Joan Sutherland’s menu
Tour and smoko treat (keeping biscuit)

ANZAC biscuits with golden syrup

TravelDocumented🍯facile30 min

A golden, crunchy oat and coconut biscuit bound with golden syrup and bicarbonate. Without eggs or fragile ingredients, it withstands long journeys and stays crisp in a tin.

Tour and smoko treat (keeping biscuit)

A golden, crunchy oat and coconut biscuit bound with golden syrup and bicarbonate. Without eggs or fragile ingredients, it withstands long journeys and stays crisp in a tin.

When you're dashing from one opera house to another, my dear, you don't always have proper sustenance at hand between two trains. I always slipped a tin of these biscuits into my luggage: no egg, so they keep and keep, and the golden syrup gives them that little caramel taste that comforts a tired traveler. A cup of tea, two ANZAC biscuits, and you find your courage again before the next rehearsal.
Joan Sutherland
Ingredients
  • Rolled oatstwo cups (rustic base, crunch)
  • Desiccated coconutone cup (flavor, texture)
  • Flourone cup (structure)
  • Sugarone cup (sweetness)
  • Golden syruptwo tablespoons (binder, caramel flavor — the signature)
  • Buttera good piece (richness)
  • Baking sodaa pinch (lightness)
How it was made : Developed during World War I to be sent to ANZAC troops (Australian and New Zealand Army Corps), these biscuits deliberately contain no eggs so they keep during long sea voyages. Golden syrup and baking soda replace the egg as a binder. They were baked by families all over Australia during Joan Sutherland's childhood.