Digestion Biscuits [old farmhouse recipe for digestive biscuits]
This old farmhouse recipe for digestion biscuits creates a crunchy biscuit that is rather similar to a Hovis biscuit or cracker (the sort found in Jacob's biscuits for cheese tubs), with the texture and flavour of modern digestive biscuits, although these digestion biscuits are much chunkier. They are also rather like a thick Scottish oatcake.
Course Breakfast, lunch, Snack
Cuisine British, Scottish
Keyword biscuits for the digestion, digestion biscuits, digestive biscuits, farmhouse biscuit recipe
Prep Time 15 minutesminutes
Cook Time 15 minutesminutes
Total Time 30 minutesminutes
Servings 12-14 biscuits
Author Leigh
Equipment
baking trays
parchment paper
mixing bowl
mixing spoon
Rolling Pin
3 inch biscuit cutter
Ingredients
125gramsmedium oatmeal[steel-cut oatmeal], plus extra to dust the work surface
125gramswholemeal flour[wholewheat flour]
50gramsgranulated sugar[or caster sugar]
¼teaspoonsalt
½teaspoonbicarbonate of soda[baking soda]
75gramsbutter or margarine
1smallegg, beaten[if necessary you may require a teaspoon of milk to bind the ingredients if your egg is not enough]
Instructions
Preheat the oven to 190℃ [375℉] or gas mark 5.
Line the baking trays with parchment paper.
Add the oatmeal, flour, sugar, salt, and bicarbonate of soda to a mixing bowl.
125 grams medium oatmeal, 125 grams wholemeal flour, 50 grams granulated sugar, ¼ teaspoon salt, ½ teaspoon bicarbonate of soda
Stir the dry ingredients.
Next, add the butter to the bowl in small pieces.
75 grams butter or margarine
Use your fingertips to rub the butter into the dry ingredients until it resembles breadcrumbs.
Now, add the egg and mix it into the ingredients. Keep mixing, as it may take a few minutes to stir the egg properly through the ingredients.
1 small egg, beaten
Use your hands to bring the mixture into a ball of biscuit dough. Depending on how large your egg was, you may not have enough to bring all the mixture together, so you can add a teaspoon of milk and mix this through.
Once the biscuit dough has formed, sprinkle oatmeal over your work surface and dust the rolling pin with some oatmeal.
Gently pat the biscuit dough down with your hands. Any sticky bits can have oatmeal sprinkled over.
Using the rolling pin, roll the dough to about ¼ inch thick or a little thicker. If you want thicker digestion biscuits, then you will end up with a few less than stated in the servings section above.
Carefully stamp out biscuits using the biscuit cutter and place each biscuit onto the baking tray. You won't need to keep too much space between each biscuit, just about an inch or just under, as they won't spread too much; rather, they will rise a little.
Keep sprinkling extra oatmeal onto the biscuit dough if you come across a sticky part. Also, bring the dough back together whenever necessary and roll it out again to finish stamping out the biscuits.
Bake on the middle shelf for 10-15 minutes. I used an electric oven [190℃] and the biscuits were baked after 14 minutes.
Once ready, the biscuits will be firm to the touch, lightly golden around the edges (although as they are a brown color going into the oven, this may be hard to decipher!), but they will still be soft in the middle as they will crisp up more as they cool.
After a few minutes of cooling on the baking tray, remove the biscuits to a cooling rack to cool completely.
Notes
Store digestive biscuits within an airtight biscuit tin or container for up to a week.
If you would like to prepare home-made chocolate digestion biscuits then you can top the digestion biscuits with a coating of either melted milk chocolate or dark chocolate.
We used butter for our biscuits but you can use any margarine that is suitable for baking.
If preferred you can use plain flour or all-purpose flour instead of wholemeal flour.
Wholewheat flour is the same as wholemeal flour.
You can use caster sugar instead of granulated sugar.
You can enjoy these biscuits as they are but as they are a biscuit you will need a nice cup of tea, coffee, or milk!
You can spread butter or margarine over these biscuits, or perhaps some fruit jam, peanut butter, or chocolate spread.
Slices of cheese also pair very nicely with digestion biscuits.
You can use these biscuits as a home-made cracker.