Spelt Biscuits

spelt biscuits

There is nothing better than a hearty, soul warming soup in the fall and through the winter, but as excited as I am about tasting each new batch or being reminded of familiar favorites, sometimes I get just as excited about the bread that will be accompanying it.

I made a big batch of stew for dinner the other night soon after finishing our chickpea noodle soup. Normally I enjoy soups and stews with a nice loaf of crusty bread; sopping up all the last remaining bits with a shaggy torn piece at the end. This time however, I was craving biscuits. Warm from the oven, flaky, buttery, homey biscuits.

Now, these are not your traditional biscuits in any sense, they are made entirely from spelt flour, but they still have that buttery, slightly flaky characteristic I was craving. So they suited me just fine.
butter

dough

spelt biscuits

This batch made plenty more than we could eat that night and biscuits are always a welcome sight in the morning. I rewarmed them slightly in the oven the next day just to give them that warm from the oven feel again. Then I drizzled mine with some local raw blackberry honey alongside a hot cup of tea, but jam or even just a nob of butter perks them up too. I also may have eaten more then one, but who’s counting?

Now that I’m on the topic of breakfast, I’m envisioning serving these alongside scrambled eggs or tofu or maybe making a fried egg sandwich from them as well. Biscuits have so many great uses! Never be afraid to make a double batch, they will always get eaten.
spelt biscuits with honey

Spelt Biscuits /8-10 biscuits

Other than the change from white flour to spelt (you can use light spelt if you prefer too), there is plenty of cold butter mixed in to give the biscuits their flakiness. I used my favorite buttermilk substitute of almond milk and vinegar, but if you have a splash of buttermilk needing to be used up you can use that here too.

3/4 cup almond milk
1 teaspoon vinegar
2 1/2 Cups spelt flour
1 tablespoon + 1 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
6 tablespoons cold unsalted butter, cut into cubes

Preheat the oven to 350F.

In a small bowl or liquid measuring cup, combine the milk and vinegar (alternatively you can use buttermilk), set aside.

Sift together the flour, baking powder, and salt. Using your hands, rub in the butter into the flour mixture until you have roughly little pea size bits.

Stir in the milk mixture with a wooden spoon. You should have a shaggy doughy mess, don’t worry if it seems dry at this point. Dump everything out onto a clean surface and knead the dough 10-15 times just until all the flour is worked in.

Flatten the dough out into a 1″ thick circle and use a biscuit cutter to make neat rounds of dough. Gather together any remaining dough scraps and repeat until you have 8-10 biscuits cut out. Place them on a baking pan and bake for 18-20 minutes. Serve warm.

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Bread, Breakfast, Fall, Grains, Proteins, Sides, Winter

11 Responses

  1. betty says:

    I am really a fan of bread and not that much about soups, everytime I go to a restaurant I eat almost every piece of bread there is in the basket, your biscuits look really good, did you put butter on the inside? or is it jam?

  2. Joanna says:

    Delicious! This is the perfect side for the chili night I have planned this weekend. Thanks, Jacqui!

  3. jacqui says:

    Betty, It's actually honey on top, but butter and jam work nicely as well!

    Joanna, These will be perfect with chili!

  4. Amber- Loves Food, Loves to Eat says:

    I love your biscuit cutter! So cute!

  5. chinmayie @ love food eat says:

    Those look great! Recipe also sounds really really simple :) Thank you!

  6. Cookie and Kate says:

    Perfect! I have been hunting for a fluffy, whole grain take on a classic biscuit for so long now. And the ingredient list is so short and simple! Can't wait to bake a big batch of these.

  7. kickpleat says:

    your biscuit cutter is way too cute!! i love it. i've never baked with spelt flour before, but i'm curious to give it a try.

  8. Joanna says:

    I just wanted to stop back and say these were a cinch to make and rose like a dream. Yummy!

    And you're so right–a drizzle of honey made them the perfect breakfast for the last few days. I'll be making these again at Thanksgiving.

  9. jacqui says:

    Joanna, I'm so glad you enjoyed them!

  10. shelly says:

    I have just switched from wheat flour to slept flour, and I have been searching out receipes. It was a very nice surprise to find this receipe this morning!! They turned beautifully!!
    The only change was milk instead of almond milk, as I didn't have it.
    Thank you so much for posting this.

    Shelly

  11. Emma says:

    These turned out perfectly, thanks for sharing the recipe :) I simply swapped non-dairy butter in. They’re amazingly soft and fluffy for all spelt too. I wish I had made a full batch so I had some leftover to have for breakfasts- they’ve all been eaten up with a hearty red lentil, split pea, barley, kale stew!

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