100 Dollar Cake 3 Musketeers Bars A-Ri-Rang À Blanc À l'Africaine À l'Agnès Sorel À l'Aillade À l'Ailleule À l'Albigeoise À l'Albufera À l'Algérienne À l'Alsacienne À l'Ambassadrice À l'Américaine À l'Ancienne À l'Andalouse À l'Anglaise À l'Anglaise -- Paner À l'Anversoise À l'Ardennaise À l'Argenteuil À l'Ariégeoise À l'Arlésienne À l'Armenonville À l'Armoricaine À l'Arrabiata À l'Autrichienne À l'Auvergnate À l'Encre À l'Espagnole Previous | Next | Beaten Biscuits© Copyright 2009. All rights reserved and enforced Apoquiniminc Cakes Maryland BiscuitsBeaten Biscuits are a firm, dry biscuit, with a texture halfway between that of a risen baking powder biscuit, and a soda cracker. Many people are surprised when they first have one, as they are expecting a soft baking powder biscuit. Instead, the texture is quite unique: crisp, flaky, and chewy all at the same time. Beaten Biscuits were made in the Southern US; non-southerners have a gruesome fascination with them. The leavener for the biscuits is your arm -- you literally beat air into the dough. They are seldom made any more owing to the labour involved. The standard recipe was "Flour, very little lard, milk." You would mix the dough, and then place it on a flat, smooth wooden surface -- a wooden block or the top of a tree stump. You'd use a wooden mallet, the flat side of an axe, or a rolling pin, and start beating the dough. You would fold the dough every few whacks; it's the folds combined with the beating that traps and drives air into the dough. The dough would eventually become very smooth, and "blister" -- bubbles of air would start to pop out. Some people called this making the dough "blister;" others referred to it as making the dough "snap." Though normally this much working of a dough would produce a tough biscuit, what happens is that the dough gets worked past that point, to where the gluten starts to break down. The right point is the blistering stage. If worked past this (not that you'd want to, after all the work you'd already done), this would cause them to get tough and leaden again. The entire beating process would take 2 to 3 hours (sic), or 300 to 500 whacks. When done, the dough was either rolled out to about 1/3 inch (3/4 cm) thick and cut into rounds, or formed by hand into smooth shapes, then pierced with a fork, and baked on baking sheets in a moderate oven for 20 to 30 minutes. Some variations added salt and sugar, or used water instead of milk. Later variations would add baking powder, as it became commercially available. With the baking powder, you'd only have to beat it 15 to 30 minutes (or 100 whacks.) Some say doubling the batch all at once doesn't work very well; that you are best to make 2 separate batches, making 1 in advance if need be. Others say as long as you have a strong enough arm, go ahead and double the batch. Beaten Biscuits are available at very few places commercially in 2005, in Maryland and Kentucky, US, being two of the places. They are made with machines called "biscuit brakes." You fold the dough, then pass it through the biscuit brake. Many say they are actually better done with some kind of biscuit machine than by hand, At home, you can use a food processor or a smaller "biscuit brake." If you use a food processor to start the dough off, you can reduce the beating time required to just 15 to 20 minutes. Some modern recipes call for the dough to be processed in a food processor for 2 minutes, with no beating afterward required. Beaten Biscuits were particularly popular in Kentucky, Maryland and Virginia. They were often served sliced in half with thin slices of country ham on them.
Nicholls, Walter. Ham Biscuits, Plain and Simple. Washington Post, 10 October 2001. Page F01. See Also:Country HamOther entries for: BiscuitsAbernethy Biscuits, Bath Olivers, Beaten Biscuits, Biscuits, Crackers, Digestive Biscuit Crumbs, Digestive Biscuits, Graham Wafers Other entries for:BreadBagels, Bread Crumbs, Bread Improvers, Flat Breads, French Breads, Kalakukko Bread, Quick Breads, Quignon, Rusks, Sippets, Tartine, Toast, Unleavened Bread |
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