Anzac biscuits and jammy dodgers: 20 best biscuit recipes – part 4 (2024)

Trine Hahnemann’s flødeboller

These are fun to make, but if you want to skip making the waffles use crisp thin biscuits instead.

Makes about 25
For the waffle batter
egg 1
egg white 1
salt a pinch
sugar 1 tbsp
plain flour 100g
butter 60g, melted
butter for greasing

For the marshmallow filling
water 50ml
vanilla pod 1, seeds scraped
glucose syrup 60g
egg whites 100g (3-4 eggs)
caster sugar 100g

For the glaze
dark chocolate 200g, minimum 60% cocoa solids

Start with the waffle batter. Beat the egg and egg white with salt, then beat in the sugar and finally the flour. Beat well, so there are no lumps in the mixture, then add the melted butter. Heat a little butter in a waffle pan. Spoon 100ml of batter into the pan and spread out in an even layer. Cook them until they are very crisp (without burning them). This mixture should make approximately 4 waffles. Leave to cool.

Preheat the oven 130C/gas mark ½. Cut the waffles into 4cm-rounds. Place on a baking tray lined with baking parchment. Bake for about 5-10 minutes or until crisp. Cool on a wire rack.

For the marshmallow filling, boil the water, vanilla seeds and glucose and whisk till the glucose is dissolved. Then whisk the egg whites and sugar until fluffy, mix in the glucose mixture and beat for about 7 minutes. Then place in a piping bag. Pipe small balls for marshmallow mixture on top of each crisp waffle, about 15g on each. Leave them to rest at room temperature for about 2 hours.

Finely chop the chocolate and melt two-thirds of it in a bain-marie. When it has melted and has reached a temperature of 50C, add the rest of the chopped chocolate. Mix well until all the chocolate has melted. Gently heat all the chocolate in the bain-marie till it reaches a temperature of 31C. Now the chocolate is ready for use.

Dip the flødeboller in the chocolate, so that the marshmallow and the sides of the wafer are covered but the bottom remains uncovered, then place on parchment paper. Let the chocolate set – then they are ready to eat. The flødeboller will last for a week.

TIP You can sprinkle some with shredded coconut on top or, if you want to make the marshmallow pink, use beetroot juice instead of water in the glucose mixture.
Trine Hahnemann is author of Copenhagen Food (Quadrille, £25)

Margot Henderson’s anzac biscuits

Anzac biscuits and jammy dodgers: 20 best biscuit recipes – part 4 (1)

Makes about 20
oats 200g
desiccated coconut 150g
plain flour 200g
demerara sugar 100g
unsalted butter 200g
golden syrup 100g
bicarbonate of soda 1 tbsp
boiling water 4 tbsp

Preheat the oven to 160C/gas mark 3 then line a baking tray with greaseproof paper.

In a large bowl, mix the oats, coconut, flour and sugar together. Over a low heat, melt the butter and golden syrup together. Combine the bicarbonate of soda and boiling water, then stir into the golden syrup and butter. Then combine the butter-syrup mixture well with the dry ingredients. Once the mix is cool enough to handle, roll into 55g balls. Place the balls on the tray, with a good amount of room around them, then lightly press down and bake for 15 minutes. Let the cookies cool, and then eat them or store in an airtight container.
Margot Henderson is chef/co-owner of Rochelle Canteen, London E2

Dan Lepard’s oat and sour cherry cookies

So many new things have appeared in our supermarkets over the last decade that sometimes I’m torn between the joy of the new and encouraging you to bake with a more traditional ingredient. So this recipe manages to face both ways, combining the chewiness of oats with the slight sourness of dried cherries.

Makes about 50 biscuits
unsalted butter 225g, softened
light soft brown sugar 375g
caster sugar 50g
vanilla extract 3 tsp
eggs 2 large
plain flour 300g
ground cinnamon 1 tsp
bicarbonate of soda 2 tsp
rolled oats 200g
dried sour cherries 200g

Beat the butter, sugars and vanilla until light and fluffy. Beat in the eggs, one at a time, then sift the flour, cinnamon and bicarb together and stir that through, followed by the oats and cherries, until you have a consistent mixture.

Heat the oven to 170C/gas 3 and line a baking tray with non-stick baking paper. Spoon tablespoon-sized dollops of the mixture onto the tray spaced 4-5cm apart; bake for 12-14 minutes until barely puffed and just starting to colour at the edges. Leave to cool for a few minutes then transfer to a rack to finish cooling, while you continue to bake – or freeze half to use later.
From Short & Sweet by Dan Lepard (Fourth Estate, £25)

Justin Gellatly’s jammy dodgers

Anzac biscuits and jammy dodgers: 20 best biscuit recipes – part 4 (3)

Makes about 18-20
plain flour 250g, plus extra for dusting
icing sugar 110g
unsalted butter 200g, softened
egg yolks 2
fine sea salt a pinch
For the filling
raspberry jam 130g
caster sugar 2 tsp, for sprinkling

Put all the ingredients apart from the filling into a food processor and whizz until a ball of dough is formed. Wrap it in clingfilm and chill in the fridge for 2-3 hours.

Preheat the oven to 170C/gas 3 and line two large baking trays with baking paper.

Take the dough out of the fridge and leave for an hour to soften. On a lightly floured surface, roll it out to 3-4 mm thick, then, using a 6cm cutter, cut out your rounds to make the bases. To make the tops, take half the rounds and cut out the centre, using a 2cm cutter. Keep rolling and cutting until you have 18-20 bases and 18-20 tops.

Place the biscuits without a hole on the trays and put ½ teaspoon of jam in the centre, spreading it out slightly. Place the holey biscuits on top, pressing slightly so the jam rises out from the centre a little. Chill in the fridge for 5 minutes, then bake for 20-22 minutes, until lightly golden brown.

Sprinkle the biscuits immediately with the caster sugar. Leave on the trays for 5 minutes, then put them on a rack to cool.
From Bread, Cake, Doughnut, Pudding by Justin Gellatly (Fig Tree, £25)

Jeremy Lee’s shortcakes, lemon curd, goat’s curd and marmalade

Anzac biscuits and jammy dodgers: 20 best biscuit recipes – part 4 (4)

Favourite things heaped together make this pleasing pudding.

For 4 good folk
unsalted butter 125g
caster sugar 40g
orange finely grated zest of 1
plain flour 170g
whole almonds 40g, ground fine
white breadcrumbs 40g, toasted

To serve
goat’s curd 1 tub – enough for 8 tsp
lemon curd 1 jar
best homemade marmalade 1 jar

Heat an oven to 170C/gas mark 3. Beat the butter and sugar in a bowl till quite pale. Add the orange zest and mix well then add in the flour, almonds and breadcrumbs. Mix well into a dough. Knead lightly and make into a roll, about 4.5cm in diameter. Refrigerate this for at least an hour or overnight.

Line a baking sheet with baking parchment and upon this lay slices of shortcake mix cut to the thickness of a pound coin. Bake for 12-15 minutes until the palest golden.

Heap the curds on the shortcakes – put goat’s curd first, then lemon, two teaspoons each – spoon over a little marmalade and heap them up. You can use only two biscuits, but if feeling brave, make a double decker and use three.
Jeremy Lee is executive chef at Quo Vadis, London W1

Anzac biscuits and jammy dodgers: 20 best biscuit recipes – part 4 (2024)

FAQs

What makes Anzac biscuits crunchy or chewy? ›

To make your biscuits extra crispy try cooking them on a lower temperature for a few minutes longer or, add an extra teaspoon of boiling water to your biscuit mix. For a chewier texture, add a little more golden syrup (just pull back on the sugar to adjust the overall sweetness) and bake them slightly less in the oven.

Why are my Anzac biscuits falling apart? ›

But watch for crumbling or "melting": "If your biscuits are falling apart, then you have added too much of the wet ingredients, or potentially too much sugar," Quinn says. The marine biologist-turned-cook advises leaving the biscuits on the baking tray as they cool, then giving them a day or two to "chewify".

Why do Anzac biscuits go soft? ›

When it comes to Anzac biscuits, people have differing ideas. I've created this recipe, so there's a mix of crunchy and chewy if you get your baking times right. If you under bake these, they'll be soft; if you over bake, they'll become a little harder, although they shouldn't become like rocks, as they'd burn first.

How do you make health4all Easter biscuits? ›

Plain flour 275g, Margarine or Butter 200g , Castor sugar 150g, Currants 50g, Egg yolks 1 or 2 , Cassia flavouring oil x 6 drops. Mix the ingredients together. If the mix is a little dry add a little milk. Roll and cut to shape.

Should Anzac biscuits be soft or crunchy? ›

Australians are divided over how Anzac biscuits should be served, with an overwhelming majority preferring them soft but a vocal minority in support of a crunchy consistency.

What is a substitute for golden syrup in Anzac biscuits? ›

Best substitute for golden syrup is a combination of light molasses or treacle, plus honey. I use 1 part molasses or treacle, and 3 parts honey – the flavour is nearly identical, and the colour is very similar (a bit darker).

Why do you put bicarb in Anzac biscuits? ›

Baking soda or bicarb soda is the main raising agent in Anzac biscuits - it is added to the wet ingredients before being mixed into the dry ingredients.

How do you make biscuits that don't fall apart? ›

Falling apart

The likelihood here is that your recipe needs a bit more liquid, or your recipe has too high a ratio of flour. Be sparing with any flour you put on the work surface to roll your dough too. Too much will dry it out and cause the cookie to crumble (so to speak).

Why do Anzac biscuits last long? ›

The basic ingredients for a rolled oat biscuit were rolled oats, sugar, flour, butter with golden syrup, not eggs, used as a binding agent. This made them not only nutritious and full of energy but also long lasting.

Why didn t my Anzac biscuits flatten? ›

Don't let the mixture stand around.

So, make sure you roll and bake the mixture as soon as possible after mixing to make rolling and flattening of the biscuits easy. If it does get a little dry you can just mix in another tablespoon or two of water to help make it a little more pliable before shaping.

What can you replace coconut with in Anzac biscuits? ›

My partner wants to make Anzac biscuits for a friend of ours who is deathly allergic to all nuts, including coconut. What would be a good substitute for it? The best thing we can think of is flax meal or ground oats with some added coconut-free coconut flavouring.

Can you use honey instead of golden syrup? ›

Honey: Similar in color, taste, and texture to golden syrup, honey is a good substitute for treacle. Look for a thick amber honey, rather than a super-light honey. Use the same amount of honey as you would golden syrup in a recipe.

Why put an egg in biscuits? ›

Biscuit recipes tend to be egg-free, this makes them drier and the lack of protein to bind the mix helps achieve that crumbly texture. For super light, crumbly biscuits try grating or pushing the yolks of hard-boiled eggs through a sieve into the biscuit dough.

What is the secret to biscuits? ›

Use Cold Butter for Biscuits

When the biscuit bakes, the butter will melt, releasing steam and creating pockets of air. This makes the biscuits airy and flaky on the inside.

What is the difference between chewy and crunchy cookies? ›

Remember moisture is the key! White sugar creates crispier cookies and brown sugar creates chewier cookies. Why use melted butter? Melted butter creates cookies with a different texture compared to cookies made with softened or creamed butter.

What factors contribute to the crispness of biscuits? ›

List 5 factors that contribute to crispness in cookies.
  1. Low proportion of liquid in the mix.
  2. High sugar and fat content.
  3. Baking long enough to evaporate most of the moisture.
  4. Small size or thin shape.
  5. Proper storage (cookies stored in the fridge will absorb moisture)

What makes a chewy biscuit? ›

Cookies that are dense and chewy incorporate more moisture into the batter. This can be achieved by making substitutions with wet and dry ingredients, or even just changing the way you incorporate certain ingredients. Plus, your particular baking technique and your method of storing cookies can also play a role.

Why were Anzac biscuits hard and long? ›

The story of the Anzac biscuit

Originally, the Anzac biscuit was designed to travel well over several weeks at sea, so the recipe didn't feature eggs, golden syrup or coconut. Their incredibly tough consistency and savoury taste meant that they were purely a source of sustenance and not particularly enjoyable.

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