Cat Head Biscuits
When we spied “Cat Head Biscuits" on a highway
billboard near
We discovered that traditional cat heat biscuit recipes
were made with lard, but most modern recipes use shortening instead. We found
shortening alone to be too artificial tasting, so we replaced most of the
shortening with butter. To create a more tender biscuit, we used an equal mix
of cake flour and all-purpose. Most cat head biscuits recipes called for cold
fat, which was “cut" into the dry ingredients to promote a flaky texture.
Because we were after a fluffy texture, softened butter and shortening worked
in with warm hands worked much better.
Serves 6
If you don't have buttermilk on hand, make clabbered milk
by whisking 1 tablespoon lemon juice into 1 1/4 cups milk and letting it stand
until slightly thickened, about 10 minutes. The recipe will also work with 3
cups White Lily flour in place of both the all-purpose and cake flours.
Ingredients
1
1/2 cups all-purpose
flour
1
1/2 cups cake flour
1 tablespoon
baking
powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon salt
8 tablespoons (1
stick) unsalted butter, cut into 1/2-inch pieces and softened
4 tablespoons
vegetable shortening, cut into 1/2-inch pieces
1
1/4 cups buttermilk (see note)
Instructions
1. MIX DOUGH Adjust oven rack to upper-middle
position and heat oven to 425 degrees. Grease 9-inch cake pan. Combine flours,
baking powder, baking soda, and salt in large bowl. Rub butter and shortening
into flour mixture until mixture resembles coarse meal. Stir in buttermilk
until combined.
2. PORTION BISCUITS Following the instructions at
left, use greased 1/2-cup measure or large spring-loaded ice cream scoop to
transfer 6 heaping portions of dough into prepared pan, placing 5 around pan's
perimeter and 1 in center.
3. BAKE BISCUITS Bake until puffed and golden
brown, 20 to 25 minutes. Cool in pan for 10 minutes, then transfer to wire
rack. Serve. (Biscuits can be stored in airtight container at room temperature for
2 days.)
Many biscuits are kneaded, rolled,
stamped out, and then baked on sheet pans. For Cat Head Biscuits, we instead
scoop the sticky, shaggy dough and nestle the biscuits in a cake pan. (A
spring-loaded ice cream scoop does the job neatly and quickly.) All snuggled
together, they're forced to grow up, rather than out, and the sides stay soft
and white.
Southern bakers swear by White Lily all-purpose flour.
They say makes biscuits soft and downy, exactly the texture we sought for our
Cat Head Biscuits. But what if you don't live in the South and can't easily get
your hands on a bag? We found we could replicate it by combining equal amounts
of ordinary all-purpose flour (made from a mix of high- and low-gluten wheats) and cake flour (a soft-fine-textured
flour).
ALL-PURPOSE FLOUR
Contributes structure
CAKE FLOUR
Contributes softness
WHITE LILY
The soft and fluffy standard-bearer