Regina’s Butter Biscuits Recipe (2024)

Recipe from Regina Charboneau

Adapted by Kim Severson

Regina’s Butter Biscuits Recipe (1)

Total Time
50 minutes
Rating
4(1,121)
Notes
Read community notes

People travel long distances to eat Regina Charboneau’s biscuits. She built a blues club in San Francisco, called Biscuits and Blues, on their reputation. And in her hometown, Natchez, Miss., her biscuits are considered the best. She mixes traditional French culinary training with tricks passed on through generations of Southern bakers to create a layered, rich biscuit that has to be frozen to be at its flaky best. The dough will seem rough and the fat too chunky at first, but persevere. Using a tea towel as a base to move and manage the dough until it rolls out smoothly is a brilliant technique that makes the whole process easier and neater. —Kim Severson

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Ingredients

Yield:3 dozen 2-inch biscuits, 12 servings marmalade butter

    For the Biscuits

    • 4cups/480 grams all-purpose flour
    • ¼cup/41 grams baking powder
    • ¼cup/50 grams sugar
    • ½cup/120 grams (1 stick) salted butter, chilled and cut into 1-inch cubes
    • cups/360 grams (3 sticks) salted margarine, chilled and cut into 2-inch cubes
    • cups/420 milliliters buttermilk, chilled

    For the Marmalade Butter

    • ½cup (1 stick)/120 grams salted butter, at room temperature
    • 3tablespoons sweet orange marmalade

Ingredient Substitution Guide

Nutritional analysis per serving (12 servings)

549 calories; 41 grams fat; 15 grams saturated fat; 5 grams trans fat; 16 grams monounsaturated fat; 8 grams polyunsaturated fat; 41 grams carbohydrates; 1 gram dietary fiber; 9 grams sugars; 6 grams protein; 652 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.

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Regina’s Butter Biscuits Recipe (2)

Preparation

  1. Make the Biscuits

    1. Step

      1

      Put flour, baking powder and sugar in the bowl of a stand mixer with a paddle attachment. Turn the machine on low and blend for 15 seconds. Add the butter, margarine and buttermilk to flour mixture before turning mixer back on. Turn mixer on medium and count to 10. This goes very quickly; the key is to not overmix the dough. There will be large chunks of butter and margarine, the size of quarters, in the dough.

    2. Step

      2

      Scrape dough from the bowl onto a generously floured work surface or tea towel and shape into a long vertical rectangle about 2 inches thick. The dough will seem rough and messy. Using the edges of the towel, fold the lower part of the dough (about one-third) toward the center, then fold the top portion down. With a rolling pin, roll dough out to a 2-inch thickness. Fold the two ends in again, lifting the edges of the towel to help move the dough. Give dough a one-quarter turn, and roll it out again to a 2-inch thickness. Continue folding, turning and rolling dough until it is smooth, with noticeable yellow ribbons of butter and margarine throughout.

    3. Step

      3

      Roll dough to 1½-inch thickness. Using a 2-inch biscuit cutter, cut dough into rounds. Punch cutter into dough cleanly, without twisting. When refolding and rerolling the dough, gently stack it to retain the layers. Do not overwork.

    4. Step

      4

      Place biscuits on a baking sheet and freeze. Once they are frozen, transfer biscuits to plastic bags. The unbaked biscuits can be frozen for 2 months.

    5. Step

      5

      To bake, heat oven to 350 degrees. Place frozen biscuits in the cups of muffin tins. Let thaw in the refrigerator for 20 minutes. Bake until golden brown, 23 to 25 minutes.

  2. Make the Marmalade Butter

    1. Step

      6

      Put butter and marmalade in a mini food processor and pulse to combine. Alternatively, whisk together butter and marmalade in a bowl. (Can be made a week in advance and refrigerated.) To serve, bring to a cool room temperature and transfer to a serving bowl. Serve next to hot biscuits.

Ratings

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1,121

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Private Notes

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Cooking Notes

nancy essig

To the lady who posted this recipe...How can you misrepresent it so with the picture chosen to accompany the recipe? I watched Regina make these on a vid and they were normal biscuit sized, not these towering things. I want the recipe for the towering biscuits please.

Cate Doty, Senior Staff Editor, NYT Cooking

Regina Charboneau, the creator of these biscuits, really recommends that you make these biscuits with the butter and the margarine. She says that without the margarine, the butter weighs the dough down, resulting in a shortbread-like texture. Kim Severson swears that these biscuits are the lightest and flakiest she's ever had.

Lapierrefine

Is it necessary to post what you will or will not do with certain ingredients? This is a forum to post helpful comments. So testing and adapting a recipe not a consideration? This is basically a pâte feuilletée, which is usually made using 100% butter. So try a recipe first, as offered, then make changes. Or try something new: read and research similar recipes. Note what is held in common. Experiment! No need to throw down the gauntlet in defiance of margarine, or calories.

inessa

margarine is still a thing?

Anita

There's a noticeable thread here: margarine. Could Kim Severson explain what its function is? Like ten below, I wonder whether lard would be a good substitute, but it's an expensive experiment so a little guidance would be great.

pmac

I have made these for holidays for the past two years. My family will have no other biscuit and negotiate for the last one remaining. They are a bit time consuming compared to most other biscuits. The fact that they must be frozen, requires that they be made in advance but makes the day of eating so easy. I do cut the margarine in half, but otherwise follow the recipe exactly. The finished biscuits look exactly like the photo using a 2" cutter. The marmalade is divine.

Jocelyn Breaux

The Finest Southern Biscuits Ever! Please use Land O' Lakes Margarine if you can find it. Regina spilled this recipe and I will never let go. First enjoyed her biscuits at Regina's in San Francisco. Freak out if you must over some other indulgence but the biscuits are worthy a special occasion.

nancy essig

These were great right out of the oven but let them rest and the margarine makes a heavy bottom. I thought I would cook the rest i had in the freezer on a rack over a cookie sheet. the margarine that dripped out of them was horrifying and the cooked product, drained of all that fat was truly amazing.

Susa

I have great respect for Regina who has made a big mark with these biscuits. So I saw no reason to change her recipe. I use a lot of butter in my cooking, but had never bought margarine in my life before. I did it exactly as she did in her video on P Allen Smith, including her compound butter. They were absolutely delicious and flakey. I now keep the frozen uncooked biscuits for quick bonuses for my meals. Since I only restrict carbohydrates, and not fats or proteins, they are a treat!

Shelley

Hi. I wondered this myself. It (now?) says at the top: 3 dozen 2-inch biscuits.
But I'll never make them. I won't use this amount of margarine in anything.

Rose

First time was best. I used a 2" can to cut them. Regular cutter is 2.25"-- makes a big difference. Now I use the larger cutter and they don't rise as well. Also cook them longer than instructed: until they smell done, thirty to forty minutes.

Nancy Matt

The recipe calls for baking powder, not soda.

Kathleen H

Making these biscuits look like the photo is so easy. Butter and margarine iced cold. Cut them 1 1/2 thick as directed. Don't twist. Keep ice cold everything. Don't freeze, but if you do, let them thaw a tad longer. Then do not put in muffin pan as directed. Place on parchment lined cookie sheet. One has only you look at the biscuits baked in the muffin tin to see that the heat of the muffin cup seals the side of the biscuit preventing rising.

nancy essig

the sugar is to counteract the bitterness of the baking powder

trexgirl

I made exactly as written after buying margarine for the first time in my life and WOW. Actually quite easy and the results were fantastic. Light, flaky, tall and buttery. I did go thru by hand and ensure that the butter and margarine had been reduced to manageable chunks before I began folding, turning and rolling. I did that quite a few times and the technique, like with puff pastry, made the layers just grow. Finally, they did need to cook longer; about 45 minutes.

The Soulful Mr T

Researching biscuit recipes: a general question about these types of biscuits:It occurs to me that I’d want to eat these hot, fluffy babies right out of the oven, i.e., I wouldn’t want to prepare them, bake them, put them in a warm towel in basket and drive half and hour to someone’s house and serve them an hour later when we all get around to dinner. In other words these are to be made at home and served directly out of the oven. Yes?

Laura M

I have always used lard when making biscuits. I am a bona fide Southerner

nyshrubbery

Friends and family consider me to be a pretty good baker but I cannot make a proper biscuit. If I were given an ultimatum - make a decent biscuit or die - you might as well just order the tombstone. Nonetheless, I try new biscuit recipes a couple of times a year, usually whenever I see buttermilk on sale. That seems to inspire me. I would love to try one of these biscuits made by someone who has the knowhow. Meanwhile, we can add this recipe to the long list in my obituary.

pegstone

RE the margarine. Try vegetable shortening (Crisco) instead. This is what cooks in eastern KY use for biscuits.

Alli

Sorry, these biscuits aren't great. I have a rotating repertoire of about five biscuits recipes that I use depending on the dish. And these won't be added to that. They were flat, greasy, no flavor, just a dissapointing venture all together. And I have no qualms with margarine as someone who makes lard biscuits without hesitation.

Rach

I agree with comments noting that a splurge is a splurge. I have no problem with a delicious calorie-laden treat on occasion. No one is making these every day. That said, I don't know why anyone would make these at all. They're incredibly time consuming and they're just OK. The immense effort required is not justified by the result. I love a challenge, and will happily devote an afternoon to a ridiculously complex cooking challenge. I won't do this one again!

Kat

Kind of greasy and didn’t look as tall as the picture but my family liked them

Sandy

I used all butter and bumped the temperature to 400 degrees F for an additional 5 minutes. The few pools of melted butter browned a bit and reabsorbed. Beautiful flaky layers. My biscuits doubled in height, using 3 tsp baking powder and rolling to about 3/4 inch thickness. Didn't take all that much longer than my cream biscuits. Delicious!

M Davis

No margarine so used half Crisco, half unsalted butter and added a tsp. of salt. Came out so light and flaky. Butter has a lower melting point than margarine/veg. shortening, which is why it's important NOT to substitute all butter (some shortening makes better pie crusts/cookies too). Butter tends to flood out and create heavy, dense pastry. Using some vegetable shortening creates flakes. It's essential the fat be cold/preferably frozen before baking.

Liz

Made a half recipe with full butter (you follow?) and they turned out spectacular. Nice tall slinkys, maybe not quite as defined as the ones in the photo, but for a first try, absolutely bomb.

nancy van house

Excellent -- a hit at neighborhood pot luck. However: (1) should have read comments first; can't use spreadable margarine; too liquid. Hard to find margarine in stick form. Made again with sticks. Better. (2) too sweet with the amount of sugar in the recipe. With no sugar, the bitterness of the baking powder comes through. Next time I'll try with some sugar but not this much. (3) Took more like 40 min to bake.

Kevin W

Before Biscuits & Blues, Regina Charboneau had the eponymous-named restaurant, Regina’s, in San Francisco’s theater district. I remember her biscuits more than 30 years later. They are that good! Five stars from me.

SFMichele

I only wish I had been able to find real margarine without traveling 20 miles. I tried to substitute with a mix of Crisco and butter after reading the notes about the issue of water content in most margarines made today. I unfortunately had the same experience as others with the spreading of the biscuit; they were tasty though but would have done better in muffin tins rather than on a cookie sheet where they spread.

Jean

I used all butter, mixed it in bread machine which blended butter in. Rich and good.

Alex

So wait do I need to bake these in a muffin tin?

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Regina’s Butter Biscuits Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is the secret to biscuits? ›

Use Cold Butter for Biscuits

For flaky layers, use cold butter. When you cut in the butter, you have coarse crumbs of butter coated with flour. When the biscuit bakes, the butter will melt, releasing steam and creating pockets of air. This makes the biscuits airy and flaky on the inside.

Are biscuits better made with butter or Crisco? ›

Crisco may be beneficial for other baking applications, but for biscuit making, butter is the ultimate champion!

What happens when you add more butter to biscuits? ›

Increasing the amount of butter definitely makes the biscuit "taste" softer, more crumbly, and more flaky.

Why aren t my buttermilk biscuits fluffy? ›

A non-fluffy, flat biscuit can be caused by a few things: too much liquid in the dough (resist the urge to add more buttermilk to make the dough come together and use the heat of your hands and a bit more kneading instead). Over-mixing the dough can cause flat biscuits.

What does adding an egg to biscuits do? ›

For super light, crumbly biscuits try grating or pushing the yolks of hard-boiled eggs through a sieve into the biscuit dough. This increases the fat content and slows down the development of gluten. Cookie recipes on the other hand are more likely to contain eggs. Adding moisture as well as binding the mixture.

What makes biscuits taste better? ›

Use good butter and dairy

Because biscuit recipes call for so few ingredients, it's important that every one is high quality—you'll really taste the difference. Catherine recommends splurging a bit on a grass-fed butter or European-style butter (now's the time to reach for Kerrygold!).

What is the best flour for making biscuits? ›

White wheat in general is around 9-12% protein, while the hard reds are 11-15%. As far as brands of flour, White Lily “all-purpose” flour has been my go-to for biscuit making. It's a soft red winter wheat, and the low protein and low gluten content keep biscuits from becoming too dense.

Is buttermilk or heavy cream better for biscuits? ›

Heavy Cream.

The heavy cream adds flavor to the biscuit by adding a little more fat and helps hydrate the dough. The extra fat in the heavy cream is helpful because buttermilk in stores is often “low-fat” buttermilk.

Which liquid makes the best biscuits? ›

*Substitute buttermilk, light cream, or heavy cream for the whole milk, if you prefer; use enough of whatever liquid you choose to bring the dough together readily, without you having to work it too much. The higher-fat liquid you use, the more tender and richer-tasting your biscuits will be.

What type of butter is best for biscuits? ›

Make sure your butter is at the correct temperature – use unsalted butter softened to room temperature for creaming and cold, unsalted butter for biscuits and pastries that require butter to be rubbed into the flour.

How can I get my biscuits to rise higher? ›

Keep the oven hot.

When baking buttery treats like biscuits, the key is to bake them at a temperature where the water in the butter turns quickly to steam. This steam is a big part of how the biscuits achieve their height, as it evaporates up and out.

Is it better to use milk or buttermilk in biscuits? ›

Regular biscuits are typically prepared with milk or water instead. Buttermilk adds a nice tang to the biscuit flavor and helps them rise better.

What is the secret to high rising biscuits? ›

For the Best Biscuits, Bake Them Close Together

We use an oven-safe skillet to bake biscuits and find that they bake up better when they are placed close together. Since we use such a hot oven, the liquid in the dough steams and helps them to rise.

What kind of flour do southerners use for biscuits? ›

SouthernKitchen.com says, "Ask any Southern chef or sagacious biscuit grandma and you'll hear a pattern emerge: they all swear by White Lily flour."

What is the best flour for buttermilk biscuits? ›

Holy cow, those southern cooks know what they're talking about! The White Lily self-rising flour far outperformed the store brand self-rising flour and the self-rising substitute.

What are the two most important steps in biscuit making? ›

The two keys to success in making the best biscuits are handling the dough as little as possible as well as using very cold solid fat (butter, shortening, or lard) and cold liquid. When the biscuits hit the oven, the cold liquid will start to evaporate creating steam which will help our biscuits get very tall.

Should you chill biscuit dough before baking? ›

And the longer it takes the butter to melt as the biscuits bake, the more chance they have to rise high and maintain their shape. So, chill... and chill.

What ingredient most caused the biscuits to rise? ›

While biscuits receive some leavening power from chemical sources — baking powder and baking soda — the difference between serviceable and greatness comes from the extra rise that steam provides. In order to generate steam, the oven must be set at a minimum of 425 degrees for at least 10 minutes prior to baking.

Why are southern biscuits so good? ›

Do you ever wonder why biscuits taste so much better in the South? Not only are they filled with more love and butter (or shortening), but more often than not, they're also made with White Lily flour.

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