Pictou County Oatcakes
Submitted by momsharp3
Pictou County oatcakes from Nova Scotia, the classic Maritime Canadian shortbread-style oat cookie. Crisp, crumbly, brown sugar sweet, ready in 20 minutes.
YIELD
24 servingsPREP
10 minCOOK
10 minREADY
20 minPictou County oatcakes are a Maritime Canadian classic from northern Nova Scotia, somewhere between a digestive biscuit, a shortbread, and a granola bar. Crisp, crumbly, and quietly sweet, they go with tea, soup, or a wedge of sharp cheese the way salt goes with butter.
The shortening is what gives them their signature shatter. Cut into the oats, brown sugar, and flour the way you’d cut butter into a pie crust, until the mixture looks pebbly. Then a small splash of boiling water with dissolved baking soda binds it just enough to mold, no more.
Shaping into a long wedge and slicing creates that classic flat oatcake shape. They bake quickly, so watch the edges closely; they’re done when the rims turn deep golden but the centers still look pale.
Pro Tips
- Use rolled oats (old-fashioned), not quick oats. Quick oats turn powdery and lose their characteristic chew.
- Cut the shortening in cold for the flakiest texture. Some Pictou County bakers swap half for cold butter for a richer flavor.
- Don’t overmix once the water is added. The dough should feel just barely held together.
- Cool fully on a rack before storing. They crisp up as they cool and turn soggy if stacked warm.
Variations
- Add a pinch of cinnamon to the dry mix for a warmer, spiced version.
- Use half lard and half shortening like older Maritime recipes called for, for a deeper, slightly savory flavor.
- Sandwich two oatcakes around dark chocolate ganache for the local treat known as chocolate-covered oatcakes.
Ingredients
Directions
Combine dry ingredients and cut in shortening.
Dissolve baking soda in the boiling water and add, continuing to mix with a knife.
Mold with the hands and shape into a long wedge.
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