Homemade Bisquick Recipe: DIY Bisquik (2024)

in Recipes

Love Bisquick? Here is a simple homemade recipe that is easy to make (takes only minutes) and a lot cheaper and probably even healthier for you than the store bought version. Buying an unbleached and/or organic flour and organic shortening is a simple swap to make it better for you. Store this DIY homemade Bisquick recipe in an airtight container in the pantry and you will always have some on hand. We use our homemade bisquik for so many recipes and I love having it already made to reach for instead of from a box. The kids can even help make the batches regardless of age! Great activity for kids of all ages to get in the kitchen 🙂

Ingredients

5 C. flour

3TBSPbaking powder

2 TSP. salt

1 C. shortening (I used butter flavored)

Directions

#1. Combine the flour, baking powder and salt and mix well.

#2. Cut in the 1 cup of shortening. There are two ways to do this; you can use a pastry cutter (or your hands) or a food processor. I love my food processor so that is what I opted to use.

I added in about ½ of the flour mixture and then ½ of the shortening and blended. Then slowly added the rest of the flour and the shortening. Super easy.

Homemade Bisquick Recipe: DIY Bisquik (2)

#3. Transfer to an airtight container and store easily for months at a time, no refrigeration required. Use chalkboard labels to keep track of when you made the batch!

Homemade Bisquick Recipe: DIY Bisquik (3)

What are some of your favorite Bisquick recipes? Have you tried making your own Bisquick before?

Pancakes –

2 C. Mix
1 C. Milk
2 eggs

Waffles –

2 C. Mix
1 1/3 C. Milk
2 tbs vegetable oil
1 egg

Biscuits –

2 C. Mix
2/3 C. Milk

Preheat oven to 450 degrees. Mix ingredients until doughy and knead dough 8-10 times. Cut with a biscuit cutter and bake 8-10 minutes.

[mpprecipe-recipe:2100]

About Brett

I'm a 40 something lifestyle blogger living in Connecticut with my husband and our 3 kids, plus our two rescue pups. We love to hike, travel, play games, watch movies, and just be outside together! Having 3 active kids makes for a hectic schedule and I try to share content, recipes and other things that can help to make today's busy family life simpler, easier, or just plain more fun!

I started working full time at a local middle school in fall 2021 and some of my students are insistent that I am mean.

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Comments

  1. theresa hill says

    how much does all this make?

  2. alice says

    what is shelf life?

    • Brett says

      4-6 weeks

  3. Robyn says

    The salt amount is not showing up for me either. Maybe if I used my laptop it might but I can’t see it on my mobile device.

    • Brett says

      Interesting. It’s there, 2 TSP salt, right under the baking powder!

      • Molly says

        How do u get it like dough to cook and what temp

    • Micki says

      Ingredients

      5 C. flour
      3 TBSP baking powder
      2 TSP. salt
      1 C. shortening (I used butter flavored)
      Instructions

      #1. Combine the flour, baking powder and salt and mix well.
      #2. Cut in the 1 cup of shortening. There are two ways to do this; you can use a pastry cutter (or your hands) or a food processor. I love my food processor so that is what I opted to use.
      I added in about ½ of the flour mixture and then ½ of the shortening and blended. Then slowly added the rest of the flour and the shortening. Super easy.
      Recipe Type: Baking Mix

  4. Christina says

    How much salt??

    • Brett says

      Where are you not seeing the salt? It’s in ingredients

    • Brett says

      It’s in the ingredients.

  5. Terry says

    i cannot see the entire recipe as there is an add over it that I cannot remove.
    Can you rewrite the recipe for me please.

  6. Melissa says

    Would this be good with whole wheat flour?

    • Brett says

      I would try for sure!

  7. Maureen says

    I’ve been wanting to try making my own. Thanks for sharing and I’m pinning.

  8. ellen beck says

    Believe it or not, my Mom and Grandmother both made these premixes up and it was always in containers so it would save a bit of time especially during bbreakfast times. I always liked the pancakes a lot.

  9. Kemi says

    I’m allergic to soy but I’ve made this with butter and then refrigerated or froze. I could try with coconut oil and see how it goes. This is so convenient. Thanks for sharing.

  10. Jan says

    Thanks for this recipe. For those wanting to know how to use it I would just go to bisquick web site and get recipes from there. I love making shortcake with bisquick for my homegrown strawberries.

    • Brett says

      We do that too- so so good. Can’t wait for fresh berries in summer next year…

  11. Meburke says

    Should I follow the “biscuit” recipe to make drop dumplings? In a stew recipe?

    • Brett says

      I would, yes!

  12. Stacey Gannett says

    This is fabulous! I grew up on Bisquick dumplings and drop biscuits and this would be so much cheaper! Thank you so much for sharing and I have pinned for future reference! Stopping in from Lou Lou Girls! Have a great week!

  13. Betsy Barnes says

    I love this recipe! I use Bisquick all the to make Cheesy Garlic Biscuits. My family goes nuts every time I make them, never any leftover and they sometimes argue over the last one! 🙂

    • Susan says

      I would like the recipe for the cheesy garlic biscuits. They sound so good. I would like the measurements and how many it will make

  14. Anne says

    To me, Bisquick has some sort of an off taste, so I’m not a fan. However, I *am* a fan of homemade biscuits, and if this mix makes it fast and easy for me to get a batch of biscuits in the oven, then I’m ever so grateful to you! I pinned your recipe, and I’m going to write it into my baking notebook so I’ll have it handy. Thank you!!

    Do you have any proportions you generally use when making biscuits? Like, how much mix to milk or buttermilk do you use?

  15. shelly peterson says

    I have never made homemade biscuit’s before. this recipe sounds super easy and nice that it lasts a long time in a storage container. Love the chalkboard labels.

    • nedinne says

      I also would like to know the ratio of milk to mix?

      • Brett says

        Pancakes –

        2 C. Mix
        1 C. Milk
        2 eggs

        Waffles –

        2 C. Mix
        1 1/3 C. Milk
        2 tbs vegetable oil
        1 egg

        Biscuits –

        2 C. Mix
        2/3 C. Milk

        Preheat oven to 450 degrees. Mix ingredients until doughy and knead dough 8-10 times. Cut with a biscuit cutter and bake 8-10 minutes.

  16. Dandi D says

    This is a great idea, I’d never thought about making my own before!

Homemade Bisquick Recipe: DIY Bisquik (2024)

FAQs

What can I use if I don't have Bisquick? ›

Yes, you can substitute Bisquick with a combination of flour, baking powder, salt, and shortening or butter. For every cup of Bisquick needed in a recipe, use 1 cup all-purpose flour, 1½ teaspoons baking powder, ½ teaspoon salt, and 2 tablespoons shortening or cold butter.

What are the ingredients in Bisquick? ›

Ingredients. Enriched Flour Bleached (wheat flour, niacin, iron, thiamin mononitrate, riboflavin, folic acid), Corn Starch, Leavening (baking soda, monocalcium phosphate, sodium aluminum phosphate), Dextrose, Vegetable Oil (palm, sunflower, canola, and/or high oleic soybean oil), Sugar, Salt, Monoglycerides.

Is Bisquick just flour and baking powder? ›

Bisquick is essentially self-rising flour (flour with salt and baking powder added) with the addition of some form of hydrogenated vegetable shortening. The shortening is the real point to Bisquick. Basically, it's everything you'd need to make biscuits except the wet so you can can make them faster.

Can you substitute pancake mix for Bisquick? ›

While pancake mix and Bisquick share many ingredients, the two are not the same. The main difference is that the pancake mix is sweeter. Most pancake mixes can be used in place of Bisquick and vice versa in sweet recipes. Compare your pancake mix with Bisquick's ingredient list before swapping.

Is Bisquick just flour? ›

According to the company web site and Wikipedia, Bisquick consists of bleached all-purpose flour with several other ingredients, including fat (shortening), leavening (baking powder), sugar, and salt. It is essentially a self-rising flour with added fat.

Why is Bisquick unhealthy? ›

Regular Bisquick contains trans fats ...

Health-conscious customers object to Bisquick's use of trans fat—specifically, partially hydrogenated soybean and/or cottonseed oil—as an ingredient in the baking mix.

Can I use self rising flour instead of Bisquick? ›

Self-rising flour might be able to be used but it's missing the shortening that is often needed and accounted for in those recipes that use Bisquick so I do not recommend it. How to store homemade Bisquick? Place your Bisquick in an airtight container and store in the fridge for up to 3 months.

What's the difference between Bisquick mix and flour? ›

The Main Differences

Convenience: Bisquick is designed to be a convenient option for baking, as it already contains the necessary leavening agents and fat, whereas flour requires additional ingredients such as baking powder and fat to achieve similar results.

Why did they change Bisquick? ›

The Bisquick available today is not the same one sold early on. In the late 1960s, General Mills decided to change the recipe. They wanted to make biscuits lighter and fluffier in texture. To do this, they added buttermilk and more shortening, and then began selling the product as New Bisquick.

What kind of flour is used in Bisquick? ›

That's why it's called all-purpose. But, it is wheat (endosperm) and only wheat. Bisquick is a mix. Normally used for biscuits, it contains all purpose flour, a fat, salt, and baking powder.

What's the difference between Bisquick and regular pancake mix? ›

Pancake Mix – Pancake mix is a lot like Bisquick, but it may yield a slightly sweeter result due to its sugar content. Jiffy Baking Mix – Use Jiffy baking mix in place of Bisquick and get delicious results!

Can you skip baking powder in a recipe? ›

If you don't have either baking powder or baking soda, consider switching gears and relying on another type of leavener altogether: whipped egg whites. Instead of sparking a chemical reaction to produce carbon dioxide, whipped egg whites introduce air to the batter, bringing natural height to your baked goods.

Is Bisquick and Jiffy the same thing? ›

Yes, Bisquick is the same as Jiffy. They are both included in the category known as ready-to-use baking mixes. Ready-to-use mixes are convenient because they do not require measuring ingredients by hand.

Can you use carbquik instead of Bisquick? ›

A: Yes. I found it is 1 to 1 ratio to bisquick.

Can you substitute eggs in Bisquick? ›

Baking Powder serves as the egg substitute, giving the waffles an extra fluffy quality. Non-Dairy Milk helps form the batter and replace some of the liquid lost from making waffles without eggs. Any kind works! Pure Vanilla Extract enhances the flavor and richness but is optional.

Can I substitute Bisquick for flour? ›

Yes, Bisquick can be used as a substitute for flour when making pie crusts, but it may not produce the same result as using all-purpose flour. Bisquick is a pre-mixed baking mix that contains flour, baking powder, salt, and often other ingredients like shortening or oil.

Can you substitute water in Bisquick? ›

To make Bisquick pancakes without milk (or Bisquick biscuits without milk), substitute an equal amount water or non-dairy milk for the milk called for on the recipe on the package. Add any other ingredients, such as oil and eggs, as instructed.

Is Bisquick the same as baking mix? ›

If you've never had it, Bisquick is simply a premade baking mix made of flour, fat, leavening, and salt. What is this? It's traditionally used to make pancakes or waffles, biscuits, and muffins.

Can I substitute self-rising flour for Bisquick? ›

Best of Culinary adds that Bisquick contains sugar, so if you're using self-rising flour to replace Bisquick in sweet recipes, you also need to add 1-3/4 teaspoons of sugar for every 1 cup of flour.

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