Chip Dudley wrote:Unless they are made with lard, biscuits are, at least to my taste, a waste of time. Passable ones can be made with lots and lots of butter, but there's just something about lard that can not be replicated.
I would agree with that. They also tend to do better in a smaller size and have to be eaten while still warm from the oven, or just cooled off less than a half hour or so, at which time they are worthless and should be tossed out. This means that serving good biscuits in a restaurant requires devoting substantial labor to their (continuous) production. It's unfortunate so many think of biscuits like pre-sliced bread for the toaster; just a substrate, an afterthought, and an "obvious" place to shave labor and cut corners by sticking them in a warming tray or, worse, letting them cool off and reheating them on the grill or in a microwave. Better not to serve biscuits if you aren't going to do it right.
Note that Josephine has spent considerable time testing and perfecting her biscuit-making skills, and may want to chime in here as a real practitioner of the art.
JiLS