prints in the picture made me cry. She did the same thing with something she called T-cakes which were dryer and had nutmeg in them but unlike the biscuits her prints stayed on the T-cakes after they were baked. I would give a million dollars to have one today with my mothers knuckle prints.

  2. Andrea says:

    I understand how you feel. I wish that I had spent more time in the kitchen with my maternal grandmother really learning how she did things, like her fabulous coconut cake. It would have been fun to try and make one with her! I’m am currently on the hunt for her apple butter recipe. One of my uncles makes it in the fall, so I’m pestering him to share the secret!

  3. Ileana Thomas-Williams says:

    This is a lovely old recipe for biscuits. I’m American and want to introduce my Welsh husband to our foods, as my Mom introduce him to Cuban cuisine, that he and all his family love here in UK. I’m making the bicuits instead of Yorkshire pudding, and so far it has being a big bang. Next I’ll make them with cheese for breakfast instead of fried bread! But it gets better, I’m converting every one to BICUITS.

  4. Andrea says:

    Ileana: Glad to hear that some of our friends in the UK are enjoying American Southern biscuits! :-)

  5. Shawn McGee says:

    Thanks so much for this sight. I have been trying and trying and trying to make the perfect southern buttermilk biscuit. Living in the North now I can’t get the Lily White so I order it online but try as I may I can’t get my grandmothers light fluffy results. I’m a little ashamed as no self respecting southern woman should make such horrible bisuits as I do. Wanted to know if you can help me. I follow the recipe and technique to a T but still get flat and crumbly texture. Any advice?

  6. Andrea says:

    Shawn: I don’t know how you much you work the dough, but my first suggestion is to only work the dough enough to bring it together, and handle each biscuit as little as possible. Overworking the dough will make biscuits flat. Also, make sure your flour is fresh because the leavening agents tend to lose strength over time. Storing flour in the freezer is a good way to preserve it’s freshness, especially if you only use it occasionally. Just keep it in a strong freezer bag.

  7. Jeff says:

    Regarding the knuckle-prints, I saw an episode of Alton Brown (Food Network TV) and he indicated that you flatten the biscuits with your knuckles so they will rise evenly. He said if you didn’t then you end up with ‘dome’ shaped biscuits — something about them heating from the sides first then the middle. It’s funny to hear people talk about making things a certain way and when challenged, will say, “…well that’s the way grandmother made them!”.

  8. HFisher says:

    Thank you so very much for this recipe, when i was growing up my grandmother would make 4 pans every sunday for the entire family. Growing up i watch in amazement each and every time she made them. She had a huge bowl she kept her flour in and mixed everything in that bowl and somehow managed to keep all the flour dry except what she used. She passed two years ago and i have tried and tried to get it right and never have until now. Now my family can enjoy chocolate and biscuits on sundays just as i did as a child. Once again thank you for helping keep a family tradition alive.

    -Harold Fisher

  9. Barbra says:

    Does anyone have pictures and the recipe for T Cakes the ones that look just like biscuits. Love them

  10. Barbara says:

    Anddrea,
    I grew up in the South. Unfortunately, I never learned to make biscuits this way. Many of the women used wooden ‘biscuit bowls’ to mix the ingredients. I have searched for this recipe for many, many years. I can’t thank you enough for posting/sharing it. By the instruction and few ingredients I know it is the same recipe. I cannot wait to make these for my family. Thank you, thank you, thank you :)

  11. wendyywy says:

    A very interesting biscuit. I can’t get buttermilk here, so I guess I’ll replace it with yogurt.
    I’ll try to make this to eat with curry.
    Will let you know about the outcome.

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  1. [...] Cookies, Susan’s Savory Cheese and Scallion Scones at Farmgirl Fare, or my mother’s Southern Pinch Biscuits at Andrea’s Recipes. Make sure you have plenty of jams, jellies, and marmalades on hand to [...]



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