Homemade Cornbread Biscuits (3 Ways)

These cornbread biscuits are golden, buttery, and make the perfect side for so many meals. A touch of honey adds subtle sweetness, while cornmeal adds flavor, a lightly crisp texture, and beautiful golden color. Using cold butter and buttermilk helps promise wonderfully tender, sky-high layered biscuits. Make them plain, or try one of our flavorful variations: jalapeño cheddar or maple bacon.

cornbread biscuits with sea salt.

What Are Cornbread Biscuits?

If you love classic buttermilk biscuits and sweet, buttery cornbread, today’s recipe brings the best of both quick breads together. These homemade cornmeal biscuits are tender, golden, and layered with buttery goodness, with just enough cornmeal and honey to add texture, flavor, and a subtle hint of sweetness. They bake up tall with crisp edges, soft centers, and irresistible homemade flavor.

Perfect served warm with honey butter or cinnamon butter, alongside barbecue, tucked next to a bowl of chili, or as part of a summertime dinner, these cornmeal biscuits are simple to make and endlessly versatile.

Or try them for breakfast, alongside eggs and maple chicken breakfast sausage!

cornbread biscuits in blue gingham linen-lined basket.

Why You’ll Love These Cornbread Biscuits

  • Extra flaky layers from cold butter and folding the dough
  • Soft, tender interiors with lightly crisp edges
  • Buttermilk keeps the biscuits flavorful and moist
  • Cornmeal adds flavor and texture without making them dry
  • Easy recipe with simple pantry ingredients
  • Delicious savory or sweet—try our favorite variations or come up with your own!

One reader, Emily, commented:What a great combo—cornbread and biscuits. Yum! Easy to make, great directions as usual, and very yummy. My family of 4 finished the whole batch except for 2 (and we are all eyeballing those leftovers, trust me!). Served them with the honey butter and some chili. Perfect combo. ★★★★★

Another reader, Elizabeth, commented:These cornbread biscuits were easier to make than I thought, and they came out amazing. Think flaky biscuit with a cornmeal crunch! So delicious. ★★★★★

Another reader, Nikki, commented:Goodness, these are so delicious! Easier to prepare than I expected. I had a 2.5-inch biscuit cutter and ended up with a perfect dozen. I made the regular version and now can’t wait to try the other two. We ate them as they came out of the oven, warm and soft, with pillowy layers and great flavor. Yum! ★★★★★


Grab These Ingredients

You need just 8 basic ingredients. With so few ingredients, it’s important to reach for quality ingredients and avoid any substitutions.

  • All-Purpose Flour: The structural base of these cornbread biscuits.
  • Cornmeal: A small amount of fine or medium-ground yellow cornmeal gives these biscuits their signature flavor and texture.
  • Baking Powder & Baking Soda: These leaveners work together for tall, fluffy biscuits with plenty of lift.
  • Salt: Key for flavor.
  • Butter: Cold butter is the secret to flaky biscuits. As the cold butter melts in the oven, it releases steam, lifting the biscuits up and creating all those beautiful layers. It’s the same principle that creates flaky layers in pie crust, scones, and other biscuit recipes.
  • Buttermilk: Buttermilk creates tender biscuits with rich flavor. If you don’t have buttermilk, you can use a DIY buttermilk substitute in a pinch, but real buttermilk produces the best texture.
  • Honey: The key to a lightly sweet cornbread biscuit is honey! But feel free to use maple syrup instead, especially if making the maple bacon cornbread biscuit variation detailed below.
ingredients in bowls including cornmeal, flour, buttermilk, honey, and butter.

Cornbread Biscuit Dough

Whisk the dry ingredients together, then add the cold cubed butter. Cut the butter into the dry ingredients with a pastry cutter, like when making pie crust or this savory quick bread, or pulse in a food processor. Cut/blend in the butter, then add the cold buttermilk and honey. Mix everything together until you have a shaggy dough, like this:

dough in glass bowl with pink spatula.

Pour it out onto a work surface and bring the dough together with your hands. It will be dry and shaggy with a few moist spots. That’s all perfectly normal:

cornmeal dough on marble surface.

Fold & Flatten the Dough

Flattening and folding biscuit dough creates multiple flaky layers, just as it does when we make homemade croissants, rough puff pastry, homemade cruffins, mille-feuille, and croissant bread. This step only takes a couple minutes, and it makes the biggest difference in how your biscuits turn out.

First, shape the dough into a rectangle about 3/4 inch thick. Fold one side into the center, then fold the other side over top, like folding a business letter.

hands flattening and folding dough.

Turn the folded dough 90 degrees so it’s now horizontal, flatten to 3/4-inch thickness, and repeat that folding process 2 more times.

Use a biscuit cutter to shape into rounds. If you don’t have a biscuit cutter, you can cut into squares instead. Gather the scraps together, refold a few times, and cut more biscuits until you use up the remaining dough.

flattened dough being cut with biscuit cutter.

For the pictured cornbread biscuits, I used a 2-inch biscuit cutter, which gave me 15–18 smaller biscuits. If you have a larger biscuit cutter, that’s fine too. A 2.5-inch biscuit cutter should give you about 10–12 cornbread biscuits.

Arrange close together on either a lined baking sheet (I used a quarter sheet pan) or in a cast iron skillet. Again, make sure the biscuits are close together—or even touching—so they will rise up without toppling over.

Before baking, brush the biscuits with buttermilk to help the tops brown evenly.

cornmeal biscuits being brushed with buttermilk.

When the cornbread biscuits come out of the oven, brush the tops with melted butter + honey and sprinkle with a little flaky sea salt. It’s a simple finishing touch that takes these cornbread biscuits from good to GREAT.

Serve your cornbread biscuits warm with butter and peach preserves, or homemade honey butter or cinnamon butter. You could also create delicious breakfast sandwiches with these breakfast sausage patties.

We loved them with BBQ and coleslaw!

cornbread biscuits with coleslaw, beans, and bbq chicken on plate.

Cornbread Biscuit Flavor Variations

This recipe is incredibly versatile. Feel free to fold in some flavorful add-ins. My team’s favorite versions are:

Jalapeño Cheddar: Deseed and dice one jalapeño pepper, and freshly shred some sharp cheddar cheese:

cheddar cheese dough in glass bowl.
jalapeño cheddar cornbread biscuits with sea salt.

Maple Bacon: Replace the honey with pure maple syrup, and fold in some crumbled or chopped cooked and cooled bacon. We especially love these with eggs for breakfast!

bacon dough in glass bowl with pink spatula.
maple bacon cornbread biscuits with sea salt.

Success Tips for the Best Cornbread Biscuits

After developing other biscuit recipes, let me share what I’ve learned along the way. I’ve made plenty of mistakes so you don’t have to. These tried-and-true tricks will turn your flat, dry biscuits into the best biscuits ever.

  1. Keep It Cold: About 15 minutes before I begin making biscuits, I take the butter out of the refrigerator, cut it into cubes, then place the butter cubes in the freezer until I need them. You can also refrigerate the shaped biscuits for a while before baking, for extra insurance that they will rise up tall instead of spreading out.
  2. Don’t Over-Mix: Never overwork biscuit dough. Overworking and over-handling biscuit dough will result in tough, hard, and flat biscuits. Mix the ingredients together *just* until combined. Dough will be crumbly, and that’s normal.
  3. Flatten & Fold Method: The most important step of all is folding the dough. Turn the shaggy dough out onto a work surface and flatten it with your hands. Fold, flatten, turn, and repeat.
  4. Don’t Twist the Biscuit Cutter: When cutting the dough with a biscuit cutter, do not twist the cutter. Press the cutter down into the dough firmly. Twisting it will seal off the biscuit edges, preventing the biscuits from rising.
  5. Bake Close Together: Biscuits rise up nice and tall when they are pressed snuggly against one another in the oven.

I bake biscuits often, and use the same process and success tips when making all of my favorite variations including cheddar biscuitseverything bagel biscuits, and zucchini biscuits. I also make biscuit-topped vegetable pot pie and biscuit breakfast casserole. And you can absolutely turn these into dessert with my recipes for biscuit-topped berry cobbler and homemade strawberry shortcake.

cornbread biscuits on sheet pan.

Cornbread Biscuits Tools

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cornbread biscuits with sea salt.

Homemade Cornbread Biscuits (3 Ways)

5 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars 2 Stars 1 Star 4.8 from 236 reviews
  • Author: Sally McKenney
  • Prep Time: 45 minutes
  • Cook Time: 20 minutes
  • Total Time: 1 hour, 5 minutes
  • Yield: 15-18 small biscuits
  • Category: Bread
  • Method: Baking
  • Cuisine: American
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Description

These cornbread biscuits combine the buttery layers of classic homemade biscuits with the subtle sweetness and texture of cornbread. Made with buttermilk and cold butter, they bake up tall, tender, and golden brown with crisp edges and soft centers. Perfect for breakfast, dinner, or serving alongside soups, chili, and barbecue.


Ingredients

Biscuit Dough

  • 1 and 3/4 cups (219g) all-purpose flour (spooned & leveled), plus more as needed for hands and work surface
  • 3/4 cup (105g) fine or medium-ground yellow cornmeal*
  • 1 Tablespoon baking powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 cup (8 Tbsp; 113g) unsalted butter, cubed and very cold*
  • 3/4 cup (180ml/g) buttermilk, cold (plus more for brushing)
  • 3 Tablespoons (63g) honey (or pure maple syrup, if making the maple bacon version)

Jalapeño Cheddar Version

  • 1 jalapeño pepper, seeded and diced
  • 1 cup (113g/4oz) freshly shredded sharp cheddar cheese

Maple Bacon Version

  • 6 slices bacon, cooked, cooled, and crumbled/chopped

Topping

  • 2 Tablespoons (28g) unsalted butter, melted
  • 1 Tablespoon (21g) honey (or pure maple syrup, if making the maple bacon version)
  • flaky sea salt


Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 425°F (218°C).
  2. Make the biscuits: Place the flour, cornmeal, baking powder, baking soda, and salt in a large bowl or in a large food processor. Whisk or pulse until combined. Add the cubed butter and cut into the dry ingredients with a pastry cutter or by pulsing several times in the processor. Cut/pulse until coarse crumbs form.

    cubed butter in bowl with other ingredients and shown again cut into the mixture.

  3. If you used a food processor, pour the mixture into a large bowl. Make a well in the center. Pour 3/4 cup (180ml/g) buttermilk into the well and drizzle honey (or maple syrup) on top. Using a large spoon or spatula, fold until it begins to come together. If making one of the flavor variations, fold in your chosen add-ins as well. Do not overwork the dough. The dough will be shaggy and crumbly with some wet spots.

    dough in glass bowl with pink spatula.

  4. Pour the dough and any dough crumbles onto a floured work surface and gently bring together with generously floured hands. The dough will become sticky as you work with it. Have extra flour nearby and use it often to flour your hands and work surface as needed in this step. Using floured hands, flatten into a 3/4-inch-thick rectangle as best you can. Fold one side into the center, then the other side on top. Turn the dough 90 degrees, so it’s now horizontal. Gently flatten into a 3/4-inch-thick rectangle again. Repeat the folding again. Turn the dough horizontally one more time. Gently flatten into a 3/4-inch-thick rectangle. Repeat the folding one last time. Flatten into the final 3/4-inch-thick rectangle.

    cornmeal dough on marble surface.
    hands flattening and folding dough.
    hands folding dough.

  5. Cut into 2- or 2.5-inch circles with a biscuit cutter. (Tip: Do not twist the biscuit cutter when pressing down into the dough because this seals off the edges of the biscuit which prevents them from fully rising.) Gather and re-roll the scraps until all the dough is used. Arrange close together on a parchment paper-lined baking sheet (or in a cast iron skillet). Continue with step 6 or cover and refrigerate the biscuits until you’re ready to bake, for up to 24 hours.

    flattened dough being cut with biscuit cutter.

  6. Brush the tops with remaining buttermilk. Bake for 18–20 minutes or until the tops are golden brown.

    cornmeal biscuits being brushed with buttermilk.

  7. For the topping: In a small bowl, whisk the melted butter and honey (or maple syrup) together. Using a pastry brush, brush the warm biscuits with honey butter topping. Sprinkle with flaky sea salt.

    cornbread biscuits with sea salt.

  8. Cover leftovers tightly and store at room temperature for up to 2 days or in the refrigerator for up to 5 days.

Notes

  1. Make Ahead & Freezing Instructions: Baked biscuits freeze well for up to 3 months. Thaw overnight in the refrigerator or at room temperature, then warm to your liking before serving. You can also freeze the biscuit dough. Prepare the dough through step 4, wrap tightly in plastic wrap (best for freshness), and freeze for up to 3 months. Thaw overnight in the refrigerator, then continue with step 5. Alternatively, after step 4, wrap the dough tightly and refrigerate for up to 24 hours before continuing with step 5.
  2. Special Tools (affiliate links): Glass Mixing Bowl | Pastry Cutter or Food Processor | 2- or 2.5-inch Biscuit CutterBaking Sheet with Parchment Paper (or Cast Iron Skillet) | Pastry Brush | Flaky Sea Salt
  3. Cornmeal: For best texture, use fine or medium-ground yellow cornmeal. Avoid coarse cornmeal, which can make the biscuits gritty and prevent them from rising as tall.
  4. Butter: Cut into 1/2-inch cubes. Keep butter as cold as possible until you need it. I recommend placing the cubed butter in the freezer for about 15 minutes before you begin.
  5. Buttermilk: If you can’t find buttermilk at the store, you can make your own DIY buttermilk substitute. Add 2 teaspoons of fresh lemon juice or white vinegar to a liquid measuring cup. Add enough milk to make 1 cup (240g/ml). (You need 3/4 cup in the recipe, plus some extra for brushing). Whisk together, then let sit for 5 minutes before using in the recipe. Whole milk is best for the DIY sour milk substitute, though lower-fat or nondairy milks work in a pinch. 
sally mckenney headshot purple shirt.
About the Author

Sally McKenney

Sally McKenney is a baker, food photographer, and New York Times best-selling author. Her kitchen-tested recipes and step-by-step tutorials have given millions of readers the knowledge and confidence to bake from scratch. Sally’s work has been featured on TODAY, Good Morning America, Taste of Home, People, and more.

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Reader Comments and Reviews

  1. Emma says:
    June 13, 2026

    Really yummy. I didn’t even bother with the extra toppings. I only cooked them for 15 mins but they were done enough.

    Reply
  2. Janae Nkansah says:
    June 13, 2026

    Delicious, flaky and buttery! Sally never steers me wrong ☺️

    Reply
  3. Deanna Alegria says:
    June 13, 2026

    The biscuits are delicious and the recipe is easy to follow. My family loves them.

    Reply
  4. Caroline R says:
    June 13, 2026

    The recipe was easy to understand and the photos were very helpful. I served with extra honey on top and they’re delicious!

    Reply
  5. Estalee Davenport says:
    June 13, 2026

    Delicious! A level up from regular biscuits.

    Reply
  6. Veronica says:
    June 13, 2026

    Such an easy and quick recipe to follow, and we liked the unique combination of cornbread and biscuit flavors!

    Reply
  7. Caitlyn Mcilwain says:
    June 13, 2026

    Very fluffy, tasted great!

    Reply
  8. Dawne Tiller says:
    June 13, 2026

    These are fantastic!! Easy to follow recipe too!!

    Reply
  9. Sara says:
    June 13, 2026

    I love your corn bread, and I love your biscuit recipe. I really wanna try this because I saw on IG you did this with cheddar and jalapeno, do I just add a bit to the dough?

    Reply
    1. Michelle @ Sally's Baking says:
      June 13, 2026

      Hi Sara, Add 1 jalapeño pepper, seeded and diced and 1 cup (113g/4oz) freshly shredded sharp cheddar cheese. Enjoy!

      Reply
  10. Kiley Whitney says:
    June 13, 2026

    The texture and flavor is on another level. I love biscuits and cornbread, and these are the best of both worlds! They were so easy and fun to bake too!

    Reply
  11. Jessy Duran says:
    June 13, 2026

    These cornbread biscuits were so easy to bake and a new spin on a traditional biscuit. I enjoyed the fluffiness of a regular biscuit while also getting a delicious cornbread flavor. I will be making these biscuits again!!

    Reply
  12. Natalie Nichols says:
    June 13, 2026

    So easy and delicious! Super yummy with honey butter

    Reply
  13. Jenna Fischer says:
    June 13, 2026

    Yummy and easy to make!

    Reply
  14. Nichole W says:
    June 13, 2026

    This biscuit cornbread hybrid was delicious! I followed the recipe as written, and it turned out perfectly. I will definitely be making these again.

    Reply
  15. Meg Blackwell says:
    June 13, 2026

    Fabulous. Made the basic ones and cannot wait to try one of the flavors

    Reply
  16. Julie Ball says:
    June 13, 2026

    I was worried these biscuits would be dry with the added cornmeal. Boy, was I surprised when they weren’t. They were so easy to make. If you are intimidated by any bread type of baking this is a great starter.

    Reply
  17. Tirzah says:
    June 12, 2026

    I only had corn muffin mix which already has flour, salt and leavening with the corn meal. I decreased the flour to 1.5 cups and substituted 1cup corn meal mix for 3/4 c corn meal. Added an extra 1/2 tsp baking powder and had great
    results.

    Reply
  18. Kylie says:
    June 12, 2026

    First time making this type of muffin. Everyone loved them and they were super easy to throw together.

    Reply
  19. Victoria Gray says:
    June 12, 2026

    These came out delicious! I made some barbecue chicken and put it on the biscuit. Topped it with some honey butter and sea salt. Definitely going to make again with some soup!

    Reply
  20. Victoria Raschi says:
    June 12, 2026

    These biscuits were delicious and easy!! I couldn’t believe how simple the process was, and how flaky and buttery they were. I didn’t make any of the extra sauces, next time I definitely will but they were just perfect with the flaky salt!

    Reply
  21. Kim says:
    June 12, 2026

    These smelled and tasted delicious but didn’t have the “fluffy” rise that I was thinking they would. I followed the recipe and have had success with other biscuits so I don’t know if I didn’t put them close enough together or not. Either way, they were delicious!

    Reply
  22. Katie Grundy says:
    June 12, 2026

    I have never made cornbread biscuits before, but I am glad I made these! They are tasty! I was going to have them with some barbecue but these are scrumptious on their own.
    The recipe was easy to follow as always. I don’t know if my oven runs hot, but I made these with 2 inch cutouts and they were done in 15 minutes.

    Reply
  23. Marne Johnson says:
    June 12, 2026

    Super easy recipe, I didn’t add any additions, and they turned out delicious.

    Reply
  24. Stacy Fellows says:
    June 12, 2026

    My family and I enjoyed the cornmeal biscuits. The texture from the cornmeal was a well- balanced. It also had the perfect amount of sweetness. These biscuits were so easy to make. I will be making them again.

    Reply
  25. Amber says:
    June 12, 2026

    easy to follow directions! i baked mine for 18 minutes- which is the suggested time and i think they’re over baked. would check at 15 minutes. turned out kinda dry which is most likely because of over-baking.

    Reply
  26. Cassandra Park says:
    June 12, 2026

    Maple bacon
    Light fluffy and delicious. Very easy recipe to make even if your a beginner

    Reply
  27. Joelle Hine says:
    June 12, 2026

    A little cheddar sharp, a little jalapeño kick, a little honey sweet and So delicious. I loved how the instructions made it simple to follow as well.

    Reply
  28. Tessa McIntyre says:
    June 12, 2026

    Absolutely delish!

    Reply
  29. Sara Clapper says:
    June 12, 2026

    Simple directions and quick to put together. Will make again!!

    Reply
  30. Theresa Fye says:
    June 12, 2026

    I made these biscuits with cheddar cheese and jalapeños tonight. They were amazing and so simple! The honey added just the right amount of sweetness. I can’t wait to try the maple syrup and bacon version next time.

    Reply