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  2. To better understand why buttermilk is used in recipes for fried chicken, biscuits, and homemade cakes, you'll need to know a little bit more about buttermilk and how it's made. Traditionally ...

  3. How to Make 3-Ingredient Biscuits with Butter, Self-Rising ...

    www.aol.com/3-ingredient-biscuits-butter-self...

    Step 1: Make the dough. making dough. Preheat the oven to 425°F. In a large bowl, combine flour and butter. Use the pastry cutter to cut the butter into the flour until the pieces of butter are ...

  4. Butter Swim Biscuits: The Easy Recipe You Should Try Next - AOL

    www.aol.com/butter-swim-biscuits-easy-recipe...

    Bit by bit pour the buttermilk into the mix, working it into a dough as you go. As soon as it becomes a cohesive dough, stop adding buttermilk (and stop mixing—nobody wants a tough crumb). If ...

  5. Biscuit (bread) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biscuit_(bread)

    Biscuit (bread) In the United States, a biscuit is a variety of baked bread with a firm, dry exterior and a soft, crumbly interior. In Canada it sometimes also refers to this or a traditional European biscuit. It is made with baking powder as a leavening agent rather than yeast, and at times is called a baking powder biscuit to differentiate it ...

  6. Drawn butter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drawn_butter

    Drawn butter. A piece of lobster with drawn butter in a plastic container. Wikibooks Cookbook has a recipe/module on. Drawn butter. Drawn butter is melted butter, [1][2] often served as a sauce for steamed seafood. Some cooks restrict the term to clarified butter, [3] while others insist that it should not be clarified.

  7. Churning (butter) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Churning_(butter)

    The buttermilk is drained off, and the remaining butter is kneaded to form a network of fat crystals that becomes the continuous phase, or dispersion medium, of a water-in-fat emulsion. Working the butter also creates its desired smoothness. Eventually, the water droplets become so finely dispersed in the fat that butter’s texture seems dry.

  8. Buttermilk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buttermilk

    Originally, buttermilk referred to the thin liquid left over from churning butter from cultured or fermented cream. Traditionally, before the advent of homogenization, the milk was left to sit for a period of time to allow the cream and milk to separate. During this time, naturally occurring lactic acid -producing bacteria in the milk fermented it.

  9. Skillet Buttermilk Biscuits Recipe - AOL

    www.aol.com/food/recipes/skillet-buttermilk-biscuits

    Preheat the oven to 450° and butter a 12-inch cast-iron skillet. In a large bowl, whisk the 2 cups of flour with the baking powder, salt and baking soda.