These fluffy, buttery sourdough biscuits are made with leftover sourdough discard, giving them a hearty flavor and tender texture. They can be made quickly for an easy breakfast, or long-fermented for added flavor and sourdough benefits.

Homemade sourdough biscuits effortlessly pair with any meal. Served with sausage gravy, they are a popular main dish for breakfast; sliced in half, they make the best egg and bacon breakfast sandwiches. Spread them with butter and homemade strawberry jam for a versatile side dish. They can even be topped with sweetened whipped cream and fresh fruit for dessert, just like this sourdough peach cobbler.
When made with sourdough discard and baked right away, these biscuits are quick and easy, while still offering great taste, texture, and nutrition from the addition of the fermented sourdough.
The long-fermented version follows a very similar process but ferments overnight before adding the leaveners. This fermentation time improves the digestion of the grains and makes the nutrients more bioavailable, yielding tender biscuits with deep flavor and lots of sourdough tang.
There’s nothing better than rustic, golden biscuits in a cast-iron skillet, which just happens to be one of my favorite sourdough baking tools.
Why You’ll Love This Recipe
Flavor and texture – You’ll enjoy the distinct tangy flavor of sourdough alongside the buttery and tender texture of these soft, flaky sourdough biscuits.
Better nutrition – The fermentation time provides benefits to your gut health with prebiotics, which feed your probiotics, facilitating a healthier gut microbiome. The process also frees up nutrients in the grains by breaking down phytic acid, resulting in more nutritious biscuits.
Simple and quick – An easy recipe made with simple ingredients, these fluffy biscuits have the best flavor and can be ready in about half an hour. They are also a great way to use up extra sourdough discard!
Ingredients

Flour – I use freshly milled whole wheat white flour, but you can use all-purpose flour.
Cold butter – Cold butter is much easier to work with.
Sourdough discard – For this recipe, you can use an active sourdough starter or discard. Discard will add more sourdough flavor than fed starter.
Baking powder and baking soda – Even though these are sourdough biscuits, there is no kneading like bread, so there is less gluten formation, and in return, less natural rise. The rise comes from these added leavening agents.
Milk or buttermilk – Buttermilk adds another depth of tanginess, but milk also works great.
A full ingredient list with exact amounts can be found in the recipe card below.
How to Make Sourdough Biscuits

Step 1: Preheat the oven to 400° Fahrenheit. Add flour, baking powder, baking soda, sugar, and salt to a large mixing bowl and combine.

Step 2: Chop the cold butter into chunks and add it to the flour mixture. Cut with a pastry cutter until the butter resembles coarse crumbs.

Step 3: Add sourdough discard and buttermilk, stirring until the ingredients are incorporated.

Step 4: Transfer the dough to a lightly floured surface, rolling it out to about 3/4 to 1 inch thick. Cut out the biscuits using a biscuit cutter or even the rim of a glass. Gather biscuit dough scraps together and roll out again, continuing until all the dough is cut into biscuits.

Step 5: Place the cut biscuits onto a well-seasoned cast-iron skillet, a baking sheet lined with parchment paper, or a greased glass baking dish.

Step 6: Bake for 14 to 20 minutes until the edges start to turn golden brown.
Long-fermented Sourdough Biscuits

Step 1: Add flour and sugar to a large mixing bowl and stir. Chop cold butter into cubes and add to the flour, cutting with a pastry blender until the butter resembles coarse crumbs.
Step 2: Add the sourdough discard and buttermilk, stirring until just combined.
Step 3: Cover the bowl with a tight lid (i.e. plastic wrap, lid, beeswax wrap) and place it into the fridge for 24 hours. For best digestion, I recommend three days.
Step 4: The next day, sprinkle baking powder, baking soda, and salt over the top of the fermented dough. Incorporate well.
Step 5: On a lightly floured work surface, roll the dough out to about 3/4 to 1 inch thick and cut out the biscuits. Cut out as many as you can, then gather the scraps and roll them out again. Continue this process until all the dough has been cut into biscuits.
Step 6: Place the biscuits into the prepared cast-iron skillet or baking sheet. Space them out if you’d like to keep them separated, as they will expand while baking. You can also keep them close together, and they can just be pulled apart after baking, which will keep the sides softer.
Step 7: Preheat the oven to 400° Fahrenheit.
Step 8: Bake biscuits for 14 to 20 minutes or until golden.
Tips
- If you have a gluten sensitivity, aim to ferment these biscuits for 24 hours.
- Incorporate cold butter with a pastry cutter, cheese grater, a couple of forks, or even your hands.
- This recipe can use an active starter or discard, and fermentation is optional.
- Cut your biscuits using a biscuit cutter, mason jar, cookie cutter, or anything round. You could also cut them into squares.
- A bench scraper is helpful for transferring the cut biscuits to the baking sheet if they are sticking.
- Add a cup of shredded cheese and some garlic powder to the dough and brush the tops of the biscuits with garlic butter for a savory, cheddar biscuit.
Recipe FAQs
Cooled biscuits can be stored in an airtight container at room temperature for a couple of days, or refrigerated for about a week. Biscuits can also be frozen in a freezer-safe bag or container for up to 3 months. Thaw at room temperature or gently reheat in the oven.
Flat biscuits are often the result of old baking powder and/or baking soda. If these ingredients are not fresh, then they may not provide a good rise. Biscuits can also be flat if the dough is overworked or the oven is not hot enough.
To add more of that delicious sourdough tang, ferment the dough longer. Making a quick biscuit will only give you a slightly sour flavor, while long fermenting the grains (12-24 hours) in a warm spot gives the wild yeast time to ferment the flour and develop that flavor.
Discard can be kept in the fridge for anywhere from one week to several months. Discard still needs to be fed occasionally to keep it from spoiling. If there are signs of mold in your discard, throw it out. For more information, I have a post all about sourdough discard.
Sourdough is so special because not only does it make the grains easier to digest, but it is also more nutritious than non-fermented grains. This is due to grains containing phytic acid, which prevents nutrient absorption. During the fermentation process, phytic acid breaks down, making the nutrients more bioavailable.
More Sourdough Recipes from the Farmhouse
- Sourdough Beignets
- Sourdough English Muffins
- Quick Sourdough Discard Cinnamon Rolls
- Sourdough Coffee Cake
- Sourdough Granola
If you try this recipe and love it, I would love it if you could come back and give it 5 stars! Tag me on Instagram @farmhouseonboone.
















These are insane crazy good! My starter, Ted, was so good with a 24 hour ferment. Thank you for sharing these!!! Happy Thanksgiving from Missouri!
Glad you enjoyed them!
I’m eager to try these!
I’m curious what would happen if I used kefir instead of milk or buttermilk?
Hmmm. I haven’t tried it but I would think it would work just fine. If your kefir is thick, you may need to add milk to it to this it out before adding it to the dough.
Hey Lisa, thank you for everything you do. I use at least one of your recipes a day. Quick question no subing honey for sugar, is it the same amount? Do I just replace the 1 tbsp sugar for 1 tbsp honey? I know in other recipies you say you have to change the amount of flour when you use honey, but maybe not in such a small amount? Thanks for the help.
Wow that is amazing and such a compliment. I think because it is such a small amount it will be ok just substituting one for one.
I did the long fermentation and waited another hour after in baking dish and these biscuits tasted amazing! I do however wish they rose up higher. Any tips on rising?
Flip upside down after the second rise
Everything was going well until I added the buttermilk. Now I have a gloopy mess. Any idea what could have gone wrong? Not my first time making biscuits so I’m a little sad about the waste of ingredients.
Hm I’m not sure. How thick is your sourdough starter?
The same thing happened to me. My starter is active but it isn’t super thick. Any tips on making it thicker? I use organic all purpose flour.
You can just feed it more flour compared to water if desired. I don’t measure my starter perfectly. I guesstimate and base it off of consistency a lot these days.
Thank you. I’ve thickened my starter and am now on attempt #2. Watching your video and reading through this entire article, I’m wondering why you didn’t use milk before letting it sit to ferment when the recipe calls for it?
I wouldn’t waste the ingredients just add a little flour to get it to the right consistency and roll out and cut biscuits. This recipe is very forgiving and good. 😊
My dough was super sticky in the morning, couldn’t even roll out and wouldn’t hold its shape. Does that mean I let it sit on the counter overnight too long? Anything I can do to save it at this point?
It could have over fermented. I would probably try to add more flour to the dough until it comes together.
This was my first sourdough recipe attempt and these biscuits turned out very tasty! Even though I totally spaced and only added half the sourdough I was supposed to last night, then panic added the remaining half this morning just before popping them into the oven, I think they came out fine! I’m grateful this recipe is forgiving!
So glad they turned out great! that happens to all of us at one point or another! Way to improvise!
I have made these several times now and each time they turned out slightly different but all VERY tasty! Do you have a YouTube video with this specific recipe? I’d like to see what the dough looks like pre-fermentation. Thank you for your amazing sourdough recipes! You’re the one I trust for consistently good sourdough breads 🙌
I do have a video, but I believe the recipe has changed a little since then. What a compliment. Thank you. Glad you enjoy the recipes.
Hello, the recipe calls for sugar but then later mentions honey. Which is it and how much??
Bueno! I just bought a 200 year old starter and have been feeding it for 2 weeks. This was my first recipe with the new batch. It came out very good, thank you. I made the doubh before bed and let it sit overnight, cooked for dinner.
PS. I took a few and tried them in my air fryer. The ones for 7 minutes were a little too dark, but the one I cooked at 5 minutes came out much better. I know..an old fashioned biscuit in an old fashioned recipe, but a little modern cooking isn’t always a bad thing. Experiment around with it.
Wow that is cool. I love that, mixing modern times with something so old.