2-Ingredient Easy Homemade Biscuits
Fluffy, golden brown, and ready in under 20 minutes, these easy homemade biscuits are the perfect companion to breakfast, dinner, or as a snack with a drizzle of honey butter.

The Easiest Way to Make Biscuits from Scratch
Sometimes you just need a basket of warm biscuits on the table without fussing over dozens of ingredients. Lucky for you, we have this easy homemade biscuit recipe handy. With just two simple ingredients, Pioneer Biscuit and Baking Mix plus milk, you’ll have soft, flaky biscuits ready before the gravy even hits the stove!
This recipe skips the long folding process and pastry cutter, but you’ll still end up with buttery biscuits that rise tall and bake up golden brown in a hot oven. If you’ve ever struggled with tough biscuits, this is the recipe to try. It’s nearly foolproof and delivers the best biscuits with very little effort!
Coincidentally, this is also one of the primary ingredients you’ll need if you’re cookin’ up our Easy Chicken and Dumplings with Biscuits!

Ingredients You’ll Need
- Pioneer Biscuit and Baking Mix
- Milk
Tips for the Best Biscuits
Even though this is an easy recipe, a few small tweaks will give you the best results every time:
- Don’t overmix the dough. Stir just until the flour mixture and milk come together. Overworking biscuit dough can lead to tough biscuits.
- Use a lightly floured work surface. This keeps the dough from sticking while you knead and roll.
- Keep your oven hot. Biscuits need a hot oven (450°F) so they rise quickly and form those beautiful flaky layers.
- Spray the tops with cooking spray or brush with melted butter. This helps them bake up golden brown and extra flavorful.
- Cut straight down with a biscuit cutter. Twisting seals the edges and keeps the biscuits from rising as tall.

Step-by-Step Instructions
1. Make the Dough
In a large mixing bowl, stir together the Pioneer Biscuit and Baking Mix with milk just until a sticky dough forms. No food processor or pastry blender needed: this is as simple as stirring with a spoon!


2. Knead Lightly
Turn the dough out onto a lightly floured surface and shape into a ball. Sprinkle a little flour over the top so it doesn’t stick. Knead the dough three to four times, just enough to bring it together.



3. Roll & Cut
Pat or roll the dough to about ½-inch thickness with a rolling pin. Use a round biscuit cutter or the rim of a glass to cut out biscuits. Gather up the scraps, pat them back together, and cut again until all the dough is used.


4. Bake
Place the biscuits on a greased or parchment paper–lined baking sheet. For golden brown tops, spray lightly with cooking spray or brush with a bit of melted butter.


Bake at 450°F for 10–12 minutes, or until the tops of the biscuits are puffed and golden.

5. Serve Warm
Enjoy these hot biscuits fresh out of the oven. They’re perfect with sausage gravy, honey butter, or alongside a hearty Southwest Chicken Soup or Easy Chicken Stew.


Storage Leftovers
If you end up with leftover biscuits, store them in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 2 days. To reheat, pop them in a 350°F oven for about 5 minutes to bring back that soft, fluffy texture. For longer storage, wrap baked biscuits tightly in plastic wrap and freeze. They’ll keep for up to 2 months.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes! Cold buttermilk will give your biscuits a richer flavor and extra-tender crumb.
You can substitute with self-rising flour and a bit of butter or shortening to mimic the mix, though the texture may vary.
Overmixing or adding too much flour is usually the culprit. Handle the dough as little as possible for fluffy biscuits.
Absolutely. Place the dough rounds close together in a greased cast-iron skillet for biscuits with soft edges and golden tops.
They’re delicious any way you slice them: split open with pumpkin butter, drizzled with honey butter, turned into breakfast sandwiches, or served with classic sausage gravy!

Ingredients
- 3 Cups Pioneer Biscuit and Baking Mix
- 1 Cup Milk
Instructions
- Mix ingredients just until dough forms.
- Turn out onto a floured surface and shape into a ball. Sprinkle lightly with flour to prevent sticking. Knead three to four times.
- Pat or roll out to 1/2″ thickness and cut out biscuits.
- Place on a greased baking sheet. I like to spray mine on the top with a bit of cooking spray before baking in a 450-degree oven for ten to twelve minutes.

Pioneer brand is available here in Knoxville, but I have never tried it. I will, though, as I’ve always hated the difficulty with reclosing the inner liner on the Bisquick box. I also like to cook but have never had much luck with biscuits. Maybe now I will tackle your recipe, as it looks pretty easy. Will definitely use Pioneer and would love to win the prize! Thanks for your site, Christy, and your “down home” way of talking to your readers.
Have you compared this to Bisquick? That’s the only kind I’ve used, but this looks inticing. I’ll look for it on the next trip to the grocery. Thanks for a fun recipe~ Donna
This recipe sounds great (haven’t used Pioneer brand but I see I need to look for it at Kroger). Since it’s just the two of us and since I seem to look for an easier way to cook this is a recipe I must try. LOVE this newsletter!!
The grocery stores in Athens Alabama won’t know what is going on when everyone asks for Pioneer Baking Mix! I love your website! Cathy
This comment made me laugh so hard my husband came back here to check on me!
Have you tried the apple dumplin recipe?
4 Granny Smith Apples
2 cans of 8 wal mart crescent rolls
1 & 1/2 cups of sugar
1 tsp. cinnamon
1 can of mountain dew (doesn’t matter if it’s diet or not)
Peel your apples and quarter them. Seperate the crescent rolls and roll the apple quarters in the rolls. You will have 16 apple rolls in a 9×13 baking dish. Sprinkle the sugar and cinnamon on top. Pour the mountain dew around the apples (not on top because you don’t want to wash off the cinnamon and sugar). Bake at 350 for about 35-40 min. Girl, you top it off with some vanilla ice cream and it is to die for. You may already have this recipe but everytime I fix it I always wonder. Cathy
I’m also from the north, but my mom grew up in Louisiana, so I’m eager to learn some of the secrets of the southern cooking I always enjoyed during our visits! I made your buttermilk biscuits this weekend and they turned out great! I’m all for trying another, quick & easy version! I’ve never heard of Pioneer Brand Baking Mix before. I’ll have to see if anyone carries it here.
FINALLY A RECIPE FOR BISQUITS I THINK EVEN I CAN DO, THEY LOOK JUST LIKE THE ONES MY MAMA USED TO MAKE, I HAVE TRIED PIONEER MIX AND ITS GREAT FOR ALOT OF THINGS
I’m a real Southern Belle….originally from Alabama but displaced to Florida as a teenager…..have always made my biscuits like my mother, grandmother and great grandmother from watching then when I was just a youngster! The Pioneer Biscuit Mix sure makes it a whole lot easier and faster….than making biscuits up without it…but no less tastier than from scratch! I liked the way it was packaged when buying groceries and how easy it was to use and store.
Pioneer …… you would make my my ancestorys proud to use your mix!