Welcome to the EGGhead Forum - a great place to visit and packed with tips and EGGspert advice! You can also join the conversation and get more information and amazing kamado recipes by following Big Green Egg to Experience our World of Flavor™ at:
Facebook  |  Twitter  |  Instagram  |  Pinterest  |  Youtube  |  Vimeo
Share your photos by tagging us and using the hashtag #BigGreenEgg.

Want to see how the EGG is made? Click to Watch

Biscuits from the clay oven

Clay Q
Clay Q Posts: 4,486
edited November -0001 in EggHead Forum
Ready to go in the clay oven.
FlatbreadbakinginClayOven0016.jpg

Dome temp was 400 degrees.
FlatbreadbakinginClayOven0017.jpg
As you can see I have a lot of ceramics in my oven. :)

All done. This is what's for breakfast along with butter, jam and java.
FlatbreadbakinginClayOven0018.jpg

If you haven't tried baking yet give biscuits a go then you will be hooked. The flavor is MUCH better from the clay oven.

Comments

  • At 400 degrees how long did it take to cook. The biscuits look great. Can you share your recipe? I would like to try that cook myself.

    Thanks,

    Buckeye
  • Clay Q
    Clay Q Posts: 4,486
    Thanks. They took about 30 minutes, I checked with my thermapen for 200 degrees internal. Recipe is in the BGE Cookbook, I can copy here but I gotta leave for work now. :ohmy:
  • Mickey
    Mickey Posts: 19,768
    Clay that just makes you hungry my friend.
    Salado TX & 30A  FL: Egg Family: 3 Large and a very well used Mini, added a Mini Max when they came out (I'm good for now). Just given a Mini to add to the herd. 

  • Gator Bait
    Gator Bait Posts: 5,244
     
    Hi Buckeye Fan

    Biscuits are the basic pastry and are very quick and easy once you have made them a few times. I'm sorry I can not find my old recipe, I had to quit making them when I found I was diabetic. :(

    HERE is a good looking basic biscuit recipe.

    HERE is a good looking Buttermilk Biscuit recipe.

    I have not tried either but would if I could. ;)

    I would use butter instead of shortening just for the flavor. Many recipes will call for unsalted butter and I ignore that, salted is just fine. Keep butter or shortening cold, you want it to stay in little pieces in the dough, this turns into a flaky biscuit. If you have a food processor you can put as much of the dry ingredients in it that will easily fit with the butter and give it a few pulses till the butter is well cut into the flour, no finer then a course corn meal texture and maybe not even quit that fine. With a food processor you can use frozen or near frozen butter, it will form the little bits better, just cut it into patty sized pieces before adding to the processor. I also got out of the habit of cutting my biscuits into rounds. I feel the extra handling of the dough can hinder their rising as high and the added steps are just not needed. I would dump my dough out on to a floured counter top, dust the top of the dough well with more flour as it is sticky and rough shape it into a thick rectangle or a square and use a knife to cut it into rectangular, square or even diamond shaped biscuits. The biscuits don't care what shape they are but might appreciate less handling. Brings to mind my grandfather that didn't like round cakes so gram always made a square cake, I wonder how he felt about his biscuits? :laugh:

    Hot from the oven with plenty of melted butter on top and strawberry jam or a drizzle of honey has got to be one of the original comfort foods. With sausage gravy or as a Strawberry Shortcake and now your talking! ;)

    Blair

     
  • Mr Holloway
    Mr Holloway Posts: 2,034
    Looks good Clay
    Biscuits are so good off the Egg :)

    Shane
  • Gator Bait
    Gator Bait Posts: 5,244
     
    Great looking biscuits Clay! I love a good biscuit and those look wonderful. I'm sorry I never got to make them on the egg. Now they are no longer part of my diet I miss a great biscuit and all you can do with them. When I was a kid growing up our church always had an annual fair that was one of the highlights of the summer for our small town and the highlight of the fair was the huge homemade strawberry short cakes made with homemade biscuits, soaking in tons of berries and juice and topped with a mountain of homemade whipped cream. Life at it's best! :laugh:

    Blair

     
  • thirdeye
    thirdeye Posts: 7,428
    DSC01359a.jpg

    I couldn't agree more.... I also cook stuff to go with them.

    DSC01424a.jpg
    Happy Trails
    ~thirdeye~

    Barbecue is not rocket surgery
  • Lobicho
    Lobicho Posts: 557
    now my wife would love that...
    do you have a good recipe?
    yours look awesome!!!
  • Beli
    Beli Posts: 10,751
    Nice breakfast Clay, &. nice wooden tray.....where did you get it? :laugh: Joke
  • Gator,

    Thanks for the help and the recipes. That's what I like about this forum everyone will share information and take the time to help out, can't wait to cook some buttermilk biscuits.

    Buckeye Fan
  • Hoss
    Hoss Posts: 14,600
    Yummy lookin "Catheads" ;) I HOPE you used REAL butta! :)
  • Gator Bait
    Gator Bait Posts: 5,244
     
    My pleasure Buckeye Fan, your right, this forum is like none other that I have seen. Biscuits are one of those traditional foods that just about everybody loves. With a little practice you can get so you can throw together a batch in no time. I found through experimentation that many biscuit recipes can have the amount of leavening (baking powder and/or baking soda) increased, some times as much as 50% if the biscuits are not light enough. I also found out with pie crusts, one of the other very basic pastries, is that if I replaced about one third of the butter with lard I would get a pie crust that would literally melt in your mouth. I don't recall if I ever tried it with biscuits but the two are very, very similar and it may be worth the experiment. Just a few thoughts. :)

    Blair