These Gluten-free Sweet Potato Buttermilk Biscuits are just the thing for dunking into soup when the weather turns cool!
At our house, it’s all about the biscuits
If I had to pick a single food that’s been a common thread throughout my life, it would be biscuits. Growing up, my dad made a lot of soups and stews using the wild game he’d hunted or the wild mushrooms we’d foraged. Some of them were good and some were, well, nourishing. I wasn’t a fan of gamey venison or piney spruce grouse but it’s what was on the table and it was by all accounts, nourishing. To sweeten the deal when we were having venison or grouse my dad always made a pan of buttermilk biscuits which we’d slather with butter and drizzle with honey before dunking in our soup.
My first job was at Hardee’s where at age 14 I got up well before the sun on Saturdays and Sundays to, you guessed it, make the biscuits. That was back before they came pre-baked and frozen in a box. I actually had to measure the flour, baking powder, soda and salt then use my hands to work big hunks of shortening into the flour before rolling out the dough and cutting the biscuits with a round metal biscuit cutter. It was my dream job. Just me and the radio and the meditative work of measuring, kneading, cutting and baking. No crabby customers to deal with – just pounds and pounds of fluffy, glutinous dough.
Shortly after I met my hubby in Alaska I made the mistake of whipping up a batch of homemade buttermilk biscuits to serve alongside the clam chowder I’d made after a day of digging littleneck clams in Kachemak Bay just outside of Homer. I say mistake because I was still playing hard to get. I didn’t need a man (or so I thought). Little did I know that buttermilk biscuits were his kryptonite and that after one bite he’d be hell bent on getting me to marry him and stopping at nothing (such as hitchhiking across Alaska with a pint of homemade fireweed jelly he’d made…just for the biscuits). <– No lie
Fast forward to our days in Montana when after pulling together every dollar we had we bought a $25,000 fixer-upper. Soup made from homegrown veggies and local meat was cheap and so were big bags of locally milled flour for biscuits. And then came babies. My daughters ask for biscuits all. the. time but the problem is that we no longer ‘do gluten’. So I had to find a way to 1) make a damn good buttermilk biscuit without gluten, and 2) add some redeeming health properties to the starchy, white gluten-free flour used to make them.
Thus, the Gluten-free Sweet Potato Buttermilk Biscuit was born and everyone at my house unanimously approved
The star of these lightly sweet and incredibly tender biscuits is truly the ingredients not my gifted biscuit-making hands as my husband would have to you believe. You just can’t make a biscuit worth it’s salt without really good butter and buttermilk. Trust me, I’ve made a lot of biscuits in my life. Which is why I was thrilled to partner with our friends at Kalona Supernatural and use their Organic Cultured Buttermilk and unsalted butter for this recipe. Kalona Supernatural is committed to helping small midwest Amish and Mennonite farmers make organic farming a viable lifestyle. And they’re committed to the providing the highest quality organic, non-homogenized, low-temperature pasteurized dairy products from grass-fed cows. Now that’s a company I can really get behind.
If you’ve never made a biscuit in your life, now is the time. These Gluten-free Sweet Potato Buttermilk Biscuits are quite forgiving and easy enough to whip up a batch on a weeknight for the soup or stew you’ve had simmering in the slow cooker all day. And they’re a great way to use up leftover baked or mashed sweet potato (or canned pumpkin).
Life is better with these Gluten-free Sweet Potato Buttermilk Biscuits! #realfood #organic Share on X
Buttermilk makes them better
Sure, you can technically substitute milk + an acid such as lemon juice or vinegar to get ‘sour milk’ to use in place of buttermilk in a recipe but let me say this, it’s not the same. I’ve tried it countless times, even making two batches to compare the buttermilk with the milk + acid and have found that hands down, the buttermilk biscuits are always better. They’re just more tender and the tang from the naturally cultured buttermilk is subtle and almost buttery in nature. Which, when we’re talking biscuits is a big deal.
Don’t be surprised if there aren’t any leftovers
Every time I make a batch of these Gluten-free Sweet Potato Buttermilk Biscuits I double (or triple) the recipe – especially if we’re having company. Once they’re baked and cooled your can wrap them tightly in plastic wrap and store in a zip-top bag in the freezer so you have some on hand for another day. They make great little breakfast sandwiches when topped with a slice of ham, a fried egg, fresh spinach and a slice of tomato.
You can also freeze them from the unbaked state on a baking sheet then transfer them to a freezer-safe storage container or bag. Just remove what you need from the freezer, place on a baking sheet and allow to rest at room temperature while the oven preheats. You can either bake them once they fully thawed or even from a partially frozen state (just add a few more minutes to the baking time).
Now it’s time to slather, drizzle or dunk those gorgeous Gluten-free Sweet Potato Buttermilk Biscuits of yours!
Pssst….looking for that ridiculously creamy soup you see above? That’s our Slow Cooker Chicken Chowder and you’ll find the recipe here.
Gluten-free Sweet Potato Buttermilk Biscuits
Ingredients
- 1 ¾ cups Bob’s Red Mill Gluten-Free 1-to-1 Baking Flour, plus more for rolling and shaping
- 2 ½ tsp.baking powder
- ¾ tsp. salt
- ¼ tsp. baking soda
- 6 Tbsp. chilled Kalona Supernatural Organic Unsalted Butter, cut into pieces
- ¾ cup mashed sweet potato or pumpkin puree, chilled
- ½ cup Kalona Supernatural Organic Cultured Buttermilk
- ⅛ tsp. ground nutmeg
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 400°F.
- In a large bowl, whisk together flour, baking powder, salt, and baking soda. Add butter and using a pastry blender or 2 knives, cut butter into dry ingredients until mixture resembles coarse meal with a few larger chunks remaining.
- In a small bowl, whisk together mashed sweet potato (or pumpkin puree), buttermilk and nutmeg.
- Add sweet potato mixture to flour mixture and mix just until combined.
- Turn dough out onto a lightly floured cutting board. Dust dough lightly with flour and use your hands to very lightly knead the dough until it comes together in a smooth ball, adding a bit of flour as needed to keep dough from sticking to your hands.
- Shape dough into a disk ½ – ¾-inch thick.
- Use a floured 2-inch biscuit cutter (or a small mason jar) to cut dough into circles as close together as possible. You can also use a knife to cut the dough into 2×2-inch squares. Gather together scraps, and repeat to cut out more biscuits until dough is used up (being careful not to use too much flour).
- Place biscuits on a baking sheet lined with parchment paper, spacing them 1-inch apart. Bake for 15-17 minutes or until bottoms are lightly browned, rotating the pan once during baking.
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Notes
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Note: We have only tested this recipe with the listed ingredients and measurements, unless otherwise noted. If you would like to try a substitution, we would love to have you share what you used and how it turned out in the comments below. Thanks!
Nutrition Information
- Serving Size: 1 biscuit
- Calories: 121
- Fat: 6g
- Sodium: 150mg
- Carbohydrate: 15g
- (Fiber: 2g
- Sugar: 2g)
- Protein: 2g
Dietary
Do you have any favorite food memories? What’s your favorite way to enjoy biscuits? Share in the comments below!
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Lori says
Made these this weekend and LOVED them! Couldn’t get over how good they tasted. I was excited to find something I can eat that tastes amazing…
Stacie Hassing says
So great to hear you enjoyed this recipe!
Kim says
Hello! My daughter accidentally purchased buttermilk light when I sent her to the store. Will the Lite version work as well in this biscuit?
Jessica Beacom says
Hi Kim,
They should be just fine! Enjoy!
Colleen Fenton says
Hi, Would it work if I used coconut or almond milk instead of buttermilk?
Jessica Beacom says
Hi Colleen,
I think that would be a fine substitute if you add a teaspoon of lemon juice to your non-dairy milk and letting it sit for a few minutes before adding it to the dry ingredients.
Kim says
In addition to having Celiac disease, my daughter cannot have tapioca. I have yet to find an all-purpose gluten-free flour that doesn’t include tapioca. Do you have any suggestions? I’d love to try this recipe, but I’m not great at gluten-free experimentation. Thanks!!
Jessica Beacom says
Hi Kim,
Here is a good article about how to create your own gluten-free flour blend that would allow you to substitute arrowroot or potato starch for the tapioca starch you find in most gluten-free flour blends:
https://gfjules.com/gluten-free-flour-comparison/
You could also try Jovial Whole Grain Gluten-free Pastry Flour which is free of tapioca.
Shannon Wells says
Just made them and I love them!