TheIncredibles!
Winner (?) of the Crazy MIL Award
- Joined
- Nov 7, 2010
- Messages
- 3,043
For the "strip" dough I use Bisquick, add salt and plenty of pepper and mix in milk till it's the consistency I like. Then I roll and cut out with a pizza cutter.
That's exactly what I was saying--the two types of dumplings are very different textures--soft, drop dumplings are lighter and fluffier, while rolled dumplings (the strip type) are denser and firmer. I was just pointing out that what someone called rolled dumplings were the same as the strip dumplings, which are completely different than biscuity drop dumplings.I don't think the two types of dumplings are similar at all. One is light and fluffy and one is dense and sometimes gummy. Not near the same. I don't think the ingredients are the same either?
Flour, salt and water? I would expect them to turn out like glue-lumps. I hope to get to "the south" someday where I can try these, but I really don't see myself making them at home here. Thanks for the information everybody!![]()
I guess our recipe is a "hybrid" then, because they're rolled, but do also contain leavening!Southern dumplings are like thick noodles, and northern ones have leavening that make them more like drop biscuits.
I guess or recipe is a "hybrid" then, because they're rolled, but do also contain leavening!

Maybe that's why everyone that's tried them, friends included, love them! It's a "Best of Both Worlds" dish!!!LOL, I stand corrected--now I can say I have heard of someone putting leavening in their rolled strip dumplings!![]()

Southern girl, born and raised, here. First you have to boil a chicken. A whole one. Add a couple of bouillon cubes and some diced carrot and celery. When the chicken is cooked, take it out and let it cool enough to debone. My dough is flour, salt, and water. That's it. And just like my great-grandmother, I don't measure anything. I just mix until it looks and feels right. I roll it out and cut it into whatever shape I'm feeling that day and drop it into the broth and throw the chicken back in. When it's thick, it's done.
All purpose, but it really wouldn't matter all that much here.Do you use All Purpose flour or self rising?
Thanks,
Terri
Flour, salt and water? I would expect them to turn out like glue-lumps. I hope to get to "the south" someday where I can try these, but I really don't see myself making them at home here. Thanks for the information everybody!![]()

There's two kinds of dumplings: drop biscuit type and noodle strip type. Both are yummy, we prefer the noodle strips (which is more the southern type).