Springfield News-Sun

The only biscuit recipe you’ll ever need requires just 2 ingredient­s

- By Ligaya Figueras The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on

Biscuits are one of my guilty pleasures. I simply cannot pass up one of these heavenly, flaky, buttery rounds.

Not sure about you, but I’ve got a biscuit ritual: Snag one hot from the oven. Slice the already bursting seam with a knife. Add a pat of good butter to each half and watch it melt. Do you know how hard it is not to sneak a bite as you watch the butter stain the bread yellow? Dab on fruit preserves, decidedly choosing from among the gifted jars of the homemade variety, ones that friends felt I was worthy enough to receive. Coupled with a cup of coffee, a well-made, well-treated biscuit is a delicious start to a day.

I don’t bake biscuits often because others make them far better than me. I’ve been treated to fresh biscuits from Chadwick Boyd, a food and lifestyle personalit­y, part-time Atlanta resident and biscuit aficionado who is a key figure in the annual Internatio­nal Biscuit Festival in Knoxville, Tennessee. He makes moist, poufy biscuits look like a cake walk while I walk the road toward dry and crumbly.

Not that I haven’t tried to improve. A few years ago, I worked the line at Bojangles’. That fast-food chain has got biscuit-making down to a science — in 48 steps. That’s at least 45 steps too many for me.

Plus, why compete with perfection?

Because I’ve since gotten ahold of a keeper of a biscuit recipe.

It calls for just two ingredient­s: White Lily self-rising flour and heavy cream. Perhaps you know of it. It’s called Jolene Black’s Cream Biscuits. Originally published in the Times-picayune in April 2005, it is a reader recipe. It has since been reprinted in “Cooking Up a Storm — 10th Anniversar­y: Recipes Lost and Found From the Times-picayune of New Orleans.”

As the Times-picayune editors note, success comes from sticking with these two ingredient­s. “The trick is to use these exact ingredient­s. The biscuits won’t be as light if you use any other kind of self-rising flour. The fat in the heavy cream replaces the shortening or butter in comparable recipes.”

The first time I made these biscuits, I probably should have recorded my oohs and aahs. I was alone in my kitchen, talking to no one about my wonderment and delight at the divine smell, the sky-high rise of the bread, and the brevity of the baking project — it’s not a project; start to finish, making these biscuits is faster than washing dishes by hand. I marveled at the perfection of the liquid-to-dry ratio. And that we don’t even need to add salt.

An apple a day might keep the doctor away. A cream biscuit a day surely is a recipe for tasting heaven on earth.

JOLENE BLACK’S CREAM BISCUITS

2 ½ cups White Lily self-rising

flour

1 ½ cups heavy cream

Preheat the oven to 450 degrees. Lightly grease a baking sheet.

Put the flour in a medium mixing bowl and add the cream. Stir until a soft, sticky ball forms. (The dough will seem wet at first.) On a very lightly floured surface, knead lightly with your well-floured hands about 3 times, just until the dough comes together.

Pat the dough to about ½-inch thickness. Cut out biscuits with a 2 ½-inch round cutter. Bake on the prepared baking sheet for 10 to 12 minutes, until the biscuits are golden brown. Makes 10-12 biscuits.

Nutritiona­l informatio­n

Per biscuit, based on 10: 234 calories (percent of calories from fat, 52), 4 g protein, 24 g carbohydra­tes, 1 g fiber, 14 g fat (8 g saturated), 49 mg cholestero­l, 410 mg sodium.

From “Cooking Up a Storm — 10th Anniversar­y: Recipes Lost and Found from the Times-picayune of New Orleans,” edited by Judy Walker and Marcelle Bienvenu, published by Chronicle Books. Published with permission.

 ?? LIGAYA FIGUERAS / THE ATLANTA JOURNALCON­STITUTION ?? Jolene Black’s Cream Biscuits come out impressive, yet the recipe calls for just two ingredient­s.
LIGAYA FIGUERAS / THE ATLANTA JOURNALCON­STITUTION Jolene Black’s Cream Biscuits come out impressive, yet the recipe calls for just two ingredient­s.

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