Sourdough Sandwich Biscuits (2024)

These sourdough sandwich biscuits are crunchy on the outside and super soft and tender on the inside. You can whip them up in just 30 minutes, including baking time.

Sourdough Sandwich Biscuits (1)

These biscuits are made with butter, flour, baking powder, and salt, but instead of milk or buttermilk, you add 100 percent hydration (equal parts water and flour by weight) sourdough starter. It's a great way to use your discard when you are feeding your starter.

These biscuits are wonderful for breakfast and make amazing breakfast sandwiches.

Do you love finding recipes for using extra sourdough starter? Me too! Be sure to try these sourdough waffles, sourdough pancakes, and sourdough blueberry muffins.

Sourdough Sandwich Biscuits (2)

You can mix the ingredients for these biscuits using a couple of methods. The first time I tried them, I grated the butter (after freezing it) and mixed it into the dry ingredients by hand and then stirred in the sourdough starter.

The second time I made them, I decided to cut the butter into larger chunks and then mix the chunks into the dry ingredients with the paddle of a stand mixer. The paddle did a great job of breaking up the butter chunks, but not to much. After that, I mixed in the sourdough starter, but just until the dough came together.

I preferred the second method, with the bigger chunks of butter, but both were delicious. You could also use a food processor.

Next time, I'm going to try folding the dough like an envelope to see if I can get even flakier layers.

Sourdough Sandwich Biscuits (3)

These biscuits make the best breakfast sandwiches. You can also just slice them and spread them with butter and jam.

How to make these biscuits your own..

First, you can cut them any size you like and vary the baking time. You can also add some fresh chopped chives or some shredded cheese to the dough.

You can also bake them with a little chopped bacon in them. So good.

Make ahead tips:

These biscuits are amazing warm from the oven. If you have leftovers, you can wrap them individually with plastic wrap and put them in a freezer bag.

To reheat the biscuits, wrap them loosely in foil and and heat for a few minutes in a 350 degree F oven.

Sourdough Sandwich Biscuits (4)

Bread Bakers July 2020

Biscuits and Scones

Sourdough Sandwich Biscuits (5)

#BreadBakers is a group of bread loving bakers who get together once a month to bake bread with a common ingredient or theme. Follow our Pinterest boardright here. Links are also updated each month on thishome page. We take turns hosting each month and choosing the theme/ingredient.

Sourdough Sandwich Biscuits (6)


Sourdough Sandwich Biscuits

Sourdough Sandwich Biscuits (7)

Yield: 6 biscuits

Author: Karen Kerr

These sourdough sandwich biscuits are crunchy on the outside and super soft and tender on the inside. You can whip them up in just 30 minutes, including baking time.

Ingredients:

  • 120 grams (1 cup) all purpose flour. I used King Arthur Flour.
  • 2 teaspoon baking powder
  • scant 3/4 teaspoon salt
  • 8 tablespoons cold unsalted butter, cut into chunks
  • 227 grams (1 cup) 100 percent hydrations sourdough starter discard.
  • 1 -2 teaspoons milk (optional, if the dough is too dry)

Instructions:

  1. Heat the oven to 425 degrees F with a rack in the upper third. Line a rimmed baking sheet with parchment paper.
  2. Whisk together the flour, baking powder, and salt in a bowl or the bowl of a stand mixer.
  3. Add the butter and cut it in with your fingers, a pastry cutter, or if you are using a stand mixer, the paddle attachment. The mixture should be crumbly with visible uneven small pieces of butter.
  4. Stir in the sourdough starter.
  5. Form the dough into a 5 1/2 inch round (about 1 inch high) and cut it with a sharp 2 3/8 inch round biscuit cutter into four biscuits. Place them on the baking sheet.
  6. Form the dough into a 2 1/2 inch by 5 inch rectangle and cut two more biscuits.
  7. If there are enough scraps left, you can form them into a smaller biscuit.
  8. Bake the biscuits for 18 to 22 minutes, until light golden.
  9. Serve warm.

Calories
280

Fat (grams)
16

Sat. Fat (grams)
10

Carbs (grams)
31

Fiber (grams)
1

Net carbs
30

Sugar (grams)
0

Protein (grams)
5

Sodium (milligrams)
420

Cholesterol (grams)
40

https://www.karenskitchenstories.com/2020/07/sourdough-sandwich-biscuits.html

Karen's Kitchen Stories

biscuits, sourdough

Breakfast

American

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Sourdough Sandwich Biscuits (2024)

FAQs

Why don't my sourdough biscuits rise? ›

If you twist, you'll seal the biscuit edges and you won't get layers! They also won't rise as well. Put your biscuits in the freezer while the oven heats up to make sure everything stays really cold.

Can I put self-rising flour in my sourdough starter? ›

You can feed your sourdough starter with any flour you like, as long as it provides the starches the wild yeast in your sourdough starter need to convert to Co2 to rise your dough.

What is the secret to sourdough? ›

The secret to sourdough is simple: water. The more water you add to your dough will affect how open the crumb (bigger holes and softer texture) will be once it's baked.

What happens when you use too much sourdough starter in bread? ›

If you have too much starter compared to the additional flour and water you're adding, your hungry starter consumes all the nutrients and then it's not as bubbly.

Why is my sourdough dough not rising? ›

When sourdough bread dough doesn't rise, it's usually because the starter you used wasn't active enough. To remedy this problem, make sure you're using recently fed, active starter with lots of bubbles. Also, next time try using warm (not hot) water when you mix up the dough and rising it in a warmer location.

How to get 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.

Why add egg to sourdough? ›

Eggs in dough usually produces an extra open and delicate crumb and the bread comes with an extra rise. Why is that? Egg has protein, fat, water and while the fat and water soften the crumb, the protein helps with strengthening the gluten and capturing more CO2.

What makes sourdough bread rise more? ›

Bacteria and yeast in the flour and air around you enables the microbes to convert the sugars in the flour into ethanol, carbon dioxide and acids. Carbon dioxide makes your sourdough bread rise. Acids give the sourdough bread its unique flavor.

Do you have to discard sourdough starter every time you feed it? ›

With each sourdough starter feeding, you'll be discarding some to avoid it from becoming overly acidic. Most will compost or trash this discard, but you can save it and use it in other recipes!

Why is sourdough starter discarded? ›

If you don't get rid of the excess, eventually you'll have more starter than your feedings can sustain. After a few days, your daily 1/4 cup flour and water won't be enough to sustain your entire jar of starter, and your starter will be slow and sluggish, not much better than discard itself.

Can you stretch and fold sourdough too much? ›

An over-folded dough might have a tighter crumb as the layers of alveoli push against each other and coalesce. In the worst case, excessive folding might cause a dough to tear under too much tension.

Why are my biscuits flat and hard? ›

Overworking (or Underworking) the Dough

The biscuits will be hard and tough if you stir the dough too much. They will have a floury, uneven texture if you don't mix enough. Our Test Kitchen cracked the code: Stir the dough 15 times for the perfect consistency and texture.

How do you encourage sourdough to rise? ›

The enclosed environment will keep the dough warmer and help it to rise. You can also use warm water in your dough (between 80° to 85°F) to speed up the rising process. In my experience, sourdough bread dough tends to thrive at temperatures between 75°F and 80°F.

What causes homemade biscuits to not rise? ›

Overworking the dough will not only create a tough biscuit instead of a tender biscuit, but can also result in a flatter biscuit. The more you play with the dough, the warmer the dough becomes. If the fat becomes too warm it will melt into the flour and they won't rise as tall.

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