What the hell is that contraption? My oven. ..My Kitchen Aide microwave/oven combo. The hinges on my oven have broke...again! One minute they are fine and I am reaching culinary magic in my kitchen. The next, the oven door will not close properly., and thus.. the oven does not heat properly!.
The FIRST time the hinges broke I had them replaced.. to the tune of a whopping $500.00. Now you have to ask?? WT&*^%$# That is outrageous for two small pieces of metal. And why does this happen? I bake, but I do not use my oven more than the average family. Simply, this oven..SUCKS! It has broken more times than I could tell you. I have complained to Kitchen Aide .. but I get no sympathy. I refuse to fix it again, so you see my MacGuyver -rigged hot -mess thing I have going on here.
That said, I did managed to actually bake some biscuits. I am originally a born and bread " Northerner" I flew south one winter, and never returned. ( Bada- bing). Besides my oven being an abomination, so are my "bricks", opps.. i mean biscuits. A perfect fluffy white biscuit is glorious . Growing up in a Italian -American northern family we just never ate them. We were a different type, Yes...were those type of breakfast people. ( says in a small whisper..".bagels"...careful my oven might here me). Don't' get me wrong I love them too. BUT, the power of a biscuit... my southern born and bred children ( who BTW..really do not like Italian food ...WHAT???!... I know.. are they really mine?? ..I am afraid sooo...: /) will choose them hands down.
Here s the recipe I am now using. Is it perfect ? No. ..but it comes as close as I will ever be to being a " true southerner" . I am sure my daughter will teach me how to bake them when she is older, because she is " the real deal"
"Cat Head" Biscuit Recipe ( so big they are the size of a Cat's head )
adapted from here: http://hubpages.com/hub/Appalachian-Biscuits-Recipe
Makes five - six large biscuits- based on size of cutter used
Ingredients:
- 2 1/4 Cup All Purpose Flour ( White Lilly) or 1 and 1/4 cup ALL-purpose flour 1 cup cake flour *if White Lilly is not avail .
- 3/4 Teaspoon Salt
- 1/2 Teaspoon Baking Soda
- 1 and Teaspoon Double-Acting Baking Powder
- 1 Cup of Buttermilk, Milk, or Plain Yogurt ( or a mixture of the 2) - ICE COLD
- 6 Tablespoons Lard, Shortening, or Unsalted Butter ( I use 3 tablespoons unsalted butter and 3 shortening) CUBED and placed in freezer.
* this is due to the differences in winter wheat ( northern flour) and southern wheat flour which has less protein and makes fluffier biscuits.
Preparation Instructions:
I use a food processor..it is faster to mix.This is how I mix, there are many different ways and variations. Somehow this one works for me :)
1. Preheat oven to 450 degrees Fahrenheit (230 degrees Celsius).
2. SIFT the flour, salt, soda, and baking powder together in a medium-sized mixing bowl.
3. Butter/shortening- CUBED and frozen .
4. Measure out buttermilk, or milk and yogurt in a cup bowl. Place in freezer to get ice cold but not frozen. @ 30 minutes
5. Place dry ingredients in food processor . Add cubed frozen shortening. ( or 1/2 of fat you are using) Pulse mixer a few times . I do 4 quick pulses. (The finished mixture should have the consistency of course-ground cornmeal).
6. Now add butter ( the rest of the fat) all at once and stream your buttermilk it into dry-quickly pulsing mixture as you go. Dough should be wet and shaggy. NOT mixed completely into a ball. Pour out onto a flour surface or parchment paper counter top. You may see bigger blobs of butter and that is ok:)
7. With your hands shape quickly into a even flat disk. Keep thickness of disk to 1/2 inch or height of biscuit cutter.
8. Punch out round shapes with a biscuit cutter. Place on un greased sheet pan. ( I used a 2 1/2 to a 3 inch ). I ended up with 5 biscuits.
9. Bake for 15 minutes or until the tops of the biscuits are a light golden brown.
9. Bake for 15 minutes or until the tops of the biscuits are a light golden brown.
My family is from the South (I live north of the Mason-Dixon now, though), so I ate a lot of biscuits growing up and I bake them pretty often. I have to say that yours look pretty damn genuine to me and they're making me need a biscuit!
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