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Posted: 2013-05-29T13:32:11Z | Updated: 2013-05-29T13:32:11Z White Lily Flour: The Southern Biscuit Cook's Pantry Staple | HuffPost Life

White Lily Flour: The Southern Biscuit Cook's Pantry Staple

Depends who you ask, but Southerners will tell you it's White Lily.
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Something that you don't realize when you grow up outside the South: there are a lot of people in this country who take their biscuits very seriously. I got to meet some of those people in Knoxville, Tennessee, at the third annual International Biscuit Festival this month, and every one of them said the same thing when we talked about biscuit secrets : White Lily flour.

White Lily flour , originally founded in Knoxville, although it is now produced in Ohio (Smucker's bought the company in 2006). It's a soft wheat flour, which means that only soft winter wheat, which has an especially low protein and gluten content is used. This is what makes White Lily so light and silky, which makes for lighter, fluffier biscuits. White Lily makes all-purpose flour, a heavier bread flour, a line of cornmeals and even frozen biscuits, but the thing all the biscuit-makers go bananas for is their self-rising flour. The self-rising flour includes exactly the right proportions of flour, baking powder and salt to make perfect biscuits. It's a shortcut even the pros are happy to admit they gladly take.

Can we tell you definitively that White Lily is the best flour for making biscuits? No -- White Lily is pretty hard to find around here, and I am a total biscuit novice. But the hoards of White Lily evangelists are pretty convincing. Don't just take our word for it, watch Husk and McCrady's chef and owner, James Beard Award winner and very serious biscuit enthusiast Sean Brock talk about why White Lily is his only biscuit flour , for Outside Magazine.

When you watch this video, see if you can catch the one small second that is our absolute favorite. The moment where Brock splits open a hot biscuit in one hand, like a ripe grape, straight down middle, without even thinking about it. Those kinds of memorized kitchen behaviors are like a stamp that says "pay attention to what this person says about this food."

Chef Brock says that "biscuits are very personal." That sentiment rang true at the Biscuit Festival as well. It's hard not to be fascinated by biscuits, even if you didn't grow up with them. The idea that flour, butter and buttermilk can come together to create light, fluffy biscuits, dense, chewy biscuits and every variation in between is about as inspired by science as we're likely to get around here.

We know some of you are biscuit people, and we want to know which flour you think is the best. Let us know in the comments! And click over to Outside Magazine for Sean Brock's buttermilk biscuit recipe .

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Before You Go

American Regional Foods
White Lily Flour(01 of23)
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Ask a Southerner, and they'll tell you White Lily Flour makes the world's best biscuits. (credit:White Lily Flour)
Graeter's Ice Cream(02 of23)
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This incredible ice cream almost makes us want to move to Cincinnati. (credit:Graeter's)
Blue Sky Cherry Vanilla Creme Soda(03 of23)
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This soda, originally produced in Santa Fe, NM , tastes like you introduced a can of seltzer to a cream soda and a cherry, they shared an afternoon and went their separate ways, forever imprinted on each other. (credit:Blue Sky Soda)
Scrapple(04 of23)
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Scrapple is sort of like toast made out of meat , and we totally love it.Photo via Flickr user Ron Dollete (credit:Flickr: Ron Dollete)
Sopapillas(05 of23)
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Schnecken(10 of23)
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Narragansett Lager(11 of23)
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Hi neighbor! Have a 'Gansett! Rhode Island's favorite lager, which once commissioned Dr. Seuss to illustrate their advertisements. (credit:Flickr: keith trice)
Moxie(12 of23)
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Coffee Milk(13 of23)
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The Muffuletta(14 of23)
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This New Orleans delicacy is basically an antipasto platter shoved into a sandwich , and we are totally in love. (credit:Flickr: rjv541)
Poutine(15 of23)
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America has totally adopted this Canadian treat of fries, cheese curds and gravy as its own. We love you, adopted poutine. (credit:Flickr: K Tao)
Durkee Famous Sauce(16 of23)
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This mustardy, vinegary mayo spread is rumored to have been loved by Abraham Lincoln. (credit:Durkee)
Underberg(17 of23)
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Too full? You need an Underberg, a bitter German digestif . (credit:Amazon)
Fox's U-Bet(18 of23)
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The key to a proper, Brooklyn egg cream is Fox's U-Bet chocolate syrup . (credit:Fox's U-Bet)
Duke's Mayonnaise(19 of23)
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This southern American staple is the star of tomato and mayo sandwiches, and helped us make the best deviled eggs to ever come out of our kitchen. The secret to Duke's Mayonnaise : no sugar. (credit:Duke's Mayonnaise)
Cheerwine(20 of23)
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You've got to try the "Nectar of North Carolina ." (credit:Cheerwine)
Kringle(21 of23)
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This danish-like pastry is most famously made by Racine Danish Kringles . We had to give a homemade version a go , as well. (credit:Racine Danish Kringles)
Vernors Ginger Ale(22 of23)
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Michigan's favorite ginger ale is also America's oldest. (credit:Flickr: Lens Artwork)
New Mexico Green Chile(23 of23)
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