Strawberry shortcake is the simple American classic that somehow gets lost under spongy supermarket versions. Done right — flaky buttermilk biscuits, strawberries that have sat in sugar until juicy, cream whipped to clouds — it's one of the best desserts there is. Make it in May when local strawberries are at their peak and the reward for waiting all winter is a plate of something that tastes like summer finally arriving.
Classic strawberry shortcake
Flaky buttermilk biscuits split and piled with macerated strawberries and fresh whipped cream — the old-fashioned spring dessert, done right.

- Prep
- 30 min
- Cook
- 15 min
- Total
- 1h 15m
- Serves
- 8
Classic strawberry shortcake
Makes 8 shortcakes
Scaled 1×. Ingredients adjusted — but cook time, pan size, and oven temperature don't scale linearly. A bigger batch usually needs a bigger pan and a few extra minutes; a smaller batch often finishes sooner. Trust your eyes, not the timer.
Ingredients (15)
Macerated strawberries
Buttermilk biscuits
Whipped cream
You'll need
- Baking sheet
- Parchment paper
- Large mixing bowl (for biscuits)
- Pastry cutter, food processor, or two knives
- 2 1/2-inch round cutter
- Medium bowl (for strawberries)
- Chilled bowl (for whipped cream)
- Hand or stand mixer (or whisk)
Instructions
Nutrition
Estimated per serving · 1 shortcakeWhat to look for when you shop
Best varieties
- Chandler — classic California strawberry; large, sweet, aromatic
- Albion — large firm berries; hold shape beautifully when sliced
- Seascape — everbearing variety; reliable spring through fall
- Earliglow — small but intensely flavored early-season strawberry
- Hood — Oregon classic; deep red and ultra-fragrant
- Wild or Alpine strawberries — tiny, intense; use as a special garnish
Ripeness
Deeply red all the way to the stem, fragrant from a foot away, and yielding slightly to pressure but not mushy. White or pale shoulders mean they were picked early and will be tart and hollow. Real ripe strawberries smell like candy.
Imperfections are fine
Small bruises, irregular shapes, size variation — all completely fine and often a sign of a heirloom or unsprayed berry. Very soft strawberries are ideal for macerating, since they release juice fastest. Trim any mushy spots.
Good substitutions
- Mixed berries (strawberries + raspberries + blackberries) — gorgeous variation
- Peaches in late summer — swap 1-for-1 with ripe peaches
- Strawberry-rhubarb (substitute 1 lb of the berries with cooked rhubarb) — classic spring twist
- Blueberries + strawberries — red-white-blue, patriotic presentation
In season
US strawberry season peaks April through June. Local strawberries are dramatically sweeter than supermarket winter strawberries — save this recipe for peak season when they taste like candy.
How much to buy
About 2 lb — 2 pint baskets or 1 quart basket.
Find your strawberry grower on CollectiveCrop
- In season April – June (peak); May – October (extended in some regions)
- For this recipe 2 lb / 2 pints
- Freshness Picked within 3 days
- Imperfects welcome Second-grade produce works great here
- Diet-friendly vegetarian
- While you're there Heavy cream from a local dairy · Buttermilk (culture your own from local milk) · Butter from a local dairy · Local honey · Vanilla beans or good extract · Fresh mint or basil
At the market
About 2 lb — 2 pint baskets or 1 quart basket.
Best varieties
- Chandler classic California strawberry; large, sweet, aromatic
- Albion large firm berries; hold shape beautifully when sliced
- Seascape everbearing variety; reliable spring through fall
Good to know
Tips
- Freeze the butter. Rock-hard butter grated into the flour (on the large holes of a box grater) gives extra-flaky biscuits. Works for any biscuit recipe.
- Don't twist the biscuit cutter. Press straight down — twisting seals the layers and prevents them from rising.
- Use real buttermilk, not a substitute. The acid reacts with baking powder and is what makes biscuits rise tall. If you must substitute: 3/4 cup milk + 1 tablespoon lemon juice, rested 5 minutes.
- Whip cream cold. Chill the bowl and beaters in the freezer for 10 minutes before whipping — cream whips faster and holds better when everything's cold.
- Make extra biscuits. They freeze well for 2 months unbaked (bake from frozen, add 2 minutes) or 1 month baked.
- For an elegant presentation, split biscuits while warm but assemble right at the table so everyone watches the cream melt into the berries.
Storage
- Assembled shortcake: doesn't store — the biscuit gets soggy within 30 minutes.
- Biscuits (alone): 8 hours at room temperature in an airtight container; 2 days refrigerated (refresh in oven); 1 month frozen baked, 2 months unbaked.
- Macerated strawberries: 4 hours at room temperature, 24 hours refrigerated.
- Whipped cream: 24 hours refrigerated in a sealed container (re-whip briefly before serving).
Reheating
- Biscuits: 300°F (150°C) for 3 to 5 minutes.
- Don't reheat assembled shortcake — eat fresh.
Make ahead
- Macerate strawberries up to 4 hours ahead (refrigerate).
- Make biscuit dough up to 24 hours ahead; refrigerate tightly wrapped. Bake fresh.
- Bake biscuits up to 8 hours ahead; refresh in oven before serving.
- Whip cream up to 24 hours ahead (keep cold, re-whip if it flattens).
- Assemble right before serving.
Variations
- Triple berry shortcake: macerate equal parts strawberries, raspberries, and blackberries.
- Peach shortcake: swap strawberries for 2 lb ripe peaches; perfect for July and August.
- Strawberry-basil: add 2 tablespoons finely chopped fresh basil to the strawberries.
- Lemon-ginger: add 1 teaspoon grated fresh ginger to the macerated berries.
- Grilled peach shortcake: grill peach halves briefly before slicing.
- Boozy version: add 2 tablespoons Grand Marnier or bourbon to the strawberries.
- Chocolate chip biscuits: fold 1/2 cup mini chocolate chips into the biscuit dough.
- Crème fraîche topping: swap whipped cream for 1 cup lightly sweetened crème fraîche.
- Individual trifle version: layer crumbled biscuit, strawberries, and whipped cream in glasses.
Swaps
- Gluten-free: use a 1:1 gluten-free flour blend for the biscuits.
- Dairy-free: swap butter for cold vegan butter; use coconut cream in place of heavy cream; use plant milk + 1 tbsp lemon juice for buttermilk.
- Vegan: same as dairy-free; use refrigerated coconut cream for the whipped topping.
- Lower-sugar: reduce sugar in strawberries to 2 tablespoons; use Greek yogurt instead of cream.
- Honey-sweetened: replace granulated sugar with honey (reduce to 3 tablespoons since honey is sweeter).
Frequently Asked Questions
Is strawberry shortcake supposed to be on biscuits or cake?
What are "macerated" strawberries?
Can I use cake mix or store-bought biscuits?
How do I make flaky biscuits?
Can I make the biscuits ahead?
Can I use frozen strawberries?
How far in advance can I macerate strawberries?
Can I use a stand mixer for the whipped cream?
Know what's worth cooking this week
Get one recipe a week — always timed to what's actually in season near you. No filler, no fluff.


