Oatcake recipe
Makes 12
8 oz fine oatmeal
8 oz wholewheat or plain flour
1 tsp salt
1/2 oz fresh yeast
1 1/2 pints warm milk and water, mixed half and
half
1 tsp sugar
(Chris and Pam Ellis, ex-pats in Australia use
double the amount of salt and sugar and claim to get excellent results.
They should know because they have tasted the original. They even
cook them on the barbie!!)
Method
1. Add salt to flour and oatmeal.
2. Dissolve yeast with a little warm liquid
and add sugar. Allow to become frothy.
3. Mix dry ingredients with yeast and rest of
warm liquid to make a batter.
4. Cover with clean cloth and leave in warm
place for 1 hour.
5. Bake on well-greased griddle. Put enough
batter onto griddle to produce an oatcake about 8 or 9 inches in diameter.
The surface will be covered in holes as it cooks. Turn oatcake after
2-3 minutes when upperside appears dry and underside is golden brown,
and cook for another 2-3 minutes.
Eat as soon as possible. Oatcakes freeze well.
eJennifer Court
suggests using ordinary porridge
oats after using a blender and a sachet of Sainsbury's Easy-Blend
yeast
Her method is as follows :-
Mix the oatmeal and flour in a (preferably warm)
basin.
Add the salt and stir. Dissolve the yeast with
a little of the warm liquid and the sugar in a mug or small basin.
Leave in a warm place (airing cupboard) for 5-10 mins. to allow it
to rise (goes frothy). Mix the dry ingredients (oatmeal, flour and
salt) with the yeast mixture and some of the liquid: stir well and
keep adding the rest of the liquid until all mixed. The result should
look like a thin batter.
Cover the bowl with a clean cloth or tea-towel
and place in warm airing cupboard for about an hour (until risen:
you can't mistake it, it almost tries to escape from the bowl).
Remove from the warmth and stir well. Bake as
pancakes on a well greased iron skillet, griddle or (at a pinch) frying
pan. For preference use the heaviest item you can find: the bulk of
the metal keeps the temperature constant and gives better results
than a thin pan.
This amount should make about a dozen oatcakes.
N.B. there is no need to cook the oatcakes immediately:
you can leave the mixture in a cool place overnight. Leave it in the
airing cupboard and it will start to rise again, which is useless.