Homemade Biscuits are so easy to make, and these are the fluffiest biscuits you’ll try – buttery and super soft! I’ll share my best tip for cutting them to get that impressive rise. This Biscuit Recipe has just six simple ingredients that come together fast, and there is no rising time required.

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Of all of the different breads I bake, I’m convinced that biscuits are the easiest home-baked bread! There’s no kneading or waiting as with yeast doughs, and you don’t need any fancy equipment. Watch my video tutorial below, and you’ll see how easy it is to whip up a batch of biscuits from scratch. These are so good on their own, but also excellent in Strawberry Shortcake or Biscuits and Gravy.
Homemade Biscuits Video
Helpful Reader Reviews
“I forgot to move my butter from the freezer to the fridge the night before, so I just grated it directly into the dry ingredients. It worked very well. I’ve been trying out a lot of biscuit recipes recently and this is by far the best one! So delicate and moist inside with a nice crust on the top and bottom.” – Johanna ★★★★★
“These are the very best biscuits I’ve ever made! This recipe is my ‘go to’ because they are tall, flaky, and have an excellent crumb! I freeze and shred my butter into the flour before adding the half & half. It all comes together so well and the biscuits are delicious! Thank you for posting!” – Brenda ★★★★★
Biscuit Recipe
If you love homemade bread and fresh dinner rolls, but don’t like to wait for them to rise and proof, this biscuit recipe is for you. They’re perfect for any cooking skill level and taste way better than store-bought biscuits out of a can.

Ingredients for Biscuits
I love that this uses pantry and refrigerator staple ingredients.
- Flour – all-purpose flour works best for a tender crumb
- Baking Powder – use aluminum-free and make sure to sift if you see clumps in your baking powder.
- Salt and sugar – add just the right amount of flavor.
- Unsalted Butter – be sure it’s cold, right from the refrigerator. If you prefer to use salted butter, you will want to reduce the salt in the recipe.
- Half and Half – this is also called “light cream.” If you don’t have half and half, you can make it by combining equal parts of milk and heavy whipping cream.

Tips for the Best Homemade Biscuits
- Measure flour correctly – spoon the flour into the measuring cup and level the top. Read our post on how to measure ingredients.
- Dip your pastry cutter into flour between each cut. This will create a cleaner cut for a better rise.
- Cut Biscuits straight down. Don’t turn your cutter side to side and do not use a sawing motion. Cutting straight down is the KEY to help the biscuits rise better.
- Use cold butter. The key to making great biscuits is to use cold butter. We dice up the butter and then refrigerate it until ready to use. Cold butter will produce the fluffiest layers in your biscuits.
- Do not over-mix – once liquids touch the flour, mix just until dry ingredients are moistened.

Tools for Making Biscuits
The best thing about making homemade biscuits is that you don’t need any fancy equipment. Here are the tools we use to make the process super quick and easy:
- Baking Sheet – line it with a sheet of parchment paper
- Biscuit Cutter – we used a 2 1/2″ diameter round cutter. You can also use a knife or bench cutter to cut the biscuits into squares.
- Pastry Blender – to cut butter into the flour. You can also use a fork with wide tines, two knives, or a food processor (see instructions for this below).
- Mixing Bowl – this dough comes together in 1 bowl (we used a 4 qt).
- Wooden spoon or spatula – to stir in the liquid ingredients

How to Make Biscuits
- Dice butter – Cut into 1/2″ cubes and refrigerate until needed.
- Whisk dry ingredients – In a mixing bowl, combine flour, baking powder, sugar, and salt. Whisk until really well combined before adding butter and liquids.
- Add diced butter to the flour mixture and cut it into the flour until the largest pieces are pea-sized. It’s easy with a pastry blender.
- Add liquids -Pour in all the half and half at once and stir it in until the dry ingredients are just moistened then transfer to a floured surface. If the dough is too moist, dust the top with flour.
- Shape the dough into a rectangle and fold in half. Shape into a rectangle again and fold a second time. Shape dough into a 5×10″ rectangle and cut out 8 2 1/2″ diameter circles. You can pull together the scraps to form 2 more biscuits.
- Bake – Place on a parchment-lined baking sheet and bake at 450˚F for 12-15 minutes or until golden. Brush hot biscuits with melted butter.

Pro Tip:
For the Softest Biscuits, be sure not to overmix the dough so it doesn’t develop gluten strands, which can cause the biscuits to be tough. Mix just until it comes together and you should still be able to see bits of butter in the dough.

Can I Make Biscuits in a Food Processor?
To use a food processor, pulse together dry ingredients, then add chilled diced butter and pulse just until the largest pieces are pea-sized. Add just 3/4 cup half and half and pulse only until combined.
What is the Secret to a good biscuit?
There are a few ‘secrets’ that are important for good biscuits. Make sure you don’t overwork the dough, cut straight down when you cut out your biscuits, and avoid overbaking.

Serve Biscuits with
- Gravy – there’s nothing more classic than biscuits and gravy.
- Jam – spread sweet jam over biscuits and enjoy them with tea.
- Honey Butter – we love how butter melts onto a warm biscuit
- Breakfast Sandwiches – break the biscuit in half and use it for a sandwich.

Make-Ahead and Storage
It’s easy to make biscuits in advance. You can prep them in advance and enjoy freshly baked biscuits in the morning.
- Overnight Make-Ahead Biscuits – Cut the biscuits, place them on a baking sheet, then cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate overnight. Uncover and bake before serving. Bake the cold biscuits in a fully preheated oven.
- Storage – once the biscuits are cooled, store in an airtight container for up to 2 days at room temperature or up to a week in the refrigerator. Biscuits can also be frozen for up to 3 months.

Homemade biscuits truly are easy and such a treat. These always disappear fast and are a hit with our whole family. The kiddos can’t resist a warm buttered biscuit.
More Quick Bread Recipes
Quick Breads are great because they don’t need rising time. Instead of using yeast, they use baking soda or baking powder for leavening to give them a beautiful rise. If you love these homemade biscuits, then you won’t want to miss our top-rated quick-bread recipes.
- Banana Bread
- Irish Soda Bread
- Flour Tortillas
- Zucchini Bread
- Classic Scones
- Pumpkin Bread
- Chocolate Chip Banana Bread
- Blueberry Bread
- Cranberry Bread
Easy Homemade Biscuits

Ingredients
- 2 cups all-purpose flour
- 1 1/2 Tbsp baking powder, (aluminum free)
- 1 tsp granulated sugar
- 3/4 tsp salt, (we use fine sea salt)
- 1/2 cup unsalted butter, cold (8 Tbsp = 1/2 cup)
- 1 cup half and half (minus 2 Tbsp)*
- 1/2 Tbsp melted butter, to brush the baked biscuits
Instructions
Make the Biscuit Dough:
- Dice butter into 1/2" cubes and refrigerate until needed.
- In a large mixing bowl, combine flour, baking powder, sugar and salt. Whisk thoroughly.
- Add diced cold butter and cut it into the flour using a pastry blender (or two knives or a fork), until the largest butter pieces are pea-sized.
- Add 1 cup – minus 2 Tbsp of Half and Half all at once and stir until mixture comes together and is mostly moistened. Do not over-mix.
Fold Dough and Cut Biscuits:
- Turn dough out onto a floured surface. If dough is very sticky, lightly sprinkle the top with flour.
- Pat dough into a rectangle then fold it in half and pat into another rectangle. Fold a second time and pat into a 5"x10" rectangle or 3/4" thickness. Dip a 2 1/2" round biscuit cutter into flour and cut out 8 biscults. Pull together scraps and form into a rectangle to cut an extra 2 biscuits.
Bake Biscuits:
- Place biscuits on a parchment-lined baking sheet 1-inch apart and bake at 450˚F for 12-15 minutes or until tops are golden brown and biscuits are baked through. While biscuits are hot, brush tops with 1/2 Tbsp melted butter. Transfer to a wire rack to cool 10 minutes then serve.
FINALLY!! Making biscuits from scratch just like I like them: yummy, tender, slightly salty and don’t fall apart; has eluded me for years. I am successful this morning!
It’s easier than most think! I’m so glad you gave our biscuits recipe a try, DeeDee! Thank you for your comment!
I just made these tonight for dinner.
These are the best biscuits.
I won’t be able to make them very often, because i ate way to many.
My husband said it was the best biscuit he ever ate.
First time making biscuits. Came out delicious! I made mine a bit thicker and ended up with 9 biscuits. Buttery, crispy, flaky! Thank you.
AMAZING!!!! So simple and delicious. So light and fluffy with a nice crispy crust. Thanks for sharing.
So simple and so delicious! This recipe has always been my family’s go-to biscuit recipe!
Wonderful recipe, no hockey pucks, husband ate them one after the other…
So glad to hear that, Lori!
Natasha! I’m almost 70 yrs. old and have tried for 50 of those to find the pefect biscuit recipe. THIS IS IT. I saw a comment from Sheri where she said she froze her butter – and then GRATED the stick of butter. I’ve just discovered this hack on my own, and it’s the key to getting your butter just the right pea-size and getting it just the right frozen temp. No more cutting in 1/2 inch cubes (such a lengthy process) so they reach the right small size. Yeah, I know, there’s always the food processor method; but I like getting covered w/flour.
AND with the frozen shreds of butter, mixing it in is a snap. And Natasha, your instruction to pat out the dough, then fold, then pat, then fold and pat is genius; gives you so many buttery, flaky layers.
If you want some soft-sided biscuits, snuggle the cut dough closely before baking. I will meed a much smaller cookie sheet to pull this off.
Thank you all for listening!
Wow! Thank you so omuch for sharing your wisdom and knowledge on this Teri! I’m so glad you enjoyed my recipe!
Terrific recipe, success every time!! Sorry, this is a dumb question; however, can salted butter be substituted for unsalted? If so, cut back or eliminate salt? Thanks!
Hi Mary. Yes, you can. Omit or reduce the salt. I like to use unsalted because it allows me control over the saltiness.
These biscuits were fluffy, light and delicious! My 4 year old girly and I had a great time making them and they were super easy 😀!! Thank you!!
My biscuits turned out light & fluffy. I used a homemade mix of cream of tartar & baking soda, as my leavener too. This mixture has no phosphate or aluminum, in it. I left out the salt, in this recipe, since there was baking soda already in my leavener mixture. They biscuits came out great, using the homemade leavener mixture. I was worried about that, since this is the first thing, that I baked with it. The dialysis patients in our household can’t have either of those ingredients. I used spicy sausage in my gravy & eliminated any extra salt, pepper or pepper flakes in it. The spicy sausage wasn’t overly spicy either.
These were amazing!! Impressed my family!! Do you think I can add things to them? I want tot ry a jalapeno cheddar biscuit!
Hi Tara! I haven’t personally tested it myself but I don’t see why not. You’ll have to experiment with how much to add. Just don’t over-mix the dough, it can affect the texture.
Absolutely delicious and so light and fluffy biscuits. Thank you for sharing recipe. I made it with gravy and crispy bacon this morning . Thanking God for this recipe. No more going to Jacks for Sausage and Gravy Biscuits. Also love your Chocolate Butter cream icing. Have a Blessed week and Easter..
Thank you for your wonderful review! We appreciate your feedback.
Can I use buttermilk instead if it’s the only thing I’ve got?
Hi Cathy! Some of my readers have reported using buttermilk with good result.
First-time bake, 100% success!! I loved the simplicity of this recipe. This is the first time I have ever made homemade biscuits, so I was anticipating a ” fail” my first time around thinking I would have to bake a couple of times to achieve a fully delicious bake. Lol. Wrong, they were great!! I loved the fact that the recipe ingredients were already in my cupboard.
Unlikely that I’ll ever buy canned biscuits again.
BTW: I mixed them up, refrigerated for about 3 hours and then baked them. Thank you.
That’s wonderful, William! Thank you for trying the recipe.
This is my go to biscuit recipe! It is fail proof and they are so fluffy tender and moist! Better than restaurant biscuits! I feel like a true baker when I make these!
That’s so great! I’m so glad you found a favorite biscuit recipe on my blog!
Great recipe!!! I do prefer smaller biscuits for biscuit and gravy for the family, so I did 1/3″ tall and 425 for ten minutes. Perfect fluffy biscuits.
I LOVE this recipe. I live in Colorado and I had never found a biscuit recipe that would rise and be good and fluffy. This recipe works every single time. I now make them 3-4 times a month on the weekends for my kids. Today I added a teaspoon of cinnamon just because and they turned out delicious with some honey drizzled on top. Thank you for this recipe!
That sounds amazing! I’m so glad you found this recipe. Thanks for sharing.
Do you freeze them before you bake them or after? Making for the second time!
Hi Bridget! They can be frozen both ways. If you’re baking them from frozen, you do not need to thaw. They’ll likely take a few more minutes to bake.
These turned out great 👍 I added an egg in with the milk
Thanks for sharing your recipe 💗💗💗
You’re very welcome, Betty!
Daughter (15) and I were looking for biscuit recipe and stumbled upon your recipe, we had all the ingredients and they turned out perfect!!! I’ve now subscribed and look forward to trying many other recipes. My daughter and I had great fun making!
Hi April! That’s so awesome. I’m glad you came
across this recipe. Thank you for subscribing.