Impulsive Late Night Biscuit Ecstasy
Say what you will about me---call me bitter, call me mean, call me sometime, won't you?---there's one thing you can't say: that I'm not impulsive.Take these biscuits for example.I had absolutely no reason to make them. I have bran muffins from the other night, remember? And I'm studying for the bar, remember? But I got bit by the biscuit bug and after reading a simple-enough sounding recipe in Cook's Illustrated I vowed to whip up a batch at 11 and have them ready by 12.Well my expectations were wildly surpassed: the biscuits were done at 11:40 and, more importantly, they were the best I've ever had. BETTER than the Silver Skillet's which refused to share their recipe. Now I don't need it.Very quickly then I will share the recipe with you since I think you should make them too. The only strange ingredient you'll need is buttermilk. I say strange because you're not likely to have it in your fridge, but not strange in that you can't run out and get it anywhere. And it adds a lot to the finished product.Here is our ingredients list:Dough:2 cups (10 oz) unbleached all-purpose flour1 Tbs double-acting baking powder1 Tbs sugar1 tsp salt1/2 tsp baking soda4 Tbs cold unsalted butter, cut into 1/4-inch cubes1.5 cups cold buttermilk, preferably low fatTo form and finish biscuits:1 cup (5 oz.) unbleached all-purpose flour, distributed in rimmed baking sheet2 Tbs unsalted butter, meltedNow for the recipe. I'll interspirce the steps with pictures from the process:1. Adjust oven rack to middle position and heat oven to 500 degrees. Spray 9-inch round cake pan with nonstick cooking spray; set aside. Generously spray inside and outside of 1/4 cup dry measure with nonstick cooking spray.2. FOR THE DOUGH: In food processor, pulse flour, baking powder, sugar, salt, and baking soda to combine, about six 1-second pulses. Scatter butter cubes evenly over dry ingredients;pulse until mixture resembles pebbly, coarse cornmeal, eight to ten 1-second pulses. Transfer mixture to medium bowl. Add buttermilk to dry ingredientsand stir with rubber spatula until just incorporated (dough will be very wet and slightly lumpy).3. TO FORM AND BAKE BISCUITS: Using 1/4 cup dry measure and working quickly, scoop level amount of dough; drop dough from measuring cup into flour on baking sheet (if dough sticks to cup, use small spoon to pull it free). Repeat with remaining dough, forming 12 evenly sized mounds.Dust tops of each piece of dough with flour from baking sheet. With floured hands, gently pick up piece of dough and coat with flour; gently shape dough into rough ball, shake off excess flour, and place in prepared cake pan. Repeat with remaining dough, arranging 9 rounds around perimeter of cake pan and 3 in center. Brush rounds with hot melted butter, taking care not to flatten them.Bake 5 minutes, then reduce oven temperature to 450 degrees; continue to bake until biscuits are deep golden brown, about 15 minutes longer.Cool in pan 2 minutes, then invert biscuits from pan onto clean kitchen towl;Turn biscuits right side up and break apart. Cool 5 minutes longer and serve.It's times like these where those who insist on using prepared dough from a tube baffle me. This took me NO TIME and the results were, to quote Will Farrell as James Lipton: "Strumtrulescent."Seriously, these biscuits were light as a feather and tasty and buttery and perfect. As a bonus, I opened up my Nectarine-Apricot-Ginger jam and dammmmmmn girlfriend it tasted great. What a great combo. All on a whim. And what a whim it was.