Buttermilk-Biscuit Shortcakes With Strawberries Recipe (2024)

By Dorie Greenspan

Buttermilk-Biscuit Shortcakes With Strawberries Recipe (1)

Total Time
1 hour, plus 30 minutes for cooling
Rating
4(496)
Notes
Read community notes

Making biscuits is a combination of technique, faith and magic. You pull the dough together with your hands, pass through a stage where only a belief in the baking gods keeps you from ditching the mess and then, presto chango, the dough smoothes, and the oven’s heat makes them rise tall and beautiful. These biscuits are sweeter than most, because they’re meant to be shortcakes topped with berries and cream. (For a savory biscuit, use just 1 teaspoon sugar and omit the citrus zest, if you’d like.) Although they’re best soon after they’ve come from the oven, here’s a baker’s trick that makes biscuits a convenience food: Freeze the cut-out dough. When you’re ready to bake, let the pucks sit out to warm a bit while you preheat the oven; give them an extra minute or two of baking time if you think they need it.

Featured in: Baking Is All in the Hands

  • or to save this recipe.

  • Subscriber benefit: give recipes to anyone

    As a subscriber, you have

    10 gift recipes to give each month. Anyone can view them - even nonsubscribers.

    Learn more.

    Subscribe

  • Print Options

    Include recipe photo

Advertisem*nt

Ingredients

Yield:10 to 12 servings

    For the Saucy Berries

    • 1hibiscus tea bag (like Red Zinger)
    • cup (80 ml.) boiling water
    • 2tablespoons sugar
    • 1fat strip orange, lemon or lime zest
    • 1pound (about 25) strawberries, hulled and coarsely chopped

    For the Biscuits

    • 3tablespoons sugar
    • Finely grated zest of 1 orange, lemon or lime
    • 2cups (272 grams) all-purpose flour
    • 1tablespoon baking powder
    • ½teaspoon fine sea salt
    • ¼teaspoon baking soda
    • 6tablespoons (85 grams) very cold unsalted butter, cut into small pieces
    • ¾cup cold buttermilk

    For the Topping

    • 1pound (about 25) strawberries, hulled and halved from top to bottom
    • 1tablespoon sugar
    • 1cup (240 ml.) heavy cream
    • 2tablespoons confectioners’ sugar
    • 1teaspoon pure vanilla extract

Ingredient Substitution Guide

Nutritional analysis per serving (12 servings)

263 calories; 14 grams fat; 8 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 4 grams monounsaturated fat; 1 gram polyunsaturated fat; 32 grams carbohydrates; 2 grams dietary fiber; 13 grams sugars; 4 grams protein; 244 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

Powered by

Buttermilk-Biscuit Shortcakes With Strawberries Recipe (2)

Preparation

  1. Step

    1

    Make the saucy berries: Steep the tea bag in boiling water for 5 minutes; pour the tea into a medium pot. Mix in the sugar, zest and berries, and cook, stirring, until the syrup bubbles exuberantly and the berries soften, about 5 minutes. Scrape into a bowl, discard zest and let cool while you make the biscuits.

  2. Step

    2

    Make the biscuits: Heat the oven to 400, and line a baking sheet with parchment paper.

  3. Step

    3

    Put the sugar and zest in a large bowl, and rub them between your fingertips until the sugar is moist and aromatic. Add the dry ingredients, and stir with a fork to blend. Drop in the butter, toss it around with your fingers until it’s coated with flour and then press and pinch until you’ve got pea-size pieces of butter and flakes like oatmeal. Make a well in the center, pour in the cold buttermilk and turn and stir with a fork until the dough forms moist curds and clumps. Some dry crumbs may remain in the bottom of the bowl — don’t fuss with them now. Reach in with your hands, and knead gently, folding the dough on itself about 8 times, until it forms a ball.

  4. Step

    4

    Dust the counter lightly with flour, turn out the dough, dust the top and roll to a scant ½-inch thick. (Size and shape don’t matter.) Using a 2-to-2½-inch biscuit or other cutter, cut rounds as close to one another as possible. Cut in a quick up-and-down movement — if you twist the cutter, you’ll impede the biscuits’ rise and their flakiness. Arrange 2 inches apart on the baking sheet. Gather the scraps together, reroll and cut more biscuits, knowing that these scrappers may not rise as high as those in the first round.

  5. Step

    5

    Bake the biscuits for 16-18 minutes, or until they’re tall and golden; transfer to a cooling rack. Use the biscuits when they’re warm or at room temperature.

  6. Step

    6

    Make the topping: Toss the berries and sugar together; leave on the counter, stirring now and then, while you whip the cream. Using a mixer, beat the cream just until it begins to thicken, then whip in the confectioners’ sugar and vanilla. Don’t overbeat — soft cream is good here.

  7. Step

    7

    To assemble: Pull apart each biscuit along a natural flake line, and place the bottoms on plates. Top each with a spoonful of saucy berries, cream and then sugared berries. Decide what to do with the other half of each biscuit: Lean it up against the shortcake; place it at a jaunty angle on top of each shortcake; make another shortcake with it; or tuck it away to toast in the morning.

Ratings

4

out of 5

496

user ratings

Your rating

or to rate this recipe.

Have you cooked this?

or to mark this recipe as cooked.

Private Notes

Leave a Private Note on this recipe and see it here.

Cooking Notes

Elizabeth Barry

Delighted to see this; at 76 I have made scones thousands of times, and my tip is; skip the little "cutout' thingies.- so much trouble!.... so - when the dough is spread and rolled to a 1/2" circle on the countertop, just take the sharp knife and cut pie-style into segments. Eight just four cuts. Nothing left over to be gathered, re-rolled and recut. This will save so much time and effort! And the pie-shaped wedges are so easy to eat as well.

Diane B

I like the sweet biscuit dough. I'm not so keen on cooking the berries and creating a jammy fruit topping. I slice up the berries, mash a few if they're not berries that slice (like blackberries). I stir in a teaspoon of sugar for each person I'm feeding, and then let them sit about half an hour. There's juice galore and a fresh spring taste - no boiling; no syrup; no almost jam.

Kathy

Thanks for the tip about freezing cut-out biscuit dough!

Kristina Haas

Gosh, it's so wonderful to see such excellent writing within the recipe. I love syrup that bubbles exuberantly!

Carol K

For maximum height when using buttermilk & soda, allow the cut biscuits to sit on baking pan, lightly covered, for 30 - 45 minutes before baking. This allows the first chemical rising to occur. In the oven the heat triggers the baking powder for a 2nd rise. (Same for Cornbread) Also, place biscuits next to each other & touching on the baking sheet, not spaced apart. It keeps the sides active & allows them to support each other as they rise. Make sure your baking powder is fresh.

PF

I wouldn't worry about it. The amount of sugar called for is not going to make these biscuits very sweet, plus you'll have the sweetened berries and whipped cream. In y experience, the "real" buttermilk makes things slightly richer and complex, so go for it.

Matthew

Kate's makes a real, actual buttermilk, not the cultured milk product that is ubiquitous. Does anyone have a sense that the recipe should change in any way if you use this real buttermilk? The Kat's seems more sour, add more sugar?

Michael

I made these this morning. They were delicious, and enjoyed by all. Sadly, mine did not rise very much, so I just used one biscuit as the bottom half and one biscuit as the top half. I think I might have rolled the dough too thin. My yield was 15, and should have only been 10-12. Gladly, my audience did not mind, and the biscuits were devoured anyway.

Margaret

It might be that your baking powder is old and has lost its lifting power. You can test it first (google search for how) or just buy a new tin if in doubt.

cynthia phillips

What is the tip ?

JoAZ

I do this all the time it's like you just made them. I use smitten kitchn recipe for cream biscuits that are super easy & outstanding.

Anne

The acid in buttermilk reacts w baking powder & soda to create lift. (Lactose is sugar.) Add lemon juice or white vinegar to your non-lactose or non-dairy milk (1 Tbl to 1 cup milk). Let curdle 5 mins, & measure what you need. To avoid lactose in butter, many bakers use good leaf lard or vegetable shortening. Some use a good, non-aerated margarine. I've used Spectrum organic vegetable shortening. Coconut oil can tricky as a butter substitute in baked goods, as you noted. Good luck!

K

Elizabeth, I do something similar; however, while I like wedge-shaped scones, I like a more regular shape for biscuits (easier to make into strawberry shortcakes or little fried-chicken sandwiches) so I knead/fold the dough into a rectangle (I do it right on a quarter-sheet baking sheet to save mess), cut into squares, and separate them slightly on the sheet. The re-rolled scraps are never as tall and tender as the first ones, anyway!

SNG

Wonderful recipe! Simple to make. Thank you for allowing me revisit Strawberry Shortcake just as my dear grandmother used to make decades ago.

Lisa Reese

I agree!! That's the only way to do it! I add fresh lemon juice as well!

C Wild

Tasted good. Jam was tasty but good also just let berries marinate with a touch of fresh citrus and sugar. Cakes were on small side for some and did not rise that much. Roll to be a bit thicker than 1/2 ". Aim to get 8-10 next time instead of 12.

Mike M

Followed note on here to cut into wedges because I didn’t have a biscuit cutter. Big hit. Added blackberries to the strawberries and nixed the sauce because of time constraints. Buttermilk was just vanilla almond milk with some Greek yogurt added in... needed like a tbsp more of each though.Added ~1 tbsp of sugar to the cream before I whipped it by hand (no electric mixer, no biggie, it took about 6 mins to come together), so no confectioners sugar was needed and no love loss.

.

I am eating this right now & it really is one of the best strawberry shortcakes I have made! The berries I got from the farmer's market are so sweet, I just added lemon juice & honey instead of making the berry sauce. This shortcake is the perfect shortcake texture with the berries & whipped cream

Carol K

For maximum height when using buttermilk & soda, allow the cut biscuits to sit on baking pan, lightly covered, for 30 - 45 minutes before baking. This allows the first chemical rising to occur. In the oven the heat triggers the baking powder for a 2nd rise. (Same for Cornbread) Also, place biscuits next to each other & touching on the baking sheet, not spaced apart. It keeps the sides active & allows them to support each other as they rise. Make sure your baking powder is fresh.

dimmerswitch

Made per recipe. Got 8 just right sized servings. Great flavors in all elements. But let's talk about the biscuit shortcakes rising because, like others who posted here, mine didn't. Flavor was wonderful (used lime for citrus zest), they were nicely short and good crumb. But did not rise much. Baking powder was in date. I've been making biscuits since I was a kid so not a novice at it. But... Still would make these again for flavor. Great by themselves with coffee.

dimmerswitch

Should have said in previously posted comment, had 12 biscuits but I served 8 with the remainder of the recipe. Hence extras of the wonderfully flavored biscuits for tea or coffee companions.

Ivy

I made the dough exactly as written and it did NOT rise at all. Instead of lovely biscuits I had flat cookies. I will not make this again, very disappointing.

Diane Kane Cox

I agree. Flat as a pancake and with no flavor. The same week the WSJ had a biscuit recipe that was much better.

Sammi

Ah, that's disappointing! I thought about baking them, today. Thank you for the heads-up!

Gloria

I increased the sugar in the biscuits a bit because I did not care to mess up another pan cooking berries, but otherwise the recipe worked well. Does not need the zest either to further simplify and make it more of a classic strawberry shortcake.

Chef Ramos

Made these biscuits and they were the most tender, buttery, and delicious biscuits I've ever made for dessert.

I used a different mixture for the strawberries - I cut the berries, mixed with some good raspberry preserves, sugar and sweet balsamic vinegar.

Delicious!

Rabia

Followed the recipe and they came out great!
I use a little microwave oven so they were finished in 10 minutes.

Lauren

I froze this dough overnight and was super grateful for the note encouraging me to do so. I got 11 shortcakes out of this, the 11th one being made from scraps and not nice and cut out like the others. I'm not sure how a pound of strawberries and a cup of cream are supposed to feed 10-12, though -- I doubled the strawberry/syrup and cream measurements and the 11 of us were still scraping the bowls. Love the hibiscus in here; I also added cardamom to the shortcakes and crème fraîche to the whip.

CitizenSissy

I added an additional tablespoon of sugar. Gotta roll out biscuits WAY thicker than a half inch; mine were rolled at an inch and were fine. Done baking at 12 minutes. Not a big yield, but very good basic sweet biscuit recipe.

Mark

Not a good biscuit recipe -- too dense, not enough rise, and too sweet. Try "Fannie Farmer Cookbook" cream biscuits. Far better and easier because it uses melted butter which doesn't need to be cut into flour. The berry sauce is interesting and worthwhile (used an extra chunk of orange zest) but I don't get the point of doing both that and traditional sliced/macerated berries. Wound up combining both for next day; it was fine.

cora

The lemon zest in the biscuits is a revelation. I love the extra dimension it adds to the dish. I didn't make the saucy berries, but the rest was delightful and a step above the bisquick version I grew up with.

Mary Lowder

Complete waste of ingredients and food

How can a dough look like small balls and oatmeal flakes at the same time? My biscuits hardly rose, despite following the recipe exactly. The taste was nothing special. I hope the biscuits decompose nicely in the compost pile.

Private notes are only visible to you.

Buttermilk-Biscuit Shortcakes With Strawberries Recipe (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Dan Stracke

Last Updated:

Views: 6606

Rating: 4.2 / 5 (63 voted)

Reviews: 86% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Dan Stracke

Birthday: 1992-08-25

Address: 2253 Brown Springs, East Alla, OH 38634-0309

Phone: +398735162064

Job: Investor Government Associate

Hobby: Shopping, LARPing, Scrapbooking, Surfing, Slacklining, Dance, Glassblowing

Introduction: My name is Dan Stracke, I am a homely, gleaming, glamorous, inquisitive, homely, gorgeous, light person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.