Kimchi Cheddar Biscuits Recipe (2024)

By Bryan Washington

Kimchi Cheddar Biscuits Recipe (1)

Total Time
55 minutes, plus chilling
Rating
4(389)
Notes
Read community notes

Regardless of where, or even when, you’re eating a biscuit, the formula’s the same: a little flour, a little water, frozen butter. A pair of deft, knowing hands and an oven to bring them home. A biscuit can be a side dish of little note, or it can characterize an entire place and time, etching its own corner in your memory. The acidity and crunch of ripe kimchi meld deeply with Cheddar here, and also in versions from Kay Chun and Joy Cho, resulting in a biscuit that traverses multiple flavors from bite to bite. For the best results, chill your butter in the freezer and your buttermilk in the refrigerator for at least an hour.

Featured in: A Great Biscuit Is a Miracle of Care

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Ingredients

Yield:6 biscuits

  • ¾cup/145 grams drained kimchi, finely chopped
  • 2cups/258 grams all-purpose flour (see Tip)
  • 1tablespoon baking powder
  • ½teaspoon baking soda
  • 2tablespoons brown sugar
  • ¾cup/66 grams shredded sharp Cheddar
  • 6tablespoons/85 grams cold unsalted butter, plus more for baking sheet
  • 1cup/240 milliliters cold buttermilk

Ingredient Substitution Guide

Nutritional analysis per serving (6 servings)

340 calories; 16 grams fat; 10 grams saturated fat; 1 gram trans fat; 4 grams monounsaturated fat; 1 gram polyunsaturated fat; 40 grams carbohydrates; 2 grams dietary fiber; 5 grams sugars; 9 grams protein; 506 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Kimchi Cheddar Biscuits Recipe (2)

Preparation

  1. Step

    1

    Stir-fry the chopped kimchi in a stainless-steel pan over medium heat until the juices have evaporated and the kimchi smells even more fragrant, about 3 minutes. Transfer to a plate and allow to cool completely.

  2. Combine the flour, baking powder, baking soda and brown sugar in a bowl, breaking up any lumps of sugar. Add the cheese and the cooled kimchi. Stir to combine; it’s all right if the dough is scraggly.

  3. Step

    3

    On the large holes of a grater, grate the chilled butter over the other ingredients and stir to combine. You want the butter to be around the size of peas. While stirring, gradually add the buttermilk and stir until combined. Be careful to handle the dough as little as possible.

  4. Step

    4

    Drop the dough in 6 mounds onto a greased baking sheet. (If your baking sheet is nonstick, line it with parchment paper instead.) Pat the mounds gently into squares.

  5. Step

    5

    Put the biscuits on their baking sheet in a freezer to chill for at least 1 hour. Heat the oven to 425 degrees.

  6. Step

    6

    Bake the biscuits until golden brown, 18 to 20 minutes. Remove the biscuits from the oven, and allow them to sit for several minutes before serving hot.

Tip

  • For more delicate biscuits, use 1⅔ cups/214 grams all-purpose flour and ⅓ cup/42 grams pastry flour.

Ratings

4

out of 5

389

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Private Notes

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Cooking Notes

Lazy Cook

Save yourself the mess of grating butter: instead, melt the butter and allow to cool slightly. Add the butter to very cold buttermilk. The butter will sieze up into the perfect size bits. Continue with the recipe. It sounds strange, but works perfectly every time. Also try chopping up cheddar cheese CURDS in place of the shredded cheddar block. The curds stay more intact so you get distinct blobs of melted cheese instead of a general cheesiness.

Ellen N.

Scone ingredients usually include sugar; biscuit ingredients don't usually include sugar. Also, biscuits are usually made with buttermilk; scone ingredients usually don't include buttermilk.

Alison L

Great recipe. Made as written and turned out fantastic. Was skeptical about adding brown sugar but added fantastic complexity with kimchi and cheddar. Thanks!

Victor

Like Lazy Cook I do the method of cooled melted butter stirred into cold buttermilk. I got it from Cook’s Illustrated. It’s foolproof and delicious. Cannot wait to try this with Kimchi.

aamcvp

Scott Peaco*ck, chef and dear friend of Edna Lewis, reminds us in his recipe for biscuits, to remember that “biscuits can smell fear”

MAKSQUIBS

You need a better/thicker pan . . . or try cast iron. Biscuits MUST have a very hot oven to rise and brown on top while keeping a pillowy inside.

esther

I always grate cheese for biscuits or pastry. I keep my unsalted butter in the freezer, works better frozen than just chilled

Jo

These are what everyone in the UK will always try to call scones, but biscuit recipes in the US generally don't require eggs.

Harriet

These are delicious but were really missing salt, in my opinion! I sprinkled a bit on each scone while eating and will add 1/2 to 1 tsp to the dough next time.

Nic

Delicious flavor but my biscuits didn’t rise, so I got very tasty biscuit pancakes 🤣Butter not cold enough? Were the cold sheet pans a bad idea? Oven not hot enough?

Timchi

A potluck hit.

Annie

I have made these almost weekly now for a couple months. They have become my favorite anytime snack-they are a perfect blend of spicy, cheesy (white cheddar FTW) with a touch of sweet. The trick/hack of adding melted butter to the cold buttermilk is GENIUS and ensures the softest, fluffiest biscuits with little butter ooze. They freeze beautifully and I find taste best reheated in our toaster oven so I bake them, cool them and immediately freeze for the rest of the week. Perfection!

Harriet

These are delicious but were really missing salt, in my opinion! I sprinkled a bit on each scone while eating and will add 1/2 to 1 tsp to the dough next time.

Tip

Made this to bring camping as an appetizer, was amazing warmed in tinfoil with drinks by the fire

Betsy M.

These biscuits were a fantastic success with my biscuit-loving family. So delicious! Made as directed, freezer step essential. I've made them three times since the recipe was published, by request. Perfect every time and look just like the photo.

James Cooper

This is great both with and without the kimchi. With it, the biscuits go better with savory wishes, without, you can slather them with jam. I used the grating disk of my food processor for both the cheddar and the cold butter. Worked perfectly and mixing was so much easier than using a pastry blender. I assume the freezing makes ice crystals that then convert to steam on baking and make the biscuits lighter. Any other reason?

Tiny freezer

If I don’t have space in my freezer, could I refrigerate overnight / for 24 hours instead?

gmarie

To the cook that noticed a fishy taste, buy vegan kimchi. Otherwise some kimchi contain fish sauce. This is the second time I am making these. The first were great but mor like pancakes. I’m making sue to chill the dough the full hour this time. I love this recipe.

JJM

Don’t put me on blast but I thought these were terrible. Hear me out, the texture and crumb was perfect so the recipe itself has some great qualities. However, I couldn’t taste the cheddar and instead they tasted like fish. Maybe it was the brand of kimchi I used, although it doesn’t taste fishy on its own. I’m not sure what happened but the flavor was so off. I’ve never turned my back on a biscuit before. I couldn’t even choke down 1/2 of one of these.

Peg

This recipe cooked well (light interior, and crispy exterior) and the suggestion to melt butter and add to the cold buttermilk was useful. But I really didn’t like the taste! Could not discern the cheddar at all. Kimchi seemed like a good idea, but was only meh.

worst_1_yet

I wondered what the water in the line "Regardless of where, or even when, you’re eating a biscuit, the formula’s the same: a little flour, a little water, frozen butter." referred to, as I don't use or often see water as an ingredient in buttermilk biscuits. Now I see that there's no water listed in the directions or ingredients. So, I'm still wondering!

Sarah

I thought this recipe had too much baking powder. I could taste it and it burned my tongue. Next time will reduce by half. The kimchi/cheddar combo was good!

AP

The biscuits were tasty and flaky but the couldn’t really taste the kimchi. Will add more and and not cook it off next time.

Annoyed

If you are going to follow this recipe, you should be aware that it actually takes several hours. Who ever said this would take 55 minutes should be sacked.

James Cooper

I think even with the sauteing of the kimchi, I had the biscuits in the freezer in under an hour. I did use my food processor grating disk though.

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Kimchi Cheddar Biscuits Recipe (2024)
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