Buttermilk Drop Biscuits - Easy and 104 Calories!!
EvilShenanigansTX
Posts: 143 Member
in Recipes
I LOVE biscuits. I come from Texas where biscuits are practically a food group. My traditional drop biscuit recipe has 225 calories per biscuit! :sad: There was no way I could succeed on a diet if I had to give up biscuits, but there was no way I could lose weight at 225 cals for one biscuit. I put on my thinking cap and I found a way to lighten my biscuits up while keeping them tender, moist, and buttery! Each serving consists of two petite biscuits, but if you want just one it is just 52 calories!
For an extra 13 calories per serving you can brush your biscuits with a touch (3 grams per serving - 12 grams for the whole batch) of reduced fat butter - I use Kerrygold Reduced fat since it is pure butter with no goofy chemicals. I like this little touch, but it is not necessary. I make a big batch of these on Sunday and freeze them for quick dinners and breakfasts during the week. Just microwave them for a few seconds to heat them up.
Buttermilk Drop Biscuits - Yield 12 biscuits - Serves 6
1 cup unbleached all-purpose flour
1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
1/4 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
2 packets Splenda (or your preferred no-calorie sweetener)
1 tablespoon salted butter (I use Kerrygold because it has a lot of flavor. Generic butter can't compare)
1/2 cup low-fat buttermilk
2 tablespoons water
Heat the oven to 350 F and line a baking sheet with parchment paper.
In a medium bowl combine the flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt, and Splenda. Whisk to combine. Add the butter and, with your fingers, rub the butter into the flour until the flour is completely coated and no pieces of butter remain. (The flour will have a slightly yellow hue when you are done.)
In a measuring cup combine the buttermilk and water. Add the buttermilk mixture into the flour mixture and mix with a spatula until just combined. (If the dough seems too dry add more water a teaspoon at a time. Some small lumps are ok, but do not over-mix or the biscuits will be tough.)
Scoop the dough into 12 biscuits onto the prepared pan. Bake for 10 to 12 minutes, or until the biscuits are lightly golden on top and deeply golden brown on the bottom, and they spring back when pressed in the center. (They may be a little pale, that is because there is less fat and no sugar.) If you are brushing with the additional butter pull the biscuits out at 10 minutes, brush with the butter and return to the oven for 1-2 minutes more.
Cool on the pan for 3 minutes then enjoy!
For an extra 13 calories per serving you can brush your biscuits with a touch (3 grams per serving - 12 grams for the whole batch) of reduced fat butter - I use Kerrygold Reduced fat since it is pure butter with no goofy chemicals. I like this little touch, but it is not necessary. I make a big batch of these on Sunday and freeze them for quick dinners and breakfasts during the week. Just microwave them for a few seconds to heat them up.
Buttermilk Drop Biscuits - Yield 12 biscuits - Serves 6
1 cup unbleached all-purpose flour
1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
1/4 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
2 packets Splenda (or your preferred no-calorie sweetener)
1 tablespoon salted butter (I use Kerrygold because it has a lot of flavor. Generic butter can't compare)
1/2 cup low-fat buttermilk
2 tablespoons water
Heat the oven to 350 F and line a baking sheet with parchment paper.
In a medium bowl combine the flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt, and Splenda. Whisk to combine. Add the butter and, with your fingers, rub the butter into the flour until the flour is completely coated and no pieces of butter remain. (The flour will have a slightly yellow hue when you are done.)
In a measuring cup combine the buttermilk and water. Add the buttermilk mixture into the flour mixture and mix with a spatula until just combined. (If the dough seems too dry add more water a teaspoon at a time. Some small lumps are ok, but do not over-mix or the biscuits will be tough.)
Scoop the dough into 12 biscuits onto the prepared pan. Bake for 10 to 12 minutes, or until the biscuits are lightly golden on top and deeply golden brown on the bottom, and they spring back when pressed in the center. (They may be a little pale, that is because there is less fat and no sugar.) If you are brushing with the additional butter pull the biscuits out at 10 minutes, brush with the butter and return to the oven for 1-2 minutes more.
Cool on the pan for 3 minutes then enjoy!
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Replies
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this made me hungry!0
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awesome - thanks!0
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OMG those look very yummy!0
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Bump!0
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These look delicious!0
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bread and biscuits are my cryptonite! made some drop biscuits last week and didn't want to know how many cals were in them. Thanks for this post, just in time for turkey day!0
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bump0
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Those sound delicous!0
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I'm soooooo gonna try these!0
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bump0
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Oh. My. Gosh. YUM!!0
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Yummy. Have to try. Glad to see they freeze well. Am I understanding correctly that you freeze them after baking??0
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Bump!0
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bump0
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Thanks for the recipe! Will be trying these!0
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Yummy. Have to try. Glad to see they freeze well. Am I understanding correctly that you freeze them after baking??
You can do it either way, actually. If you freeze before baking you will need to add an extra minute or two to the baking time. I like to bake them first then freeze so I can just nuke them for 20 seconds and have a hot, fresh biscuit for breakfast in a hurry.
Good luck!0 -
bump! Yummo!!!!0
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sounds great! I sent the recipe to myself.0
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Biscuits FTW!0
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bump0
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BUMP!0
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Yuuuuummm! Thank you for sharing this. I love biscuits....well any type of bread really. And I love to bake but rarely find low cal options that actually work.
I made the corn and bacon chowder recipe I found here for supper tonight and decided to try these to go along with it. I made a few adjustments which actually made them lower in cals as well...bonus!
I used whole wheat flour, original almond milk and stevia rather than white flour, 2% milk, and splenda. They turned out delicious! And only 45 cals a biscuit with my alterations.
Thanks again, lovely recipe!0 -
Bump0
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Look & sound GREAT!0
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Look good...may have to make these soon.0
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I LOVE biscuits. I come from Texas where biscuits are practically a food group. My traditional drop biscuit recipe has 225 calories per biscuit! :sad: There was no way I could succeed on a diet if I had to give up biscuits, but there was no way I could lose weight at 225 cals for one biscuit. I put on my thinking cap and I found a way to lighten my biscuits up while keeping them tender, moist, and buttery! Each serving consists of two petite biscuits, but if you want just one it is just 52 calories!
For an extra 13 calories per serving you can brush your biscuits with a touch (3 grams per serving - 12 grams for the whole batch) of reduced fat butter - I use Kerrygold Reduced fat since it is pure butter with no goofy chemicals. I like this little touch, but it is not necessary. I make a big batch of these on Sunday and freeze them for quick dinners and breakfasts during the week. Just microwave them for a few seconds to heat them up.
Buttermilk Drop Biscuits - Yield 12 biscuits - Serves 6
1 cup unbleached all-purpose flour
1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
1/4 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
2 packets Splenda (or your preferred no-calorie sweetener)
1 tablespoon salted butter (I use Kerrygold because it has a lot of flavor. Generic butter can't compare)
1/2 cup low-fat buttermilk
2 tablespoons water
Heat the oven to 350 F and line a baking sheet with parchment paper.
In a medium bowl combine the flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt, and Splenda. Whisk to combine. Add the butter and, with your fingers, rub the butter into the flour until the flour is completely coated and no pieces of butter remain. (The flour will have a slightly yellow hue when you are done.)
In a measuring cup combine the buttermilk and water. Add the buttermilk mixture into the flour mixture and mix with a spatula until just combined. (If the dough seems too dry add more water a teaspoon at a time. Some small lumps are ok, but do not over-mix or the biscuits will be tough.)
Scoop the dough into 12 biscuits onto the prepared pan. Bake for 10 to 12 minutes, or until the biscuits are lightly golden on top and deeply golden brown on the bottom, and they spring back when pressed in the center. (They may be a little pale, that is because there is less fat and no sugar.) If you are brushing with the additional butter pull the biscuits out at 10 minutes, brush with the butter and return to the oven for 1-2 minutes more.
Cool on the pan for 3 minutes then enjoy!
OMG~!!0 -
Thanks for this - Will replace my normal Grands Biscuits with this on Turkey Day!!0
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Yuuuuummm! Thank you for sharing this. I love biscuits....well any type of bread really. And I love to bake but rarely find low cal options that actually work.
I made the corn and bacon chowder recipe I found here for supper tonight and decided to try these to go along with it. I made a few adjustments which actually made them lower in cals as well...bonus!
I used whole wheat flour, original almond milk and stevia rather than white flour, 2% milk, and splenda. They turned out delicious! And only 45 cals a biscuit with my alterations.
Thanks again, lovely recipe!
YAY!! I am so pleased!! **Happy Dance**0 -
Recipe is copied and saved :happy:
My husband loves biscuits and gravy but the store bought biscuits are sooo high in calories, I could only have one for breakfast and therefore barely ever made them. Now I can make it more often and not feel bad about it.
THANKS! :flowerforyou:0 -
Bump for later!0
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