Update 24th Jan 2024: I wrote a follow-up post to this.
Fox’s Butter Crinkle Crunch biscuits have always been a favourite of mine. I had a little rummage, but completely failed to find a recipe for them, so I though I’d try making one up.
Fox’s page on the biscuits is oddly free of marketing, but includes both the the ingredients list and the nutrition label, from which we can deduce something of the recipe. The ingredients list noted 8% oats and 5% butter, no eggs, and a critical ingredient I’d not thought of – partially inverted refiners syrup. That’s golden syrup to you. Taking those with some of the nutrition label led to make some guesses about the proportion of ingredients. I did a little searching about ginger snaps, a very similar biscuit texture-wise, which gave me an important tip – “go heavy on the raising agent”. This is what makes the biscuits over-rise and form the distinctive “crinkly” cracks. I then compared my recipe with Rachel Allen’s recipe for ginger honey biscuits (from her “Bake” book, ISBN 978-0007259700), which I’ve made before, and made a few adjustments to quantities, before settling on a recipe.
Ingredients
- 175g white flour
- 75g white sugar
- 25g dark muscovado sugar (adds a slightly caramel-y taste)
- 50g oats (porridge, not jumbo)
- 125g butter
- 50g golden syrup
- 2tsp baking powder
- Pinch of salt
- 1/4tsp vanilla powder
- A small bowl of Demerara sugar (cassonade in France) for rolling
This is about 500g of ingredients providing eleventy bazillion calories, and made 24 large-ish biscuits.
Steps
I used a Kenwood Chef to make this, but it’s easy to do by hand too. I baked them on a large double-layer tray with a silicone baking sheet.
- Preheat oven (traditional mode, not fan) to 180°C.
- Put all the dry ingredients except the sugar in a bowl and mix.
- Put butter, sugar (not the Demerara!) and golden syrup in the mixer bowl and whiz until it’s creamy.
- Add the dry ingredients and whiz until it forms a thick, slightly crumbly dough with no small crumbs. It should be fairly dry, not sticky. If it’s sticky, add a little more flour.
- Grab small 2-3cm blobs of dough and roll them between your palms to make them into smooth spheres, then roll them in the Demerara sugar before putting them on the baking tray. Leave quite a lot of space around them as they will spread a lot when baking.
- Bake for about 16 minutes on a middle shelf. They will initially rise to look like little cakes (which had me worried!), but after about 10 mins the tops will crack and they will flatten a bit. I wanted to make sure they were nice and crunchy; if you prefer them softer, take them out a little sooner.
I made a time lapse video of them cooking, but the camera focused on the little dots on the oven door rather than what’s inside, so the biscuits are a little blurry:
They looked pretty good in the end and taste pretty much as I expected, though lacking that blatant butteriness that the originals have, possibly due to my lack of a listed ingredient: “Flavouring”! Still yummy though.
I think if I made them again I’d cut down on the sugar a bit, perhaps increase the oats, though I don’t want to stray into Hob-Nob territory! I could make them look more like bought ones if I squashed them a bit before baking so that they come out flatter.
By white sugar do you mean granulated or caster?
Thank you
Either will work, but you might find that granulated leads to a slightly crunchier texture, depending on how well it dissolved in the butter/syrup mix.
Hi Amber, did you actually try this recipe? How did you get on?
This is awesome! It took me a while to remember what these were called (I was initially searching for “Fox’s Golden Crunch”, which kept bringing up the “Crunch Creams”, much to my frustration!) I’m keen to give this a go now. Thanks for sharing.
Perhaps add milk powder, that always boosts the flavour and it’s on the ingredients for Fox’s crunch creams, it’s always in commercial baking, primary secret ingredient, extra dairy richness without additional liquids. Also on the baking powder, they’re using ammonium bicarb as the primary in addition to sodium bicarb and disodium diphosphate. That’s very traditional with biscuits and yields an entirely different texture. Rarely used by home cooks now, except in Greece and a few other places, Germany sometimes. It’s older than the other raising agents, hartshorn was the old name for it, as it was sourced from deer antlers, not anymore of course, can be bought still, but stinks a bit during baking, ammonia, the smell is removed by baking usually.
Interesting tips, thanks. I might skip the ammonium bicarbonate if I ever get around to trying this recipe. It doesn’t sound too pleasant!