After not being able to eat biscuits at Red Lobster for a long time, I am really delighted to be able to make these and eat them. Try these biscuits and let me know how you like them. Also, instead of the milk and vinegar, you can use equal parts buttermilk. When I use the coconut milk * from the can, it's thick and can make your biscuits dense, so I generally use ½ parts milk to ½ parts water to make it a better consistency (think of it as skim coconut milk). Any type of milk should work, such as coconut milk or almond milk. But, I must say that butter is my favorite and the most traditional. Sugar, honey, agave, stevia - whatever floats your boat.įor the fat, I used coconut oil, but butter, ghee or olive oil works fine too. The sugar/sweetener really doesn't matter. We use Bob's Red Mill gluten-free flour blend *, but your favorite gluten-free flour blend should work just fine (please let me know if it doesn't, so others will know not to try that brand). Bonus - they have healthy ingredients you can feel good about eating. But now we don't need to because we can make our own biscuits. Needless to say, we don't go to Red Lobster much anymore. Sometimes we just end up saying if one of us can't eat them, no one can. Especially not fun to tell your child they can't eat them but their siblings can. Try going to Red Lobster and not eating the biscuits. My family LOVES Red Lobster's Cheddar Bay biscuits, but they aren't gluten-free. It's a gluten-free red lobster biscuits copycat recipe of those delicious cheddar biscuits they serve at Red Lobster.
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