Tuesday, April 21, 2020

"Everything-free" Honey Butter Biscuits...or Scones

I have been stuck in a debate over whether to call these biscuits or scones. The sweetness tips the scale toward scones, but I love the rhythm and alliteration of the name Honey Butter Biscuits. Can they be both?



See the rise on those? They turned out beautifully!

They are free of gluten, dairy, eggs, soy, almonds, sorghum, and nightshades. If you use a special baking powder (and a substitute for the xanthan gum, they can be corn-free too. (see note below)>>

This is a recipe that I just came up with a couple of days ago. I made them for the first time yesterday morning (my birthday) and they made a delicious part of my breakfast.

The idea was birthed from thinking about biscuits topped with butter and honey. I suddenly wondered how it would work to put the honey and butter into the biscuits themselves. I am loving the results! These are tender, with a nice crunch to the bottoms. They have a pleasant, light sweetness from the honey, and a buttery feel from the coconut oil. They paired beautifully with my mug of lemon balm tea cooled with coconut milk.


"Everything-free" Honey Butter Biscuits
free of gluten, dairy, eggs, soy, almonds, nightshades, rice (and corn)

makes about 12, using a 2" cutter
preheat oven to 375 or 400 Fahrenheit ****
Line your baking sheet or pan with parchment paper (or lightly oil)

"Buttermilk"
1/2 cup non-dairy milk  
      (I use Silk or SoDelicious unsweetened original coconut milk beverage)
1 Tablespoon lemon juice
Set aside until needed.

Dry ingredients
2 cups gluten-free flour (I use 1 cup each of millet flour and arrowroot starch)
2 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon xanthan gum*
1/2 teaspoon salt

Combine dry ingredients in a large bowl and whisk together thoroughly.
Cut in:
1/2 cup Spectrum palm-kernel oil shortening/all-vegetable shortening
   (Other butter alternatives, such as Earth Balance buttery sticks, should work well) 

Wet ingredients
1/4 cup liquid honey***
2 teaspoons melted buttery-flavored coconut oil
Stir together, then add, along with the soured milk.**
Make a "well," or small hollow, in the middle of the dry ingredients. Pour the wet ingredients into the well, then mix together, using a fork.


 Isn't that a beautiful dough?

Scoop dough onto a surface dusted with more gluten free flour (a tablespoon or two each of millet flour and arrowroot starch, mixed together). Gently fold dough over onto itself several times, then pat out or roll to about 1 1/4" thick. Use a sharp cutter, dipping in flour between cuts.

Place rounds on prepared sheet, leaving  an inch or two between them.
Bake for around 18 minutes, until they're cooked in the middle and the bottoms are lightly golden brown.
Transfer to cooling rack so bottoms don't continue to cook on the hot pan.

>>Leftover gluten-free baked goods are better when warmed. I've found that 9 or 10 seconds in the microwave works well for a single item (biscuit, scone, muffin). This restores its soft, light texture. 

****Biscuits and scones usually cook at 400 or higher. Because our oven is quirky (a very small, gas-powered RV oven) I've had to lower the baking temperature. If you're using a normal oven, and it doesn't run hot, you could safely bake at 400. An inexpensive oven thermometer is a good way to find out how accurate the settings are on your oven. If things always seem to over-brown before they're cooked through, then you probably need to reduce your cooking temperature by 25-50 degrees for most recipes.

***Liquid honey- as in a normally runny consistency. If your honey has crystalized and turned solid, you can warm it to make it flow again. A common method is to set the closed container of honey in a larger container and add hot water. Just be sure that the water level stays below the edge of the honey container. Runny honey is good. Watery honey would be sad.

**If the milk is still cool from being refrigerated, it will instantly turn the melted coconut oil to hard little clumps. Mixing the coconut oil with the honey first helps to prevent this.

*Xanthan gum serves a very important function in gluten-free baking. It sort of acts like gluten, thickening the dough and giving it structure. >>>Xanthan gum can be derived from corn. People often substitute guar gum for the xanthan gum if this is a concern.<<<
   

   

2 comments:

  1. I'm looking forward to attempting these. They look scrumptious!

    ReplyDelete