3-Ingredient Drop Biscuits

Southern 3-Ingredient Drop Biscuits
The drop biscuit is the most democratic form of the biscuit — no cold butter to cut in, no rolling pin required, no circular cutter to press through carefully layered dough. You mix a soft, sticky dough in a single bowl, drop heaping spoonfuls onto a baking sheet, and slide it into a hot oven. Fifteen minutes later you have biscuits with golden, slightly craggy tops, fluffy steaming interiors, and a buttery crust that holds up to being split and loaded with jam, swiped through sausage gravy, or simply eaten out of hand with an extra pat of butter melting into the crumb. Three ingredients — self-rising flour, whole buttermilk, and salted butter — and the technique is genuinely as simple as the ingredient count suggests.Desserts

Drop biscuits have a long tradition in Southern cooking, where they’re valued for their speed and lack of fuss relative to rolled and cut biscuits. The drop method produces a slightly different character from the laminated, cut variety: the tops are more textured and rustic, the interior is a bit more tender and less flaky, and the overall quality is warm and comforting rather than technically refined. These are biscuits for Sunday mornings and weeknight dinners, for serving alongside soup and gravy and eggs, for the kind of cooking where the goal is excellent, satisfying food prepared quickly and without complicated technique.

Why
Three Ingredients Is All You Need
Self-rising flour is the key to the recipe’s simplicity. It’s all-purpose flour with baking powder and salt already incorporated at the mill — typically one tablespoon of baking powder and half a teaspoon of salt per cup of flour, calibrated for biscuit and quick bread ratios. Using self-rising flour means the leavening and seasoning are already present in the correct proportions without measuring anything separately. Southern cooks have used self-rising flour for biscuits for generations precisely because it eliminates one category of variables from the process.Dairy & Eggs

Buttermilk does two distinct jobs: it provides the liquid the dough needs to come together, and its acidity reacts with the baking powder in the self-rising flour to produce carbon dioxide — the bubbles that make the biscuits rise and become airy rather than dense. Whole buttermilk (full-fat) produces the best results: its fat content contributes tenderness and a rich, slightly tangy flavor that’s characteristic of good Southern biscuits. The tang of the buttermilk also provides a pleasant flavor contrast to the butter’s richness in the finished biscuit.

Discover more
Flour
Bread
flour
The butter serves multiple functions. Some goes into the dough with the buttermilk, contributing fat that produces tenderness; some is brushed over the tops before baking, producing the golden, slightly crisp outer crust; and the final brush of melted butter straight from the oven produces the glistening, rich-smelling finish that makes hot biscuits so irresistible. The melted-butter method rather than cut-in cold butter is what makes drop biscuits fast and foolproof — no cold-butter technique to master, no risk of over-developing the gluten by working the fat in too long.Cooking & Recipes

Why You’ll Love This Recipe
The speed is the most immediate appeal. From bowl to oven to table in under 30 minutes — including the five-minute dough rest and 12 to 15 minutes of baking — these are biscuits that can go from idea to finished plate faster than almost any other from-scratch bread. There’s no dough-chilling time, no waiting for butter to come to the right temperature, no kneading, no rolling. The bowl and spoon method is genuinely accessible to anyone regardless of baking experience, and the results are reliably good from the first attempt.

The flavor is the second appeal. Good drop biscuits made with whole buttermilk and real butter have a tangy, rich, warmly savory character that pairs with an enormous range of foods — savory and sweet alike. They’re equally at home beside scrambled eggs and bacon at breakfast, split and covered with sausage gravy at brunch, served alongside a pot of soup or beans at dinner, or topped with sliced strawberries and whipped cream for a spring shortcake. Few baked goods are as genuinely versatile.Flour

NEXT PAGE

Leave a Comment