Sourdough Biscuits
Use leftover sourdough discard to make these light and fluffy sourdough biscuits! They're super easy to make, and you can bake them right away or let the dough ferment overnight for extra flavor.

Sourdough baking isn't just for bread! You can make cinnamon rolls, crackers, pancakes or sourdough waffles, and these melt-in-your-mouth buttermilk biscuits with your sourdough starter.
This simple sourdough recipe is great for beginners and home bakers who want to make homemade biscuits anytime you're in the mood.
Serve the biscuits hot from the oven with butter and strawberry jam, or use them for breakfast sandwiches with eggs and cheese!
Sample baking schedule
This easy sourdough biscuit recipe can be baked right away or left to ferment overnight for more flavor. If you want to ferment the dough, mix it before bed and bake it the next morning!
- 8 PM: Mix the biscuit dough, cover, and let rise at room temperature for 10-12 hours.
- 8 AM: Preheat your oven. Add the salt, baking powder, and baking soda to the dough and cut out the biscuits. Bake for 25-30 minutes.
Ingredients needed
- sourdough starter discard: This recipe was created to use leftover sourdough discard, but active starter works just as well.
- all-purpose flour: For the lightest, fluffiest biscuits, use an all-purpose flour with a low protein content. While most all-purpose flours have a protein content of around 12%, White Lily flour has a 9% protein content, which makes for a light and fluffy biscuit. Gold Medal all-purpose flour comes in at a 10.5% protein content.
- butter: These biscuits can be made with regular butter or plant-based butter for a dairy-free option.
- buttermilk: Buttermilk adds extra tang to the biscuits, but you can use any milk, whether regular or plant-based.
- sugar: Granulated sugar adds just a touch of sweetness.
- baking powder and baking soda: These two ingredients help the biscuits rise in the oven. If you're fermenting the dough overnight, be sure to add them right before cutting the dough for baking. Replace baking powder and baking soda every 6 months because they lose their strength over time.
- salt
Equipment
- cheese grater: A cheese grater or box grater is the fastest and easiest way to prepare butter for biscuits and pie crust. If you donโt have a cheese grater, cut cold butter into small cubes with a knife. Then, use a pastry cutter or fork to mix the butter into the flour. You can also use your hands to rub the butter into the flour.
- cast iron skillet: We use a cast iron skillet whenever possible. If you donโt have one, you can place the biscuits on a baking sheet or in a baking dish, leaving about ยผ to ยฝ inch of space between each biscuit.
- biscuit cutter: You can use a cookie cutter or a regular-mouth mason jar instead of a biscuit cutter.
How to make sourdough biscuits from scratch
These sourdough biscuits couldn't be easier to make. So, let's dive straight into the details and get these delicious biscuits on the table!

Step 1
Hold a cheese grater over a large mixing bowl and grate the cold butter into the bowl.

Step 2
Add the flour to the bowl and use a bench scraper to cut the flour into the butter by using a chopping motion.

Step 3
To bake right away: Add the buttermilk, sourdough discard, baking soda, baking powder, and salt, and mix until well combined with a stiff spatula, switching over to your hands to bring the dough together.
To ferment overnight: Add the buttermilk and the sourdough discard and stir until combined. Cover the bowl and let rise at room temperature for 10-12 hours.

Step 4
Preheat the oven to 400ยฐF (204ยฐC) and lightly grease a 12-inch cast iron skillet.
If the dough has been fermenting overnight, mix the salt, baking soda, and baking powder in a small bowl and then pour them over the dough. Use your hands to mix them well.
If you don't break up the lumps of baking soda and baking powder before adding them to the dough, your biscuits might end up with brown spots.

Step 5
Flour your work surface generously and turn out the dough. Sprinkle flour on top of the dough, then pat it into a 1-inch thick rectangle. Cut out biscuits and gather the scraps to cut more until you have 12 biscuits.

Step 6
Arrange in a cast iron skillet and bake for 25-30 minutes.

How to cut biscuits
For cutting out biscuits, use a biscuit cutter with a sharp edge. Dip it in flour to keep it from sticking. Press it down onto the dough, wiggle it to separate the biscuit, and lift straight up. Avoid twisting the cutter when cutting as this will seal the edges and prevent them from rising to their full potential!
Serve
Serve the biscuits hot from the oven with homemade butter and honey, or your choice of apple butter, cherry jam, or strawberry jam. They are delicious with sausage gravy and eggs.
They can also be used in our breakfast casserole or blueberry bread pudding.

How to Store
Keep your biscuits at room temperature in a covered container for up to a week. Avoid storing them in the fridge, as they will get hard.
For longer storage, wrap individual biscuits tightly in plastic wrap and place them in a freezer-safe container for up to 3 months.
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Sourdough Biscuits Recipe
EQUIPMENT
- Mixing Bowl
- Bench-Scraper or pastry cutter
- 3" Biscuit cutter
- 12" cast iron skillet or baking sheet
INGREDIENTS
Initial biscuit dough mix
- 2 ยฝ cups (300 g) all-purpose flour (See notes)
- 8 tablespoons (113 g) unsalted butter (cold)
- ยฝ cup (125 g) sourdough starter discard
- 1 cup (240 g) buttermilk (or milk)
- 1 tablespoon (15 g) sugar (optional)
To add before cutting out
- 1 teaspoon (5 g) fine sea salt
- 1 ยฝ teaspoon baking powder
- ยฝ teaspoon baking soda
INSTRUCTIONS
Mix the dough (choose one option)
- To bake right away: Grate the butter into a large mixing bowl. Add the flour and use a bench scraper or fork to mix the butter into the flour until it looks like small pea-sized crumbs. Then add the sourdough starter discard, buttermilk, sugar, baking powder, baking soda, and salt. Stir with a stiff spatula until everything is well combined. Use your hands to ensure there are no dry bits left. Let the dough rest while you preheat the oven.
- To ferment overnight: Grate the butter into a large mixing bowl. Add the flour and use a bench scraper or fork to mix the butter into the flour until it looks like small pea-sized crumbs. Then add the sourdough starter discard, buttermilk, and sugar. Stir with a stiff spatula until everything is well combined. Cover the bowl and let it rise on the counter for 10-12 hours.Right before you are ready to cut out the biscuits, mix the salt, baking soda, and baking powder in a small bowl with a fork, breaking up any lumps. Sprinkle half of this mixture over the dough and work it in with your hands. Then sprinkle the remaining half and keep mixing until everything is fully combined.
Cut out and Bake
- Preheat your oven to 400ยฐF (204ยฐC). Lightly grease a cast iron skillet with butter and set aside.
- Generously flour your work surface and turn the dough out onto it. Flour the top of the dough and use your hands to press it into a rectangle shape that is 1 inch in thickness. Use a biscuit cutter to cut out biscuits, pressing straight down and pulling straight up. *See notes.
- Arrange the biscuits in a 12" cast iron skillet and bake for 25-30 minutes, or until the tops are golden brown. Remove and serve warm.
NOTES
- White Lily and Gold Medal all-purpose flour are low in protein and will give you the lightest, fluffiest biscuits.
- Active sourdough starter can be used instead of discard. Make sure to add the salt to the initial mix. (Omit the baking powder and baking soda.) After cutting out the biscuits, let them rise in the skillet for 60-90 minutes before baking.
- Do not twist the biscuit cutter when cutting out the biscuits. The twisting motion will seal the edges, making it harder for them to rise.





Thank you so much for this recipe. I have been trying homemade biscuits recipes for years. Now Iโm experimenting with sourdough so I wanted to find a biscuit recipe that worked. I must say these were super easy and perfect! ๐โค๏ธ
This is the best. Biscuits I have ever made and I have made biscuits all my life. I am 70 and I believe everything is better made from scratch. I made biscuits for my husband and boys for many many years but never sourdough.
This recipe is almost like the one I originally make but without the sugar, sourdough starter (discard). I will never make a different one in the future. My husband loves these and the boys and their families rave about them also.
I have made them both ways, but letting them ferment was even better. They were probably the most fluffiest biscuits ever and the taste was awesome. I will ferment in the future because the taste is indescribable.
Thank you so much for your recipe.
Looking to make this recipe but wondering if I can double the recipe as I need about 2 dozen biscuits to feed my gang?
Yes you can double this recipe.
Amazing recipe! my batch yielded 23 biscuits and i added about a half cup of shredded cheddar before adding the starter and milk. the dough was slightly dry as well so i added a few extra spoonfulls of discard and it mixed in beautifully. i laminated the dough as i rolled it out which made it much easier to shape into a rectangle. definitely will keep this recipe in the books for a holiday.
Help! Let me start by saying how much I love your recipes. I have made your country loaf and your honey wheat sandwich bread successfully many times. Iโve made many of your other delicious recipes as well. Always awesome. But my biscuit dough was so wet I couldnโt touch it. But I carried on and put it on a generously floured surface, floured the top and pressed it out and cut out biscuits. They were so wet and floppy I could hardly handle them. They were just floppy and wet that I finally just tossed it all. Had a temper tantrum then cleaned up my mess LOL. What went wrong? I rechecked the recipe and had followed it exactly.
Hi Sharon, we are so happy to hear you love our recipes! I'm sorry about your experience with this recipe. Did you happen to measure the water and flour with measuring cups or in grams with a kitchen scale? Measuring with cups often leads to excess water and/or flour which can lead to wet, floppy dough.
Loved these biscuits. Thanks for the recipe.
These are light, tender and fluffy biscuits, however they taste slightly metallic from the baking powder. I made them as a side for a pot roast so the taste wasnโt obvious with plenty of gravy and butter, but on their own the flavor was obvious.
Hi CM, Thanks for your feedback! We're glad you found the English muffins light, tender, and fluffy. Weโve never experienced a metallic taste from the baking powder in these, but if that happens, it might help to use an aluminum-free baking powder for a milder flavor. We appreciate you giving them a try!
recommend slightly warmer oven to start then turn down... a lot of butter in recipe and biscuits cld "stall out" rising
Oh my gosh!! These are the best biscuits I've ever made! Thank you so much for this recipe!
Sounds like a great recipe! Please clarify one thing: After allowing the mixture to ferment overnight on counter top, and after adding salt, baking soda, and baking powder, and after cutting the biscuits and placing them in the skillet, do we allow the skillet of unbaked biscuits to rest for another hour, or is that step just for baking biscuits the same day as doing the mixing? Thanks! Cathy
Go ahead and bake them right away!