Vintage 7Up Biscuit Recipe - Semi Homemade Recipes (2024)

bread / Vintage 7Up Biscuit Recipe

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Step back in time with a modern twist on the beloved vintage 7Up biscuits. This Vintage 7Up Biscuit Recipe shares a unique variation that combines the nostalgia of the past with a contemporary flavor profile. Get ready to savor the best of both worlds!

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Vintage 7Up Biscuit Recipe - Semi Homemade Recipes (1)

I found this 7Up Biscuit recipe card in a batch of recipe cards that I got from an antique shop and I’m so glad that I found it.

I love homemade biscuits but I think that these 7Up biscuits may be my new favorite! They’re so fluffy and sweet and soft! I just love them.

Plus they’re super easy to make.

The simplicity of the ingredients and the ease of preparation made vintage 7Up biscuits an instant hit in kitchens the south and now you can make them at home!

Vintage 7Up Biscuit Recipe - Semi Homemade Recipes (2)

Ingredients For Vintage 7Up Biscuits:

  • Bisquick mix
  • sour cream
  • 7UP
  • melted butter

Ingredient amounts and entire recipe directions in recipe card below with print option!

Vintage 7Up Biscuit Recipe - Semi Homemade Recipes (3)

Which Brands Did I Use For This 7 Up Biscuit Recipe?

Sometimes when it comes to Semihomemade recipe that use packaged foods to create meals, the brands of items can make or break a dish. I don’t think this ALWAYS happens but I do know that not all packaged items are created equally.

Baking mixBisquick Brand

Sour Cream – Daisy Brand – Sour Cream

7UP – 7Up Soda (not diet)

Melted Butter – any brand

How To Make Vintage 7Up Biscuits:

  1. Preheat oven and get dry ingredients together in a mixing bowl.
    Vintage 7Up Biscuit Recipe - Semi Homemade Recipes (4)

  2. In a bowl, mix together the Bisquick, sour cream and 7UP together until everything is combined.
    Vintage 7Up Biscuit Recipe - Semi Homemade Recipes (5)

  3. Lightly dust a flat working space with a bit of Bisquick.

    Vintage 7Up Biscuit Recipe - Semi Homemade Recipes (6)

  4. While butter is melting, from biscuit dough into a semi rectangle shape, about an inch or 1.5 inches thick. Gently pat the dough out to desired thickness.

    The dough will be very sticky and very soft dough. Use extra Bisquick to keep dough from sticking to your hands or board.

    Vintage 7Up Biscuit Recipe - Semi Homemade Recipes (7)

  5. Use a large biscuit cutter to cut out biscuits.

    Vintage 7Up Biscuit Recipe - Semi Homemade Recipes (8)

  6. Add a stick of butter to a 9×9 pan pop it into the oven to melt.
    Vintage 7Up Biscuit Recipe - Semi Homemade Recipes (9)

  7. Place biscuits on top of hot melted butter.

    Vintage 7Up Biscuit Recipe - Semi Homemade Recipes (10)

  8. Pop into preheated oven and bake for 15 minutes.
    Vintage 7Up Biscuit Recipe - Semi Homemade Recipes (11)

  9. Remove and brush with butter.
    Vintage 7Up Biscuit Recipe - Semi Homemade Recipes (12)

  10. Bake 3-4 more minutes until golden brown.
    Vintage 7Up Biscuit Recipe - Semi Homemade Recipes (13)

  11. Remove the let cool.

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Do I Need A Biscuit Cutter To Make These 7Up Biscuits?

You don’t. You can use a round glass to cut out biscuits, as well as a ring lid for a mason jar. You could also just use a knife to cut out square biscuits.

What To Serve With 7-Up Biscuits?

  • Butter
  • Jelly
  • Jams

More Bread Recipes:

More Vintage Recipes:

Vintage 7Up Biscuit Recipe - Semi Homemade Recipes (15)

Vintage 7Up Biscuit Recipe

Vintage 7Up Biscuit Recipe - Semi Homemade Recipes (16)

Vintage 7Up Biscuits

Yield: 9-12 depending on size

Step back in time with a modern twist on the beloved vintage 7Up biscuits. This Vintage 7Up Biscuit Recipe shares a unique variation that combines the nostalgia of the past with a contemporary flavor profile. Get ready to savor the best of both worlds!

Ingredients

  • 4 cups Bisquick mix
  • 1 cup sour cream
  • 1 cup 7UP
  • 1/2 cup melted butter + extra for brushing

Instructions

  1. In a bowl, mix together the Bisquick, sour cream and 7UP together until everything is combined.
  2. Lightly dust a flat working space with a bit of Bisquick.
  3. Preheat oven to 425F.
  4. Add a stick of butter to a 9x9 pan pop it into the oven to melt.
  5. While butter is melting, from dough into a semi rectangle shape, about an inch or 1.5 inches thick. Gently pat the dough out to desired thickness.
  6. The dough will be very sticky and wet. Use extra Bisquick to keep dough from sticking to your hands or board.
  7. Use a large biscuit cutter to cut out biscuits.
  8. Place biscuits on top of hot melted butter.
  9. Pop into preheated oven and bake for 15 minutes.
  10. Remove and brush with butter.
  11. Bake 3-4 more minutes.
  12. Remove the let cool.

Notes

Can I use Diet Soda for this? I have not tried using Diet Soda for this recipe.

If you make this recipe, snap a picture and share it onInstagramor Facebookwith the hashtag#semihomemaderecipesWe love to see what you’re making from the blog!

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Vintage 7Up Biscuit Recipe - Semi Homemade Recipes (2024)

FAQs

How did they make biscuits in the old days? ›

beaten biscuits are what people made in the days before baking soda and baking powder was around. In order to get the biscuits to rise, cooks would beat the dough with a mallet, rolling pin, or even an ax for over half an hour util it blistered.”

What does adding cream of tartar to biscuits do? ›

As the biscuits rise, the carbon dioxide gas expands, creating pressure on the dough. This pressure can cause the dough to collapse without proper support. Cream of Tartar helps stabilize the dough structure, ensuring the biscuits maintain their shape and rise uniformly.

What is Joanna Gaines biscuit recipe? ›

Ingredients
  1. 4 cups self-rising flour, plus more for the work surface*
  2. 2 tablespoons baking powder.
  3. 1 teaspoon baking soda.
  4. 3 sticks salted butter (¾ pound), cold, cut into ½-inch pieces or grated.
  5. 2 large eggs, beaten, plus 1 large egg for brushing.
  6. 1½ cups buttermilk, or as needed, plus 1 tablespoon for brushing.
Feb 13, 2024

Which liquid makes the best biscuits? ›

Just as important as the fat is the liquid used to make your biscuits. Our Buttermilk Biscuit recipe offers the choice of using milk or buttermilk. Buttermilk is known for making biscuits tender and adding a zippy tang, so we used that for this test.

What happens if you use baking soda instead of baking powder in biscuits? ›

That is why you will notice that recipes usually call for a small amount of baking soda, typically ¼ teaspoon per 1 cup of flour. Do not make the mistake of trying to substitute equal parts baking soda for baking powder in recipes. Your baked goods will have no leavening, be quite flat, and have an altered taste.

What is the oldest biscuit? ›

DISCOVER Aberffraw biscuits & Cornish pasties

THE ABERFFRAW BISCUIT (or cake) goes by a number of names, but whatever you call it, with a tradition dating back to the 13th century, it's often held up as the oldest recognised biscuit in Britain.

What does cornstarch do in biscuits? ›

The cornstarch lowers the protein of the flour, which produces a more tender biscuit. The heavy cream provides the fat that helps create the flaky layers in great biscuits.

What does egg white do in biscuits? ›

Eggs are natural binders, helping hold all other baking ingredients together and increasing the viscosity of batters and doughs. Egg white has the capability to gel and is frequently used as a binding agent in many different prepared foods.

What happens when you add more butter to biscuits? ›

Increasing the amount of butter definitely makes the biscuit "taste" softer, more crumbly, and more flaky.

How do you make Paula Deen's biscuits? ›

directions
  1. Preheat oven to 400ºF.
  2. Dissolve yeast in warm water; set aside.
  3. Mix dry ingredients together.
  4. Cut in shortening. ...
  5. Add yeast and buttermilk and mix well.
  6. Turn dough onto lightly floured surface and roll out to desired thickness.
  7. Cut with small biscuit cutter and place on greased baking sheet.

What are the ingredients in farmhouse biscuits? ›

With a love of old family recipes, the finest ingredients, traditional baking methods and above all a simple love of baking biscuits. INGREDIENTS: Flour (Wheat Flour, Calcium, Iron, Niacin, Thiamin), Vegetable Oils (Rapeseed, Sustainable Palm), Sugar, Salt, Flavourings, Raising Agent: Sodium Hydrogen Carbonate.

How to make a Mary Berry biscuit? ›

Method
  1. Pre-heat oven to 180°C /fan 160°C/ gas 4. ...
  2. Mix the butter with the caster sugar.
  3. Add the self-raising flour and mix it in well. ...
  4. Using your hands, bring the mixture together to form a dough.
  5. Take a walnut size amount and roll it into a ball and place it on a baking tray. ...
  6. Get a fork and dip it in warm water.
Jan 3, 2024

What is the secret to an excellent biscuit? ›

Do not Overwork Biscuit Dough. Handle the dough as little as possible. Every time you touch, knead and fold, you are developing gluten. The more developed the gluten, the tougher the biscuit.

What is the secret to a good biscuit? ›

There are several secrets to good biscuits:
  • Use a good recipe.
  • Measure carefully (flour is compressible). ...
  • Used chilled ingredients. ...
  • Use a flour made from soft wheat if you can. ...
  • Cut the fat (butter, shortening or both) into the flour with a pastry cutter until the pieces of fat are pea sized.
Apr 27, 2021

Is butter or crisco better in biscuits? ›

So what's the final verdict? Butter is the winner here. The butter biscuits were moister with that wonderful butter taste and melt-in-your mouth texture. I'd be curious to test out substituting half or just two tablespoons of the butter with shortening to see if you get the best of both.

How was the first biscuit made? ›

The Earliest Evidence

The Romans certainly had a form of biscuit, what we'd now call a rusk and, as the name suggests, it was essentially bread which was re-baked to make it crisp. It kept for longer than plain bread, and was useful for travellers and soldiers' rations.

What makes Southern biscuits different? ›

What makes biscuits Southern? Besides being passed down by beloved grandmothers, Southern biscuits are typically made with flour made from soft red winter wheat, such as White Lily.

How did they make biscuit? ›

The biscuit making process is elaborate and continuous. The ingredients are combined to form a dough, which is kneaded and rolled to a uniform thickness. It is cut into biscuit shapes and placed in a travelling oven. Some biscuits necessitate special preparation and cooking methods.

Why were biscuits cooked twice? ›

The Old French word bescuit is derived from the Latin words bis (twice) and coquere, coctus (to cook, cooked), and, hence, means "twice-cooked". This is because biscuits were originally cooked in a twofold process: first baked, and then dried out in a slow oven.

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