A Northumberland Cottage Kitchen Recipe: Stotty Cake (Stottie Cake) (2024)

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Stottie Cake is made from ordinary white bread dough, but due to the one rise and a slow bake, it creates a chewy bread reminiscent of sour dough, which makes a fabulous vehicle for butter, jam, treacle and cheese.

A Northumberland Cottage Kitchen Recipe: Stotty Cake (Stottie Cake) (1)

AD – This article and recipe was previously shared on the Kenwood site, where I shared an old family recipe that used their Kenwood Titanium Chef mixer.

What Are Stotty Cakes?

A rather plain and flat looking disc of bread, and yet to many people in the North East of England the Stotty Bread is an important and potent symbol of their identity and region.

It’s the bread of my childhood, linked forever in my memory to my grandmother’s old stone cottage and warm, happy days sitting around a big old kitchen table with a flickering fire and the wind howling outside.

A Northumberland Cottage Kitchen Recipe: Stotty Cake (Stottie Cake) (2)

Stotties, as they are called in the plural, are born of thrift and frugality; at the end of a long day of baking, as most bread was made at home until fairly recently.

Any excess white bread dough that was left over was simply shaped and rolled into a large disc, and thrown on to the bottom of the oven, where it baked in an initial burst of heat before continuing to cook as the oven cooled.

This baking method is what gives the Stotty Cake it’s crusty but soft exterior and yet a rather pleasant chewy crumb, and that unique “Stotty” taste too. A cake it is not, but a simple and homely regional loaf of bread.

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My Stotty Cake Recipe

My mother still talks about my grandmother’s Stotty Cakes……she remembers sitting at the kitchen table as a child and tearing chunks from the freshly baked loaf, then spreading butter on to the warm pieces of bread before adding crumbly Cheshire cheese.

My grandmother’s recipe remained a secret for many years after her death, and then one day my mum found an old hand-written recipe in the back of a Be-Ro cookbook, where she had written down the basic principals of how to make a Stotty, and so the secret family recipe was released.

She and I are regular bakers of this secret family recipe now, much to the delight of our families.

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How to Serve Stottie Cake

Once you have tasted one of these flat loaves of bread, you will wonder how you managed to live without them.

They maybe be plain to look at with none of the fancy decorations, glazes and cuts that other bread loaves have, but as soon as you tear off a piece of bread, all warm and crusty, and then spread some butter on so it melts into golden pools of saltiness, you will understand the alchemy of this slow-baked bread, as how it is inextricably linked to happy childhood days and simple suppers at an old cottage table.

A Northumberland Cottage Kitchen Recipe: Stotty Cake (Stottie Cake) (5)

Also GREAT with French cheese too.

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As well as cheese, and jam and treacle (golden syrup), a Stotty Bread is the perfect bread for sandwiches, and if you have ever visited the North East of England, or if you live there, you will know that the classic sandwich of choice made with Stotty Cake is ham and pease pudding.

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My grandmother was an excellent pease pudding maker, as is my mum, but I have to admit to resorting to the ready-made tinned version sometimes, when time is short, although it is still delicious when spread onto warm bread with a slice of home-cooked ham.

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Baking The Stotty Cake

Our family recipe is always better if made with the remnants of some basic white bread dough, and cooked on the bottom of a hot oven that has been turned off to cool, but you can replicate the method for today with the recipe I am about to share below.

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Don’t forget to serve it on a wooden bread board in the middle of the table, with salted butter, cheese, pease pudding and ham too, if you like. Although this bread is perfect all year around, it always seems to taste better when eaten on a cold winter’s evening with the hiss of a log fire and the warm glow of oil lights flickering……or is that just in my memory, maybe.

A Northumberland Cottage Kitchen Recipe: Stotty Cake (Stottie Cake) (10)

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More Traditional Bread Recipes:

A Northumberland Cottage Kitchen Recipe: Stotty Cake (Stottie Cake) (12)

Dutch Tiger Bread

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Italian Ciabatta Bread

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Banana Bread

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No Yeast Fadge Bread

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Stotty Cake Recipe

A Northumberland Cottage Kitchen Recipe: Stotty Cake (Stottie Cake) (18)

Stotty Cake (Stottie Cake)

Yield: 2 Stotties

Prep Time: 1 hour 30 minutes

Cook Time: 45 minutes

Total Time: 2 hours 15 minutes

My Grandmother's recipe for authentic "Stotty Cakes", my grandmother’s recipe remained a secret for many years after her death, and then one day my mum found an old hand-written recipe in the back of a Be-Ro cookbook, where she had written down the principals of how to make a Stotty, and so the secret family recipe was released.

Ingredients

  • 1 ½ lbs strong white bread flour (680g)
  • 1 ½ teaspoons salt
  • 1 teaspoon sugar
  • ½ ounce (15g) fresh yeast (quick action dried yeast can be used, 1 x 7g sachet)
  • White pepper, about ¼ of a teaspoon
  • ¾ pint (450mls) tepid water

Instructions

    1. If using fresh yeast crumble it into a jug and then add the white pepper, sugar and a little tepid water to mix. Place somewhere warm for 10 to 15 minutes so it can start to “work” it is ready to use when it becomes frothy.

    2. Put the bread flour and salt into a large mixing bowl and make a well in the centre, pour in the yeast mixture and the remaining water. If using dried yeast, just sprinkle the yeast in to the flour at this stage, with the sugar and white pepper and add the water as before.

    3. Mix and then knead the dough until it is smooth and elastic. (The word stotty is believed to be derived from the local word of “stotting” which means to bounce, and I remember my grandmother “bouncing” her bread on the kitchen table for ages! So, don’t be shy when kneading.) This bread needs to be well kneaded for at least ten minutes.

    4. Cover the bowl with a clean tea towel and set to one side, somewhere warm, to allow the dough to rise. This will take about an hour, and the dough should have doubled in size before you can use it.

    5. Pre-heat oven to 200C/400F/Gas 6. Butter or grease some large baking sheets.

    6. Put the dough onto a floured board and divide it into two equal pieces; roll the dough out to make two large flat discs, about 1” (2/5cm) thick and then stick the end of a rolling pin in the middle of the dough to make an indentation. You can also prick the top of the bread with a fork too.

    7. Place the Stotty Cakes onto the prepared baking sheets and bake in the pre-heated oven for 15 minutes, before turning the oven off and leaving them in there for up to half an hour to continue to bake.

    8. Serve warm with butter, jam, treacle, honey or cheese, ham and Pease pudding.

Notes

Our family recipe is always better if made with the remnants of some basic white bread dough, and cooked on the bottom of a hot oven that has been turned off to cool.

Nutrition Information

Yield 2 Stotty CakesServing Size 1
Amount Per ServingCalories 1240Total Fat 6gSaturated Fat 1gTrans Fat 0gUnsaturated Fat 3gCholesterol 0mgSodium 1597mgCarbohydrates 249gFiber 9gSugar 3gProtein 41g

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A Northumberland Cottage Kitchen Recipe: Stotty Cake (Stottie Cake) (2024)

FAQs

What is a Northumberland stottie? ›

Despite its name, the stotty cake is actually a type of bread, and the chewy goodness has a similar consistency to sourdough. Like many Northumbrian recipes, it came from frugality – waste not want not – and the idea was that it could be made using any excess white bread dough.

What is a stottie in Scotland? ›

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? ›

In the North East, ham and pease pudding is a very traditional filling for a Stottie. Here at Botham's, our family bakers enjoy a Stottie filled with Beef Paste and real butter. * Suitable for home-freezing. Stotties are one of our biggest sellers with returning online customers ordering in bulk to fill their freezers.

How do you eat a Stottie cake? ›

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.

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.

Is Northumberland Scottish or English? ›

Northumberland, historic county and unitary authority of northeastern England. It is England's northernmost county, bounded to the north by Scotland, to the east by the North Sea, to the west by the administrative county of Cumbria (historic county of Cumberland), and to the south by the county of Durham.

What is cake called in Scotland? ›

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

What do Scots call a bread roll? ›

Cob. Robyn Mackenzie/Shutterstock. All around the UK, from North Wales, north Norfolk and the northwest to northern Scotland and the East Midlands, you'll often hear a bread roll called a cob.

What do Scots call food? ›

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

Why do bakeries freeze 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.

What do you eat pease pudding with? ›

Pease pudding - also known as pease porridge, pease pottage or even "Geordie hummus" - is extremely easy to cook and very, very satisfying to eat – hot or, as the nursery rhyme says, cold. Traditionally pease pudding is served with pork and was often cooked in a muslin with the ham.

What cakes can you not freeze? ›

You can't freeze and defrost a fondant covered cake as the moisture in the freezer makes the fondant sticky. Buttercream on the other hand freezes very well for cakes that have already been decorated.

What is a Mary Jane cake? ›

'' Basically, a Mary Ann is spongecake that is round like a standard cake, but has a shallow, uniform depression in the center.

What is a Newcastle bread roll called? ›

The map reveals teacakes are the term of choice in the West Country, while those in Newcastle favour stotty. Across the border, Glaswegians favour rowies, while those in the Highlands say cob. In southern England, there's huge variance with vienna, buttery and batch thrown into the mix.

Is pease pudding a Geordie thing? ›

Pease pudding is popular in North East England and also known as Geordie Hummus. You can find variants of Pease pudding in other countries. In Germany the name is erbspüree. In Greece fava is similar but uses split yellow beans instead of peas.

What do you call someone from Northumberland? ›

The name originated from the coal mines of Durham and Northumberland, for many poems and songs written about, and in the dialect of, these two counties speak of the “Geordie”.

Why is it called Northumberland? ›

The name of Northumberland is recorded in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle as norð hẏmbra land, meaning "the land north of the Humber". The name of the kingdom of Northumbria derives from the Old English Norþan-hymbre meaning "the people or province north of the Humber", as opposed to Southumbria, south of the Humber Estuary.

Which Celtic tribe lived in Northumberland? ›

Votadini. The Votadini were a very large tribe or people that lived in the south east of Scotland. In the north, their territory started at Edinburgh and the Firth of Forth and stretched as far south as Northumberland in northern England.

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