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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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[Biscuits as in bread biscuits, not sweet biscuits for our British/New
Zealand/Aussie friends.] I heard a number of people talking about how great frozen biscuit dough is, and how easy to simply pop into the oven on a baking sheet. So I bought some and tried it. I preheated the oven and baked as directed. I promise, you would *not* have wanted me to fling one of those biscuits at you unless you were wearing a padding and a face-mask! Hockey-puck city. If I'm going the "quick biscuit" route, I'd rather buy a roll of Pillsbury biscuit dough. Or make them from Bisquick. Anyone else have better luck with these? I do like frozen bread dough which I find at the supermarket under the brand name of Rich's. Tastes almost like Grandma's ![]() Jill |
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jmcquown wrote:
> If I'm going the "quick biscuit" route, I'd rather buy a roll of Pillsbury > biscuit dough. Or make them from Bisquick. Anyone else have better luck > with these? I don't prefer Frozen Biscuits - but having been served them I've never had a problem with them being too hard or inedible... They actually *are* a comparable substitute for fresh biscuits as opposed to "canned biscuits" which is an entirely different beast altogether... ~john! -- What was it like to see - the face of your own stability - suddenly look away... |
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levelwave writes:
> >I don't prefer Frozen Biscuits Of course not... unless yer tawkin' ice hockey they'd bust yer friggin' hillybilly choppers. ---= BOYCOTT FRENCH--GERMAN (belgium) =--- ---= Move UNITED NATIONS To Paris =--- Sheldon ```````````` "Life would be devoid of all meaning were it without tribulation." |
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jmcquown wrote:
> [Biscuits as in bread biscuits, not sweet biscuits for our British/New > Zealand/Aussie friends.] > > I heard a number of people talking about how great frozen biscuit dough is, > and how easy to simply pop into the oven on a baking sheet. So I bought > some and tried it. I preheated the oven and baked as directed. I promise, > you would *not* have wanted me to fling one of those biscuits at you unless > you were wearing a padding and a face-mask! Hockey-puck city. > > If I'm going the "quick biscuit" route, I'd rather buy a roll of Pillsbury > biscuit dough. Or make them from Bisquick. Anyone else have better luck > with these? > > I do like frozen bread dough which I find at the supermarket under the brand > name of Rich's. Tastes almost like Grandma's ![]() > > Jill > > I've had bad luck with frozen biscuits -- they turn out better than mine. ;-) I'm not sure which ones though, Wife usually buys them, and some brands or varieties are much better than others. Seems like one package turned out hard and dry, but all the others were perfect. Best regards, Bob |
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zxcvbob wrote:
> jmcquown wrote: >> [Biscuits as in bread biscuits, not sweet biscuits for our >> British/New Zealand/Aussie friends.] >> >> I heard a number of people talking about how great frozen biscuit >> dough is, and how easy to simply pop into the oven on a baking >> sheet. So I bought some and tried it. I preheated the oven and >> baked as directed. I promise, you would *not* have wanted me to >> fling one of those biscuits at you unless you were wearing a padding >> and a face-mask! Hockey-puck city. >> >> If I'm going the "quick biscuit" route, I'd rather buy a roll of >> Pillsbury biscuit dough. Or make them from Bisquick. Anyone else >> have better luck with these? >> >> I do like frozen bread dough which I find at the supermarket under >> the brand name of Rich's. Tastes almost like Grandma's ![]() >> >> Jill >> >> > > I've had bad luck with frozen biscuits -- they turn out better than > mine. ;-) I'm not sure which ones though, Wife usually buys them, and > some brands or varieties are much better than others. Seems like one > package turned > out hard and dry, but all the others were perfect. > > Best regards, > Bob This brand is Mary B's Buttermilk Biscuits. But according to the folks at the little store down the street, they started using them rather than making biscuits from scratch for their breakfast buffet. Cuts the prep time down. They brush the baking pan with butter and then lay the biscuits down. When the biscuits come out of the oven they are risen and fluffy looking. Then they brush the top with melted butter. Sorry, but when I tried them they just came out like hard lumps of dough. Besides, their biscuits aren't nearly as good now that they are using the frozen dough stuff. I'm not advocating canned biscuits. I much prefer the following recipe when I have the time: 1/3 c. shortening 1-3/4 c. all purpose flour 2-1/2 tsp. baking powder 3/4 tsp. salt 1 c. milk or buttermilk Combine dry ingredients in a large mixing bowl then stir in milk or buttermilk until you have a thick dough. Pat your hands with flour and flour your counter. Turn the dough out onto the floured surface and knead briefly. Roll out the dough and cut with a floured drinking glass or biscuit cutter, about 3 inches in diameter. Place on a lightly greased baking sheet. Bake at 350F for 10-12 minutes. Remove from oven and brush melted butter over the tops. Jill |
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"jmcquown" > writes:
>If I'm going the "quick biscuit" route, I'd rather buy a roll of Pillsbury >biscuit dough. Or make them from Bisquick. Anyone else have better luck >with these? Try the Pillsbury frozen biscuits. They outclass all other frozen biscuits. And they're FAR superior to any "roll of dough" or canned biscuits, which to me taste like plastic. For a mix, try BixMix if you can find it, Martha White mix as a second choice. They're both available in little packets.. Nothing's as good as homemade. Connie ************************************************** *** My mind is like a steel...um, whatchamacallit. |
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On Sat, 8 Nov 2003 12:28:18 -0600, "jmcquown" >
wrote: >[Biscuits as in bread biscuits, not sweet biscuits for our British/New >Zealand/Aussie friends.] > >I heard a number of people talking about how great frozen biscuit dough is, >and how easy to simply pop into the oven on a baking sheet. So I bought >some and tried it. I preheated the oven and baked as directed. I promise, >you would *not* have wanted me to fling one of those biscuits at you unless >you were wearing a padding and a face-mask! Hockey-puck city. > >If I'm going the "quick biscuit" route, I'd rather buy a roll of Pillsbury >biscuit dough. Or make them from Bisquick. Anyone else have better luck >with these? > >I do like frozen bread dough which I find at the supermarket under the brand >name of Rich's. Tastes almost like Grandma's ![]() > >Jill > May have been old. I lost a bag in the freezer for nearly a year and rediscovered them last month. If they'd been cookies I'd have said they maybe rose a bit much. As biscuits I'd have said they were trying to disguise themselves as crackers. We've gone through several brands and the ones we get from the SuperWalmart are the best. One of the few things I actually prefer from there. I like them mostly because they're quick and I can bake only the number I want instead of having to bake an entire tube. ......Alan. -- Curiosity killed the cat - lack of it is killing mankind. |
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jmcquown > wrote in message
.. . > [Biscuits as in bread biscuits, not sweet biscuits for our British/New > Zealand/Aussie friends.] > > I heard a number of people talking about how great frozen biscuit dough is, > and how easy to simply pop into the oven on a baking sheet. So I bought > some and tried it. I preheated the oven and baked as directed. I promise, > you would *not* have wanted me to fling one of those biscuits at you unless > you were wearing a padding and a face-mask! Hockey-puck city. > > If I'm going the "quick biscuit" route, I'd rather buy a roll of Pillsbury > biscuit dough. Or make them from Bisquick. Anyone else have better luck > with these? > > I do like frozen bread dough which I find at the supermarket under the brand > name of Rich's. Tastes almost like Grandma's ![]() > > Jill > > The Pillsbury frozen biscuits (not in a roll) have been very good - flaky and soft. Had good luck with their dinner rolls as well. I bake them up in a toaster oven. Like that I can make only 1 or 2 at a time. JonquilJan Learn something new every day As long as you are learning, you are living When you stop learning, you start dying |
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I also love the Pillsbury Home Baked Classics. They come inButter,
Buttermilk, Cheddar and Southern. I can't decide which I like best but I'll never make another one from scratch and I'm kinda a biscuit snob!! |
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