These Bojangles Blueberry Biscuits are the identical copycat recipe to the famous Bo-Berry biscuits. After testing these almost a dozen times to make sure they were perfect, my family said they couldn't tell the difference. If you're looking for a homemade recipe with all the tips, I can't wait to share this with you.
If y'all know me well, I'm a pro-biscuit maker. Growing up in the South, I learned to make biscuits from my grandmother when I was a little girl. One of my favorite treats is the Bojangles Bo-Berry Biscuits, warm from the drive-thru lane - there's really nothing better. I've always wanted to crack the code on making a version at home with pillowy soft layers, bursts of blueberries, and a drizzle of icing.
I put my biscuits skills to the test and had to troubleshoot these blueberry biscuits multiple times to make them flawless. The end result was totally worth it, and now they're a favorite recipe for breakfast and brunch gatherings.
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If you love biscuits or just trying to learn more about the basics to perfecting the technique, try my Whipping Cream Biscuits. My other favorite flavor variations are the Bacon Cheddar Biscuits and Orange Cranberry Biscuits.
Table of Contents
Why You'll Love this Recipe
- Best Bojangles Bo-Berry Biscuit Copycat. These really do taste identical to the famous Bojangles recipe!
- Great to Make-Ahead. Perfect for a party or to take to someone's house. They also freeze well to make at a later date.
- Flaky, Buttery Layers. No dense biscuits here, I made sure to include detailed instructions for the best final product.
- Pantry Staples Recipe. Most of the ingredients are already in your kitchen, which saves you both time and money!
Ingredients for Bo-Berry Biscuits
Scroll Down for Ingredient Amounts Listed in the Recipe Card Below
For the Biscuits:
- Salted Butter: The key ingredient to making biscuits light and flaky. Be extra sure your butter is very cold for the best product, we recommend freezing for 10 minutes before using.
- Self-Rising Flour: Gives the structure to the biscuit and already has some baking powder in it to help give the dough a nice rise when baked.
- Granulated Sugar: You don't need much, just a hint to sweeten the dough.
- Baking Powder: This is the key secret to this recipe. You'll want to add more baking powder in addition to what is in the self-rising flour for the perfect biscuits.
- Fresh Blueberries: Adds a touch of natural sweetness and are just so delicious when baked.
- Whole Buttermilk: Another ingredient that's required to be chilled well before making the recipe. Adds additional fat and flakiness to the dough and binds all the ingredients together.
For the Icing:
- Powdered Sugar: The base of the icing, if your icing is too thin, just add a spoonful at a time more until the right consistency.
- Lemon Juice: Great acidic flavor to balance the sweetness of the sugar.
- Whole Milk: Adds creaminess to the icing, a little goes a long way!
- Vanilla Extract: Gives that classic vanilla flavor to compliment the blueberries.
Laura Ashley's Tip: The key to a great biscuit is to make sure your butter is lightly frozen and buttermilk is ice cold. This helps to release steam in the dough when baked for perfect flaky layers.
Tools You'll Need
- 12-inch Cast Iron Skillet
- Mixing Bowl
- Liquid Measuring Cups
- Measuring Cups and Spoons
- Biscuit Cutter
- Silicone Baking Mat
How to Make Copycat Bojangles Blueberry Biscuits
- In a large mixing bowl, whisk together flour, baking powder, and granulated sugar.
- Grate frozen butter and toss with the flour mixture. Freeze 10 minutes.
- Gently fold in the fresh blueberries until evenly distributed.
- Make a well in the center of the dry mixture and pour in buttermilk. Stir with a wooden spoon or spatula until the dough just comes together. Be careful not to overmix.
- Turn the dough out onto a lightly floured surface. Gently pat it into to about 1 inch thickness Do not use a rolling pin.
- Using a biscuit cutter or a sharp knife, cut out biscuits. Reshape scraps as needed, working the dough as little as possible.
- Line a baking sheet with parchment paper or lightly grease it. You can also use a greased 12-inch cast iron skillet. Place dough rounds on the prepared pan.
- Bake in a preheated 475ºF oven for 25-30 minutes or until golden browned.
- Brush with melted butter.
- For the icing, in a small bowl combine powdered sugar, lemon juice, vanilla extract, and milk. Mix until well combined. Transfer the icing to a ziploc bag.
- Once the biscuits are done baking, remove them from the oven and brush with melted butter. Allow them to cool for a few minutes, then transfer to a wire cooling rack.
- Snip one corner of the bag with scissors. Drizzle the icing over the biscuits.
Expert Tips for Recipe Success
- Avoid over mixing the dough. This will yield dense biscuits. Once the dough "just comes together in the bowl, turn onto your floured surface for rolling and folding.
- Make self-rising flour at home easily. It's just all-purpose flour with baking powder and salt. The ratio is for every 1 cup of self-rising flour, you can use 1 cup of all-purpose flour, 1 ½ teaspoons of baking powder, and ¼ teaspoon of salt.
- Dust off any loose flour. This is when you are rolling and folding the dough. Any leftover flour will prevent the biscuit layers from sticking to each other.
- Measure flour correctly. Be sure to spoon the flour into the measuring cup and level it with a knife. Too much flour makes for a dense dough. One cup of flour weighs 4 ounces.
- Cut the biscuits into different shapes. A square, round, or large biscuit are all great. For miniature biscuits, rolls them a little thinner so that they aren't so tall that you can't split and fill them with jam or meat.
- Use only fresh blueberries. Frozen and thawed blueberries have lots of juice that will compromise the texture of the biscuit.
- Salted vs. Unsalted Butter: There is salt premixed in self-rising flour. I've tested these biscuits using both salted and unsalted butter, and both ways have been satisfactory for the level of salt for our palate. Per feedback, if using unsalted butter, you might prefer adding ½-1 teaspoon salt.
Storage & Freezing
General storage for these biscuits is in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 4 days. Do not refrigerate or else this will change the texture.
Freezing the baked biscuits works great! I recommend not icing them if you do this. Freeze the baked biscuits in a zip top bag or freezer safe container for 1 to 2 months. Thaw on the counter overnight and warm through in the oven at 300ºF for 5 to 10 minutes. Drizzle over the icing after they have cooled slightly.
You can also freeze raw biscuit dough that's been cut into rounds. Just place on a baking sheet lined with parchment paper. Place in the freezer for 1 hour until solid then transfer to a zip top bag or freezer-safe container to store for 1 to 2 months. Bake the biscuits from frozen, just keep an eye on the timing, it will take longer than the recipe.
FAQs
They're served at the Southern fast-casual restaurant called Bojangles. A warm and flaky biscuit with lots of blueberries and a drizzle of icing on top.
Drop biscuits are wetter in texture than regular biscuits and are not kneaded or rolled. Drop biscuits and scooped onto a baking sheet similar to cookie dough and then baked.
All you need is all-purpose flour, baking powder, and salt. The ratio is for every 1 cup of self-rising flour, you can use 1 cup of all-purpose flour, 1 ½ teaspoons of baking powder, and ¼ teaspoon of salt.
Be sure not to over-mix the dough, measure your flour correctly, and gently fold the ingredients together.
Make sure you are dusting off the excess flour every time you fold the dough. If you don't, then the layers of dough won't stick together and this causes uneven rising.
More Easy Biscuit Recipes
Bojangles Blueberry Biscuits
Ingredients
Biscuits
- ½ cup salted butter frozen 10 minutes
- 2 ½ cups self-rising flour
- 1 tablespoon granulated sugar
- 1 ½ teaspoons baking powder
- 1 cup fresh blueberries
- 1 ¼ cup chilled whole buttermilk
- 1 tablespoon salted butter melted
Icing
- 1 ½ cups powdered sugar
- 2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
- 1-2 teaspoons milk
- ½ teaspoon vanilla extract
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 475ºF. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper or lightly grease it. You can also use a greased 12-inch cast iron skillet.
- In a large mixing bowl, whisk together flour, baking powder, and granulated sugar.
- Grate frozen butter and toss with the flour mixture. Freeze 10 minutes.
- Gently fold in the fresh blueberries until evenly distributed.
- Make a well in the center of the dry mixture and pour in buttermilk. Stir with a wooden spoon or spatula until the dough just comes together. Be careful not to overmix.
- Turn the dough out onto a lightly floured surface. Gently pat it into to about 1 inch thickness Do not use a rolling pin.
- Using a biscuit cutter or a sharp knife, cut out biscuits. Reshape scraps as needed, working the dough as little as possible.
- Place dough rounds on the prepared pan. Bake 25-30 minutes or until golden browned. Brush with melted butter.
- For the icing, in a small bowl combine powdered sugar, lemon juice, vanilla extract, and milk. Mix until well combined. Transfer the icing to a ziploc bag.
- Once the biscuits are done baking, remove them from the oven and brush with melted butter. Allow them to cool for a few minutes, then transfer to a wire cooling rack.
- Snip one corner of the bag with scissors. Drizzle the icing over the biscuits.
Video
Notes
- Avoid over mixing the dough. This will yield dense biscuits. Once the dough "just comes together in the bowl, turn onto your floured surface for rolling and folding.
- Make self-rising flour at home easily. It's just all-purpose flour with baking powder and salt. The ratio is for every 1 cup of self-rising flour, you can use 1 cup of all-purpose flour, 1 ½ teaspoons of baking powder, and ¼ teaspoon of salt.
- Dust off any loose flour. This is when you are rolling and folding the dough. Any leftover flour will prevent the biscuit layers from sticking to each other.
- Measure flour correctly. Be sure to spoon the flour into the measuring cup and level it with a knife. Too much flour makes for a dense dough. One cup of flour weighs 4 ounces.
- Cut the biscuits into different shapes. A square, round, or large biscuit are all great. For miniature biscuits, rolls them a little thinner so that they aren't so tall that you can't split and fill them with jam or meat.
- Use only fresh blueberries. Frozen and thawed blueberries have lots of juice that will compromise the texture of the biscuit.
Angie
Oh my goodness, these were amazing. I guess my oven cooks hotter and faster. I did mine for 20 minutes and they were golden brown top and bottom and cooked inside nice and tender. 10/10 will be making again soon.
Laura Ashley
YAY!! That makes my heart so happy! Thank you so so much!!
Jessica
I’ve made these biscuits several times for my family and we all LOVE them! I want to make them for our staff meeting at work but don’t want to get up extra early. What is your suggestion on making them fresh the night before and heating them the next morning so they taste “just baked”?
Laura Ashley
I have always made these fresh, but I've made my buttermilk biscuits the night before and they work great. I would assume these would be great as well. Thank you again for making them and liking them so much!! 🙂
Michaela Kenkel
These taste EXACTLY like the original Bo Berry biscuits! I have made them twice this week! Thank you!
Laura Ashley
WAHOO!! I'm so happy you felt they were spot on and liked them!!
Jules
These biscuits are perfect for every meal. We enjoyed them with a cup of soup and with my coffee the next morning.
Laura Ashley
YAY!! I'm so happy you made them and liked them so much!!
Kathleen
I just accidentally overbought blueberries so I am making all things blueberry! These are so light, fluffy, flavorful -- you nailed it!
Laura Ashley
WAHOO!! That is wonderful!! I'm so happy you liked them so much...and had a yummy way to use those extra blueberries!
Christy Ann Atwood
Made these and they were a hit! Love them!
Laura Ashley
That's wonderful! I'm so happy you liked them so much!!
Allye
Is it possible you meant to say 1-2 tablespoons of milk for the icing? Also, the recipe notes speak of a ‘gravy’. Think this may be an accidental note from a different recipe.
Laura Ashley
I've corrected the notation of gravy and no, it's 1-2 teaspoons as written 🙂 You can add more if you'd like thinner icing.
Jeannette
Can you substitute strawberries in this recipe?
Laura Ashley
Yes, you can 🙂
Allye
I made these biscuits following the recipe and I would have the following suggestions…
1 cup of flour is actually closer to 4.25 ounces. If you’re measuring by weight I recommend following that conversion instead of what this recipe suggests, which is 4 ounces.
Make sure you use a pan that keeps your biscuit rounds close together. This helps ensure they raise up versus spreading out and resulting in flat biscuits.
I would also include at least one envelope fold after turning your dough out. This helps with lamination and will make a flakier dough.
Last note: I added twice as much sugar as this recipe suggested and added a tsp of salt. In my opinion, this resulted in a biscuit that tasted more like what it’s imitating and was just more tasty overall.
Also, if you notice the biscuits browning too quickly in your oven, try covering them in tinfoil for the first 15 minutes of baking.
The icing recipe was spot on! I needed the modifications I made as my first batch turned out flat in shape and dull in flavor.
Laura Ashley
Thank you so much for making the biscuits and for your feedback! As written, the biscuits have turned out exactly how we like them, and I hadn’t received these points of feedback from those who have successfully made them as well. Regarding the flour, that’s a great suggestion for weighing it with a scale. To your point about the size of the baking dish, I specify using a 12 inch skillet, but that’s a good point that folks should consider if they don’t follow my instruction and consider using a bigger baking dish. I don't prefer folding the dough for my version of this recipe, but do in my homemade buttermilk biscuits. Good to know that's a method you find helpful for them. I’m happy to hear you liked the icing! As far as the salt, during my multiple tests and trials of these biscuits, I have made it with both salted butter and unsalted butter. I have liked it both ways without adding additional salt other than what’s in the self rising flour. Considering that you felt it was a little under salted, I went ahead and made a special note under “expert tips for recipe success” about salted versus unsalted butter and specified salted butter for my recipe. I wouldn’t add additional sugar for my version of the recipe, but that’s a great suggestion for those who might like it a little sweeter. Thank you again for your feedback as this is great information for folks who might be considering altering the recipe or adapting it in different ways.
Elizabeth
My dough was so sticky and the biscuits were flat. I followed the recipe EXACTLY. I even measured my flour on a kitchen scale. Help 😫
Laura Ashley
I haven't had this feedback for these and hundreds of folks have sent me successful picture, so I will note a few things to troubleshoot:
1) make sure you used self-rising, not all-purpose flour
2) the butter was properly frozen before grating and then frozen again with the flour
3) buttermilk was whole and chilled - and measured exactly
4) all measurements were the same as noted in the recipe
It had to be one of these that caused it to happen. Sometimes flour varieties can change the texture, but not so much that it would make them sticky. In the future, if your dough is sticky making any sort of biscuit, you can add 2 tablespoons more flour at a time until it's the correct texture.
Of all of my recipes, this one I tested the most before perfecting them, so I know the measurements are correct. They plum wore me out LOL! I hope you have better success next time!