Hartford Courant

A warm Southern WELCOME

- By Gretchen Mckay Pittsburgh Post-gazette

Is there anything more glorious and deeply satisfying on a visceral level than a fresh-baked biscuit? I’d venture a resounding “no,” especially when the fluffy squares or circles of dough are super-sized to allow a generous canvas for building breakfast and lunch sandwiches, or paired with a creamy, hangover-curing Southern-style sausage or red-eye gravy.

Carolyn Roy definitely decided bigger is better when she and her former husband and now business partner, Jason, opened their first Biscuit Head eatery in Asheville, North Carolina, in 2013.

The couple had worked in various restaurant settings for years after meeting in Colorado in the early aughts — everything from fine dining to breweries to catering gigs.

They moved to Asheville 15 years ago after seeing how much fun family and friends were having there.

Known for its vibrant arts scene, exciting beer culture and many outdoor activities in the Blue Ridge Mountains, Asheville “had the same great vibe and funky feel of Boulder,” says Roy, but was much less expensive.

That suited the couple’s long-held desire to one day open their own restaurant.

When the pair took the actual plunge 11 years ago, they decided to go for something as fun, welcoming and big-hearted as the town itself — a breakfast restaurant centered around Southern-style “cathead” biscuits, so called because they’re as large as a cat’s head.

The restaurant was a hit almost as soon as its doors opened. Two more locations followed, along with a fourth restaurant in Greenville, South Carolina.

To this day, the original location on Haywood Road in West Asheville still draws lines that sometime stretch around the block.

Their cookbook, “Biscuit Head: New

Southern Biscuits, Breakfast and Brunch,” hit stores in 2016. In addition to the recipe for its title character, it includes recipes for many of its homemade jams, gravies and infused butters.

It also offers instructio­n on how to use biscuits as the base for all kinds of knifeand-fork sandwiches.

“It might sound simple, but we believe cathead biscuits are magical,” the couple writes in the book’s forward. “They are humble but delicious, and they are wonderfull­y versatile as the base for a menu.”

 ?? GRETCHEN MCKAY/PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE PHOTOS ?? A staple of the South, drop biscuits can be made quickly in a cast-iron pan and serve as a delicious base for all kinds of sandwiches.
GRETCHEN MCKAY/PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE PHOTOS A staple of the South, drop biscuits can be made quickly in a cast-iron pan and serve as a delicious base for all kinds of sandwiches.

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