Looking for the best drop biscuits recipe that’s fluffy inside, golden outside, and requires zero rolling or cutting? This complete guide covers everything you need to know! Drop biscuits are soft, tender, rustic biscuits made by dropping spoonfuls of dough directly onto a baking sheet instead of rolling and cutting.

Drop biscuits are our go to recipe when we crave biscuits in a flash! They require no kneading, no shaping, and no special equipment, making them the fastest way to homemade biscuits. If you’re looking for a sweet version loaded with blueberries and some lemon glaze, make this Homemade Drop Biscuits.
Unlike our classic biscuits recipe, or Mayonnaise Biscuits, these easy drop biscuits have
- Succulent crumb with golden tops
- Super tender texture and tender interior
- Slightly irregular shapes, but still rounds
- A unique crisp edge with a super soft center almost cake like.
What Are Drop Biscuits?
Drop biscuits are soft, tender quick breads made by mixing flour, butter, and dairy into a loose dough. The dough is spooned (or dropped) directly onto a parchment paper lined baking sheet before baking.
Unlike rolled biscuits, they are not kneaded or cut, resulting in a rustic shape and a more tender crumb. They bake in about 12–15 minutes and require no rolling pin or shaping.
Why You’ll Love This Drop Biscuits Recipe

- They’re Incredibly Buttery and Flavorful: These biscuits bake up with crisp, golden edges and soft, fluffy centers. The cold butter melts into the dough as it bakes, creating tender pockets and rich flavor in every bite. If you use buttermilk, you’ll also get a subtle tang that balances the richness beautifully.
- The Texture Is Perfectly Rustic: Unlike rolled biscuits, drop biscuits have craggy tops and irregular peaks that turn deeply golden and slightly crisp in the oven. Inside, they’re light and tender, never dense or dry when made correctly.
- They’re Shockingly Easy: No rolling pin, cookie or biscuit cutter and absolutely zero kneading required. You simply mix, scoop, and bake. That makes this recipe ideal for beginner bakers or anyone who wants homemade biscuits without extra steps.
- Ready in About 25 Minutes: From start to finish, you’re looking at 10 minutes prep time for the dough, and 12–15 minutes baking time. That means fresh, warm biscuits on the table in under half an hour. Perfect for busy weeknights or last minute meals.
- Extremely Versatile: This base recipe adapts effortlessly, we added cheddar and seasoning for savory biscuits. You can stir in herbs, add fruits like our blubbery Homemade Drop Biscuits. Swirl jams, add nuts, dried fruits, honey, or your favorite ways to flavor them!
- Foolproof for Any Skill Level, Made with simple ingredients: Because there’s no rolling or cutting, there’s far less risk of overworking the dough. Even if your scoops aren’t perfect, they’ll still bake beautifully.They use simple pantry ingredients so you can start with the basic version.
Ingredients You’ll Need

- All Purpose Flour : Provides structure and is the base of the dough. Avoid bread flour as it creates toughness, while cake flour makes a fragile biscuit.
- Baking Powder: Primary leavening agent so it makes the biscuits rise and fluffy. It reacts with liquid and heat to release carbon dioxide gas. Use fresh baking powder always, to test freshness: add 1/2 teaspoon to hot water, it should bubble immediately.
- Kosher Salt: Balances flavor and enhances butter richness. Other seasonings can be used like garlic powder, Italian seasoning blend, cajun seasoning, fresh herbs and more!
- Cold Butter: The MOST crucial part of successful biscuits is the BUTTER. We use unsalted butter, cold butter is critical for structure and lift. This is what happens in the oven, as the butter melts, water inside it turns to steam. Steam expands and creates air pockets. That’s what makes biscuits fluffy.
- Buttermilk or Whole Milk or Cream: You can use either or. Our Homemade Drop Biscuits are made with buttermilk, and today we made this easy drop biscuit recipe with milk. Buttermilk is more acidic, activates baking powder more aggressively, produces tangy flavor with a more tender crumb. Milk has a neutral flavor and creates a slightly less tender crumb. Heavy cream is the richest in flavor, and offers a more cake like crumb.
- Sugar: To balance the flavors.
- Cheese: We added in some cheddar cheese, which we shredded at home for extra flavor.
- Melted Butter: is used for brushing the baked hot biscuits right out of the oven to infuse it with ore flavor.
How To Make Drop Biscuits
Preheat The Oven
- High heat is non negotiable for tall fluffy biscuits! The heat creates steam from the cold butter before it fully melts.
Make the Dough

- You can use a large mixing bowl as did with our Homemade Drop Biscuits or use a food processor as we did here.

- Start with the dry ingredients always, add flour, baking powder, salt and sugar.
- Process lightly to mix and then add the cold butter. You can use our frozen grated butter technique that we used in our other Homemade Drop Biscuits.

- Alternatively you can use a pastry cutter or your fingers, but we find the food processor to be best for beginner level.
- You want to pulse until you have pea sized chunks of butter within the flour mixture. You should see visible butter pieces. Do NOT smear into paste, the texture should resemble coarse crumbs.
Add Cold Liquid And Flavorings

- Pour the liquid into center and the shredded cheese, herbs and seasoning if using. You can pulse or transfer the mixture into a large bowl and fold gently with spatula.
- The consistency is like a sticky dough, but one that is scoopable.
- Stop mixing when flour disappears. The dough should look shaggy, sticky and uneven.
Use an Ice Cream Scoop

- Our favorite part is scooping the dough! that’s how simple this easy biscuit recipe is! An ice cream scoop is our best bet and favorite tool.
- You can use a regular large tablespoon, make sure to oil it so that you can release the dough easily.
- But an ice cream scoop works easier nonetheless. Spray it with oil and it scoops and releases the dough easier.
Scoop / Drop The Biscuits

- Here’s where the name comes from, the dough is now dropped on to the baking sheet which we lined with parchment paper for easy release.
- Do not attempt to shape the mounds of biscuits or smooth the tops. You want those craggy edges for a crisp golden texture.
Bake The drop biscuits 12–15 Minutes

- Bake them until they’re golden brown, and look for golden peaks, firm tops and an internal temperature of about 200°F.
Rest

- Remember the biscuits as they come out of the oven are SUPER tempting to bite right in to! But the interior will be so hot, so you need to allow steam to settle and the crumb to set.
- Rest it for just 5 minutes before tasting and enjoying them! Follow this guide and tips for perfect biscuits every single time!
Pro Tips For Drop Biscuits
- Cold butter is a CRUCIAL part of this recipe, if in doubt, freeze butter 10–15 minutes before cutting.
- You can use frozen and grated butter if you don’t have a food processor. This is our secret tip for FLAKEY Pie Dough for beginners, and advanced bakers alike! We also used the same technique in our Homemade Drop Biscuits with blueberries and lemon.
- If you feel the dough is warming up, chill it in the fridge for 15 minutes before baking.
- Use an ice cream scoop for easy release and even scooping.
- Make sure to oil lightly the scoop or tablespoons before dropping the biscuits.
- Hot oven temperature is important for the initial rise of the biscuits so make sure you preheat the oven well.
- For an extra lift, bake in cast iron pan as it retains and distributes the heat like no other!
- Space apart for crisp sides, do not overcrowd the baking sheet.
- Brush with melted butter AFTER baking for shine and to infuse flavor.
Drop Biscuits Variations
- Buttermilk Drop Biscuits: Use buttermilk for tender crumb and tang.
- Cheddar Drop Biscuits: Add your favorite cheddar cheese as we did here, shredded. Avoid old and dried cheddar cheeses.
- Garlic Herb Drop Biscuits: Add garlic powder and lots of fresh herbs, some parmesan cheese if you want.
- Sweet Drop Biscuits: Increase the sugar and make it sweet.
- Whole Wheat Drop Biscuits: Use whole wheat flour for a hearty biscuit. The type of flour will determine the type of biscuit.
- Gluten-Free Drop Biscuits: substitute one to one gluten free flour.
- Vegan Drop Biscuits: Use vegan butter and dairy free milk.
- 3 Ingredient Drop Biscuits: Skip the butter, and use flour, cream and baking powder only for this southern classic.

The Science of Fluffy Drop Biscuits
Three forces create height, if any of these fail, the biscuits end up dense. Make sure you stick to those:
- Carbon dioxide from baking powder, make sure it’s fresh before you start.
- Steam from the cold butter, make sure the butter is super cold.
- Rapid oven spring from high heat, always check that your oven is properly heated before baking.
Tips For Texture Control
- For Fluffier biscuits: Use buttermilk and have a slightly wetter dough.
- Richer biscuits: Use heavy cream only.
- Crispier edges: Bake them spaced apart.
- Softer edges: Bake them slightly touching with minimal spaces
What Do Drop Biscuits Taste Like?
The perfect drop biscuits are buttery, soft on the inside and slightly crisp on the outside. They are light but not airy like bread, the feel tender, and not chewy. They should NEVER be gummy, dense, raw, or dry.
Why Are My Drop Biscuits Dense?
This is caused by over mixing the dough, using old baking powder, warm butter of if you added too much flour. make sure to follow the tips above and avoid over working the dough.
Why Didn’t My Biscuits Rise?
You have used Baking powder that’s expired or old, or your oven was not hot enough. Always check and test the baking powder by adding a teaspoon into a cup of hot water and it should fizz, otherwise discard it. Also make sure the oven is hot enough before baking.
Why Are They Gummy Inside?
This happens when the biscuits are underbaked, or if the oven temperature is too low, or if you added too much liquid. Always follow the tips and recipe to avoid these.
Why Are My Biscuits Dry?
They are dry when you used too much flour, you over baked or you didn’t use enough butter. Always follow the recipe and tips above.
Why Did They Spread Too Much?
Biscuits spread too much if you used warm butter or added too much liquid in the dough or didn’t bake at a high enough oven. If you feel the dough is loose, you need to chill it briefly before baking.
Storage & Reheating
- Room Temperature: Up to 2 days in airtight container.
- Refrigerator: Up to 5 days.
- Freezing:Freeze baked biscuits in a ziploc bag up to 3 months.
- Reheat: Oven at 350°F until warmed through. Our favorite way to reheat is in an air fryer at 350 degrees F for just 2-3 minutes.
Can You Freeze The Dough?
Yes. Drop scoops onto tray, flash freeze until solid, then store in freezer bag. Bake directly from froze, but add 2–3 minutes.
What to Serve with Drop Biscuits
Chili, Chicken Taco Soup, Hot Honey Chicken
Beef stew or Lamb Stew
Fried chicken
Honey butter, Apple Butter
Jam, Scrambled eggs, Breakfast sandwiches

What is the difference between drop biscuits and regular biscuits?
Drop biscuits are spooned onto a baking sheet without rolling or cutting. Traditional biscuits are rolled, folded, and cut for flaky layers.
Why are drop biscuits easier?
They require no kneading, shaping, or cutting making them beginner friendly and fool proof.
Can I make drop biscuits without buttermilk?
Yes in fact we shared versions with whole milk and cream, but overall buttermilk produces a more tender, tangy biscuit. To make homemade buttermilk, mix 1 cup of milk plus 1 teaspoon of lemon juice or vinegar.
Why are my drop biscuits tough?
Over mixing the dough develops gluten, that’s why we recommend a food processor and mix just until combined.
Can I make drop biscuits without butter?
Yes, but flavor and texture will change. Oil produces softer texture but less richness.
Can I use self rising flour?
Yes. Since self rising flour already has baking powder, skip the baking powder and salt in the recipe.
How do I make them fluffier?
Use fresh baking powder, cold butter, a hot oven to bake, and avoid over mixing the dough.
Are drop biscuits supposed to be crumbly?
They should be tender but not dry or crumbly.
Are drop biscuits healthier than regular biscuits?
They are similar nutritionally. Health depends on added ingredients.
Fool Proof Baking Recipes
Black Forest Cupcakes
Mini Cheesecakes
Banana Bread Muffins
Cranberry Orange Muffins
Homemade Drop Biscuits
Cinnamon Roll Monkey Bread
Cornbread Recipe
Brownie Pudding
Healthy Oatmeal Cookies
Molten Lava Cake
Mandarin Orange Cake

Drop Biscuits Recipe
Ingredients
- 1 1/2 cups flour all purpose flour
- 2 teaspoons baking powder make sure it's fresh
- 1 teaspoons salt
- 1 teaspoon sugar
- 1 stick butter COLD butter is key
- 3/4 cup buttermilk or whole milk or cream
- 1 cup cheddar cheese shredded
- 1 tablespoon fresh thyme leaves optional
- 2 Tablespoons melted butter for brushing , optional
Instructions
-
Preheat The Oven to 425 degrees F.
-
High heat is non negotiable for tall fluffy biscuits! The heat creates steam from the cold butter before it fully melts.
-
To make the dough, You can use a large mixing bowl as did with our Homemade Drop Biscuits or use a food processor as we did here.

-
Start with the dry ingredients always, add flour, baking powder, salt and sugar.

-
Process lightly to mix and then add the cold butter. You can use our frozen grated butter technique that we used in our other Homemade Drop Biscuits.

-
Alternatively you can use a pastry cutter or your fingers, but we find the food processor to be best for beginner level.
-
You want to pulse until you have pea sized chunks of butter within the flour mixture. You should see visible butter pieces. Do NOT smear into paste, the texture should resemble coarse crumbs.

-
Pour the liquid into center and the shredded cheese, herbs and seasoning if using. You can pulse or transfer the mixture into a large bowl and fold gently with spatula.
-
The consistency is like a sticky dough, but one that is scoopable.
-
Stop mixing when flour disappears. The dough should look shaggy, sticky and uneven.
-
Use an Ice Cream Scoop, about 1-1.5 inch size.

-
You can use a regular large tablespoon, make sure to oil it so that you can release the dough easily.
-
But an ice cream scoop works easier nonetheless. Spray it with oil and it scoops and releases the dough easier.

-
The dough is now dropped on to the baking sheet which we lined with parchment paper for easy release.
-
Do not attempt to shape the mounds of biscuits or smooth the tops. You want those craggy edges for a crisp golden texture.

-
Bake The drop biscuits 12–15 Minutes

-
Bake them until they're golden brown, and look for golden peaks, firm tops and an internal temperature of about 200°F. You can optionally brush them with melted butter as soon as they come out of the oven.
-
Remember the biscuits as they come out of the oven are SUPER tempting to bite right in to! But the interior will be so hot, so you need to allow steam to settle and the crumb to set.

-
Rest it for just 5 minutes before tasting and enjoying them! Follow this guide and tips for perfect biscuits every single time!
Recipe Notes
Pro Tips For Drop Biscuits
- Cold butter is a CRUCIAL part of this recipe, if in doubt, freeze butter 10–15 minutes before cutting.
- You can use frozen and grated butter if you don't have a food processor. This is our secret tip for FLAKEY Pie Dough for beginners, and advanced bakers alike! We also used the same technique in our Homemade Drop Biscuits with blueberries and lemon.
- If you feel the dough is warming up, chill it in the fridge for 15 minutes before baking.
- Use an ice cream scoop for easy release and even scooping.
- Make sure to oil lightly the scoop or tablespoons before dropping the biscuits.
- Hot oven temperature is important for the initial rise of the biscuits so make sure you preheat the oven well.
- For an extra lift, bake in cast iron pan as it retains and distributes the heat like no other!
- Space apart for crisp sides, do not overcrowd the baking sheet.
- Brush with melted butter AFTER baking for shine and to infuse flavor.
Drop Biscuits Variations
- Buttermilk Drop Biscuits: Use buttermilk for tender crumb and tang.
- Cheddar Drop Biscuits: Add your favorite cheddar cheese as we did here, shredded. Avoid old and dried cheddar cheeses.
- Garlic Herb Drop Biscuits: Add garlic powder and lots of fresh herbs, some parmesan cheese if you want.
- Sweet Drop Biscuits: Increase the sugar and make it sweet.
- Whole Wheat Drop Biscuits: Use whole wheat flour for a hearty biscuit. The type of flour will determine the type of biscuit.
- Gluten-Free Drop Biscuits: substitute one to one gluten free flour.
- Vegan Drop Biscuits: Use vegan butter and dairy free milk.
- 3 Ingredient Drop Biscuits: Skip the butter, and use flour, cream and baking powder only for this southern classic.
The Science of Fluffy Drop Biscuits
Three forces create height, if any of these fail, the biscuits end up dense. Make sure you stick to those:
- Carbon dioxide from baking powder, make sure it's fresh before you start.
- Steam from the cold butter, make sure the butter is super cold.
- Rapid oven spring from high heat, always check that your oven is properly heated before baking.
Tips For Texture Control
- For Fluffier biscuits: Use buttermilk and have a slightly wetter dough.
- Richer biscuits: Use heavy cream only.
- Crispier edges: Bake them spaced apart.
- Softer edges: Bake them slightly touching with minimal spaces
What Do Drop Biscuits Taste Like?
The perfect drop biscuits are buttery, soft on the inside and slightly crisp on the outside. They are light but not airy like bread, the feel tender, and not chewy. They should NEVER be gummy, dense, raw, or dry.
Why Are My Drop Biscuits Dense?
This is caused by over mixing the dough, using old baking powder, warm butter of if you added too much flour. make sure to follow the tips above and avoid over working the dough.
Why Didn’t My Biscuits Rise?
You have used Baking powder that's expired or old, or your oven was not hot enough. Always check and test the baking powder by adding a teaspoon into a cup of hot water and it should fizz, otherwise discard it. Also make sure the oven is hot enough before baking.
Why Are They Gummy Inside?
This happens when the biscuits are underbaked, or if the oven temperature is too low, or if you added too much liquid. Always follow the tips and recipe to avoid these.
Why Are My Biscuits Dry?
They are dry when you used too much flour, you over baked or you didn't use enough butter. Always follow the recipe and tips above.
Why Did They Spread Too Much?
Biscuits spread too much if you used warm butter or added too much liquid in the dough or didn't bake at a high enough oven. If you feel the dough is loose, you need to chill it briefly before baking.
Storage & Reheating
- Room Temperature: Up to 2 days in airtight container.
- Refrigerator: Up to 5 days.
- Freezing:Freeze baked biscuits in a ziploc bag up to 3 months.
- Reheat: Oven at 350°F until warmed through. Our favorite way to reheat is in an air fryer at 350 degrees F for just 2-3 minutes.
Can You Freeze The Dough?
Yes. Drop scoops onto tray, flash freeze until solid, then store in freezer bag. Bake directly from froze, but add 2–3 minutes.
What to Serve with Drop Biscuits
Chili, Chicken Taco Soup, Hot Honey Chicken
Beef stew or Lamb Stew
Fried chicken
Honey butter, Apple Butter
Jam, Scrambled eggs, Breakfast sandwiches
What is the difference between drop biscuits and regular biscuits?
Drop biscuits are spooned onto a baking sheet without rolling or cutting. Traditional biscuits are rolled, folded, and cut for flaky layers.
Why are drop biscuits easier?
They require no kneading, shaping, or cutting making them beginner friendly and fool proof.
Can I make drop biscuits without buttermilk?
Yes in fact we shared versions with whole milk and cream, but overall buttermilk produces a more tender, tangy biscuit. To make homemade buttermilk, mix 1 cup of milk plus 1 teaspoon of lemon juice or vinegar.
Why are my drop biscuits tough?
Over mixing the dough develops gluten, that's why we recommend a food processor and mix just until combined.
Can I make drop biscuits without butter?
Yes, but flavor and texture will change. Oil produces softer texture but less richness.
Can I use self rising flour?
Yes. Since self rising flour already has baking powder, skip the baking powder and salt in the recipe.
How do I make them fluffier?
Use fresh baking powder, cold butter, a hot oven to bake, and avoid over mixing the dough.
Are drop biscuits supposed to be crumbly?
They should be tender but not dry or crumbly.
Are drop biscuits healthier than regular biscuits?
They are similar nutritionally. Health depends on added ingredients.


















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