Stottie Cake Recipe - Dragons and Fairy Dust (2024)

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A stottie cake is a disc of bread which is bakes slowly in the oven. This gives it a distinctive chewy texture making it perfect for a lunchtime sandwich.

I first discovered stottie cakes when I came to North East England as a student. Hungry and between lectures I was searching for a sandwich. I found a sandwich shop with a wide range of stotties, from hand and pease pudding to chicken salad. Unsure of what it was but having no other choice I tried one. I found that the stotty cake is a disc of bread, rather like an extra-large bap. They have a distinctive taste, crusty and soft with a chewy texture.

Stottie Cake Recipe - Dragons and Fairy Dust (1)

What is a stotty cake?

Like many dishes from North East England, stottie cakes were born from poverty. Food had to be filling to serve shipyard workers and miners. Money was short so nothing went to waste. Making bread at home was commonplace. At the end of the day leftover dough was shaped into round discs. These were put at the bottom of the coal-fired oven, the coolest part, known as the sole. The stotties would cook as the oven cooled down.

Cooking the bread at a low temperature in this way gives the yeast longer to work and give the stottie its distinctive chewiness. In the twenties, it was common to see stotties, in the plural, lining windowsills in order to cool. In those days it was commonplace to bake bread at home.

Read more: Traditional recipes from North East England

Why is a stottie called a stottie?

The name stottie comes from the Geordie word “stott” which means bounce. The Geordie dialect finds its origins in the tongue of the Anglo-Saxon settlers who were mainly found in the North East.

Legend has it that cooks would check the texture of the stottie was correct by stotting or bouncing it off the kitchen floor. If it bounced the texture was correct. I must admit I did not check my stotties to see if they bounced, I suspect the family would not have wanted to eat them if I had.

Fortunately, due to health and safety rules, the bouncing no longer takes place.

Stottie Cake Recipe - Dragons and Fairy Dust (3)

How to make a stottie cake

Bread is not something I am good at making, but the stottie cake is actually quite easy to make. Unlike most loaves of bread, there is only one rise needed, which limits the amount of kneading involved. It is definitely worth the effort, there is something homely about eating homemade stotties.

Don’t forget to scroll down to get the complete printable recipe.

Equipment required

You will need:

  • Large bowl
  • Small bowl
  • Sieve
  • Board to roll out the bread
  • Rolling pin
  • Measuring jug
  • Kitchen scales

Ingredients

  • Strong white bread flour – bread flour is high in gluten which allows the dough to rise and expand better.
  • Yeast – this will help the bread to rise.
  • Sugar – this will make the yeast more active which will make the bread rise more.
  • Salt and pepper – this seasons the stottie cake and makes it tastier.
  • Water – to help make the dough.

Steps to make

First, activate the yeast. Put the yeast, sugar and pepper in a bowl and add 3 tablespoons of tepid water.

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Leave in a warm place. It should become frothy after 15 minutes.

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Sieve the flour and salt into a bowl and make a hollow in the middle.

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Pour the yeast mixture and the rest of the water into the hollow.

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Mix to make a dough.

Knead the dough until it gets glossy. This will take about ten to twelve minutes. Don’t be scared to work the dough, it will increase the gluten and make the bread better.

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Put the dough in a bowl and leave to rise until it doubles in size. This will take about an hour.

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When the dough has risen preheat the oven to 180C. Roll the dough out on a floured board and shape into two to three rounds about 2cm thick and 25 cm across.

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Bake for twenty minutes. Leave to cool on a wire rack.

Stottie Cake Recipe

Stottie Cake Recipe - Dragons and Fairy Dust (11)

Stottie Cake Recipe

Alison Maclean

A stottie cake is a large round of bread which is cooked slowly at the bottom of the oven for a more chewy texture

5 from 2 votes

Print Recipe Pin Recipe

Prep Time 30 minutes mins

Cook Time 20 minutes mins

Proving time 1 hour hr

Course Appetizer

Cuisine British

Servings 2 Stotties

Equipment

  • Large bowl

  • Small bowl

  • Tablespoon

  • teaspoon

  • Measuring Jug

  • Pastry Board

  • Rolling Pin

Ingredients

  • 1 tsp salt
  • ½ tsp sugar
  • 15 g fresh yeast or 7g sachet of dried yeast
  • ½ tsp white pepper
  • 400 g strong plain white flour
  • 220 ml tepid water

Instructions

  • Place the yeast, sugar and pepper into a bowl and add 3 tbsps of the water.

  • Leave in a warm place for 15 minutes until frothy

  • Sieve the flour and salt into a bowl and make a well in the centre.

  • Add the yeast mixture.

  • Add the rest of the water and mix to make a firm dough.

  • Knead the dough until it is glossy

  • Cover with a cloth and leave to rise for an hour, or until doubled in size.

  • Preheat the oven to 180C

  • Roll out on a floured board and shape into two or three rounds about 2 cm thick

  • Bake for 20 minutes

Video

Notes

Stottie cake is a delicious bread recipe from North East England. It is quick and easy to make

Keyword Bread, North East Food

What do you put in a stottie?

The stottie is perfect served warm with butter and jam or cold in a sandwich. The stottie is normally cut into four wedges to make sandwiches. Traditionally the stottie is served with ham and pease pudding, the pease pudding made from spilt peas cooked alongside the gammon.

Home made pease pudding is more tasty but shop bought will work just as well, bringing out the taste of the ham and the stottie cake. Real butter is a must to create a taste sensation. Other fillings will work just as well, cheese is ideal and often you will find stotties filled with cheese savoury. This is a mix of grated cheese, grated carrots, onion and mayonnaise which makes a simple and delicious filling.

Can you freeze a stottie cake?

Yes they can be frozen. It is better to eat them freshly baked as they are not as nice when they are defrosted.

Home made pease pudding is more tasty but shop bought will work just as well, bringing out the taste of the ham and the stottie cake. Real butter is a must to create a taste sensation. Other fillings will work just as well, cheese is ideal and often you will find stotties filled with cheese savoury. This is a mix of grated cheese, grated carrots, onion and mayonnaise which makes a simple and delicious filling.

Why not pin for later?

Stottie Cake Recipe - Dragons and Fairy Dust (13)
Stottie Cake Recipe - Dragons and Fairy Dust (2024)

FAQs

Why is stottie cake so called? ›

The cake originated in the part of England just outside of Newcastle. The word "stottie" comes from the term "to stott," which in the local Geordie vernacular means "to bounce." The Geordie dialect has origins in the tongue spoken by the Anglo-Saxon settlers of England.

What is a Scottish stottie? ›

A stottie cake or stotty is a type of bread that originated in North East England. It is a flat and round loaf, usually about 30 centimetres (12 inches) in diameter and 4 centimetres (1.6 inches) deep, with an indent in the middle produced by the baker.

Can you freeze stottie cakes? ›

Our stotties can be frozen for up to to 3 months.

What to do with a stottie? ›

The stottie is perfect served warm with butter and jam or cold in a sandwich. The stottie is normally cut into four wedges to make sandwiches. Traditionally the stottie is served with ham and pease pudding, the pease pudding made from spilt peas cooked alongside the gammon.

What is cake called in Scotland? ›

kaka, Dan. kage, a cake (O.N. has it in kokukorn (Torp)).]

What's the difference between a stottie and a fadge? ›

The difference between a fadge and a stottie was in the making of the dough. The fadge dough was made with yeast and that of the stottie was mode without it. "Because of the texture of the stottie, it was often known locally as Tough Geordie.

What is a sandwich called in Scotland? ›

Piece: a piece of bread and butter, jam, or the like, a snack, usually of bread, scone or oatcake, a sandwich. Jeelie piece: bread and jam; the most common kind of piece in Scotland, often provided as a snack between meals. By extension, a piece came to mean the sandwich lunch carried to work by the working man.

What do Scots call food? ›

'Scran' is Scottish slang for food… so this is one you'll likely hear on your excursions.

What is a Yorkshire stottie? ›

Traditional to the North of England, a Stottie is a white, soft, oven-bottom bread bun; golden on the outside with a light-texture inside.

Why do bakeries freeze cakes? ›

The freezing process allows the flavours to meld and develop, resulting in a more harmonious taste. Simply bake your cakes, allowing them to completely cool, pop them in the freezer the next day, and keep them there until you're ready to serve. This clever technique is a valuable addition to any baker's arsenal.

Do bakeries freeze their cakes? ›

Cake layers, brownies, and other bars take up time and space both in the oven and out. Instead of make these daily, many bakeries will bake up massive batches intermittently, far more than they'd need in one day, then cool, wrap, and freeze them.

How best to eat a stottie? ›

What goes well with stottie cake? Popular fillings include pease pudding and thick ham, breakfast items (eg the classic bacon and egg combo) and they're also very good simply spread with butter.

Why are Welsh Cakes called Welsh Cakes? ›

They were usually cooked on a bakestone and the Welsh names given to these cakes were usually based on the different regional Welsh name for the bakestone. These included pice bach, tishan lechwan or tishan ar y mân (bakestone cakes), but in English they became known generally as Welsh Cakes.

Why is Scotland called the Land of cakes? ›

Scotland is known as the land of cakes and it is famous for its oatmeal cakes as in old times, oatmeal cakes were baked only in Scotland. The most famous crop grown in Scotland was oats.

What are Welsh Cakes called? ›

Welsh cakes (Welsh: picau ar y maen, pice bach, cacennau cri or teisennau gradell), also bakestones or pics, are a traditional sweet bread in Wales. They have been popular since the late 19th century with the addition of fat, sugar and dried fruit to a longer standing recipe for flat-bread baked on a griddle.

What is another name for Dundee cake? ›

A classic Dundee cake is a round fruitcake. I prefer it to its distant American cousin, the Christmas fruitcake, in part because it's lighter and butterier. It's typically made with moist raisins and orange peel and topped by pretty concentric circles of whole blanched almonds.

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