Recipe·Baking·British·Five Ways
Five Raw Honey Flapjacks
One master method, five distinct flapjacks. Classic Acacia, orange and sunflower seed, fruit and nut, pear and cinnamon, and dark chocolate. Each finished with a different raw honey from our hives.
A flapjack is the British baker’s test: four ingredients, one tin, no margin for error. Get the ratio right and you have a chewy, golden tray of breakfast or tea-time gold. Get it wrong and you have an oily slab or a pile of crumbs. The honey is doing real work here. It binds, sweetens, and adds the floral edge that distinguishes a good flapjack from a forgettable one.
Below is the master method, which works for all five variations on this page. Then five distinct recipes, each tuned to a different mood and a different raw honey. Start with the Classic if you’ve never made a flapjack before. Move to the Dark Chocolate if you have, and you want to show off.
One technique, five flapjacks
All five recipes follow the same arc. The variations sit in what you add to the base. Learn this once and the rest is variations on a theme.
Heat low, melt slow
Butter, sugar and honey go into a saucepan over the lowest heat. Stir gently until the butter melts and the sugar dissolves. Take it off the heat the moment it’s smooth. Boiling kills the floral notes in raw honey, so this step is more vigilant than fast.
Combine off the heat
Tip the oats and any additions into the warm syrup. Stir until every oat is coated. The mixture should look glossy and stick to itself, not the spoon. If it looks dry, your honey was overheated and lost moisture.
Press firmly into a tin
Line a 20cm or 28cm by 18cm tin with baking paper. Tip the mixture in. Press down with the back of a spoon until the surface is flat and tight. Loose flapjacks crumble. Pressed flapjacks slice cleanly.
Bake to deep gold, then wait
Bake at 180°C (160°C fan / Gas 4) until the edges are deeply golden and the centre is just set, around 20 to 25 minutes. The hardest part is what comes next: leave them in the tin to cool completely. Cut while warm and they fall apart. Cut cold and they hold.
Classic Honey Flapjacks (Acacia)
The everyday flapjack. Four ingredients, twenty minutes in the oven, a delicate floral lift from raw Acacia honey. Start here.
Ingredients
- 200g unsalted butter
- 200g raw Acacia honey
- 200g soft brown sugar (or light muscovado)
- 400g porridge oats (rolled, not instant)
- Pinch of fine sea salt
Method
- Preheat. Oven to 180°C (160°C fan / Gas 4). Line a 20cm square or 28cm x 18cm tin with baking paper.
- Melt. Butter, sugar and salt into a saucepan over the lowest heat. Stir gently until smooth. Remove from the heat.
- Stir in honey. Off the heat, add the Acacia honey and stir to combine. Keeping it off direct heat protects the raw honey’s floral character.
- Combine. Tip in the oats and stir until every flake is coated.
- Press. Spread evenly into the tin and press firmly with the back of a spoon. The surface should be flat and tight, around 2cm thick.
- Bake. 20 to 22 minutes, until the edges are deeply golden and the centre is just set.
- Cool, then cut. Leave in the tin until completely cool. Lift out and cut into 20 squares.
Orange & Sunflower Seed Flapjacks
The classic with two upgrades: orange zest folded through the syrup, and a glossy marmalade glaze brushed over the top. Sunflower honey works beautifully here, its slightly nutty character meeting the citrus head-on.
Ingredients
- 250g unsalted butter
- 200g Sunflower honey (or Acacia)
- 250g caster sugar
- 450g porridge oats
- Zest of 2 oranges, finely grated
- 30g sunflower seeds
- 3 tbsp orange marmalade, plus 1 tbsp water
- Pinch of fine sea salt
Method
- Preheat. Oven to 180°C (160°C fan / Gas 4). Line a 28cm x 18cm tin with baking paper.
- Infuse the syrup. Butter, sugar, salt and orange zest into a saucepan over the lowest heat. Stir until smooth, then remove from the heat.
- Add honey. Off the heat, stir in the Sunflower honey.
- Combine. Add the oats and stir until coated.
- Press and seed. Press into the tin, then scatter the sunflower seeds evenly across the top, pressing them in lightly.
- Bake. 22 to 25 minutes, until golden.
- Glaze. While baking, warm the marmalade with a tablespoon of water until syrupy. Once the flapjack comes out of the oven, brush the marmalade glaze across the warm surface.
- Cool, then cut. Leave to cool completely before slicing into 20 squares.
Fruit & Nut Honey Flapjacks
The lunchbox flapjack. Dense with dried fruit and chopped nuts, satisfying enough to count as breakfast. Use any raw honey you have open: Wildflower is a strong default.
Ingredients
- 250g unsalted butter
- 200g raw honey (Wildflower or Acacia)
- 250g soft brown sugar
- 450g porridge oats
- 120g mixed dried fruit (sultanas, cranberries, chopped apricots)
- 80g chopped nuts (almonds, pecans, walnuts)
- Pinch of fine sea salt
Method
- Preheat. Oven to 180°C (160°C fan / Gas 4). Line the tin.
- Melt. Butter, sugar and salt over the lowest heat until smooth. Remove from the heat.
- Stir in honey. Off the heat.
- Combine. Add the oats, dried fruit and chopped nuts. Stir until evenly distributed.
- Press. Tip into the tin and press firmly. The mixture is heavy; lean into it.
- Bake. 22 to 25 minutes, until golden.
- Cool, then cut. Cool completely in the tin. Slice into 20 squares.
Pear & Cinnamon Flapjacks
The autumn flapjack. Dried pears and a generous knock of cinnamon, finished with the deeper, smokier register of Heather honey. Tea-time in October.
Ingredients
- 250g unsalted butter
- 200g Heather honey (or Acacia)
- 250g soft brown sugar
- 450g porridge oats
- 180g sliced dried pears, roughly chopped
- 2 tsp ground cinnamon
- Pinch of fine sea salt
Method
- Preheat. Oven to 180°C (160°C fan / Gas 4). Line the tin.
- Spice the syrup. Butter, sugar, salt and cinnamon into the saucepan over the lowest heat. Stir until smooth, then remove from the heat.
- Add honey. Off the heat, stir in the Heather honey.
- Combine. Add the oats and chopped dried pears. Stir to coat.
- Press. Tip into the tin and press firmly.
- Bake. 22 to 25 minutes.
- Cool, then cut. Cool completely. Slice into 20 squares.
Dark Chocolate Honey Flapjacks
No granulated sugar at all. Honey carries the sweetness, dark chocolate adds the bitter counterpoint. The most refined flapjack on the page, and the most adult. The dipped finish makes them photogenic enough for a gift box.
Ingredients
- 200g unsalted butter
- 300g raw honey (Acacia or Linden, runny only)
- 450g porridge oats
- 1 tsp fine sea salt
- 150g dark chocolate (70%), chopped
Method
- Preheat. Oven to 180°C (160°C fan / Gas 4). Line the tin.
- Melt the butter. Butter and salt into a saucepan over the lowest possible heat. Remove the moment the butter melts.
- Stir in honey. Off the heat, add the honey and stir until smooth. Without granulated sugar, the temperature is more critical: keep it below 40°C if you can.
- Combine. Add the oats. The mixture will look wetter than the others. That’s correct.
- Press hard. Press into the tin with serious pressure. Without sugar, the structure relies on compression alone.
- Bake. 22 to 25 minutes, until deeply golden.
- Cool fully, then cut. Cool completely. Slice into 20 squares.
- Melt the chocolate. Set a heatproof bowl over a pan of simmering water (do not let the bowl touch the water). Add the chopped chocolate and stir gently until smooth.
- Dip and dry. Dip one cut edge of each flapjack into the chocolate. Place on a wire rack and leave until set, around 30 minutes at room temperature.
Make ahead, store, freeze
Make ahead
Best baked the day you’ll eat them, but the mixture can be pressed into the tin and chilled for up to 12 hours before baking. Bake straight from the fridge, adding 2 to 3 minutes.
Storage
Keep in an airtight tin at room temperature for up to 5 days. Don’t refrigerate. The fridge dries them out and the texture turns hard.
Freezing
Wrap individual squares in baking paper and freeze for up to 2 months. Defrost at room temperature for an hour, or warm briefly in a 150°C oven for 5 minutes to refresh the texture.
You’ll need
- Saucepan (medium, heavy-bottomed)
- Wooden spoon
- 20cm square tin or 28cm x 18cm tin
- Baking paper
- Sharp knife
- Wire cooling rack
- Kitchen scales
About the oats
Use rolled porridge oats, not jumbo and not instant. Jumbo oats are too thick to bind cleanly. Instant oats turn pasty during baking. Standard porridge oats sit in the middle: enough texture to bite into, fine enough to absorb the syrup. Supermarket own-brand is fine. The honey is the ingredient to spend money on.
For a more wholesome version, swap up to 100g of the porridge oats for jumbo oats. The texture becomes coarser and chewier, and the flapjack holds together less neatly. That’s a feature, not a bug, in a lunchbox flapjack.
Honey Flapjacks FAQ
Are honey flapjacks healthier than regular flapjacks?
Lower in refined sugar, yes. Replacing some or all of the golden syrup with raw honey reduces the proportion of refined sugar and adds the antioxidants and trace nutrients found in raw honey. They are still calorie-dense, butter-rich treats. We’ve covered the full sugar versus honey comparison in our honey vs sugar guide.
Can I replace the sugar with more honey?
Yes, but only partially. Honey is liquid and adds moisture. Replacing all of the sugar with honey gives you a wetter, more cake-like flapjack that won’t hold. The Dark Chocolate variant on this page is the example: 100% honey, no sugar, but the recipe is rebalanced (less butter, more honey, careful temperature control).
What raw honey is best for flapjacks?
Acacia is the safest default. It stays liquid, has a clean floral profile, and doesn’t fight the oats. Heather is best for spiced or autumnal variants. Sunflower works for citrus and seed combinations. Linden adds a slight herbal coolness that suits chocolate. Avoid set or crystallised honey unless you can warm it to a runny consistency first.
Why won’t my flapjacks set?
Almost always one of two reasons. First: you cut them too soon. Flapjacks set as they cool, not in the oven. Wait until completely cold. Second: you didn’t press hard enough into the tin. Loose flapjacks crumble. Use the back of a spoon and lean in.
Can I make these flapjacks gluten-free?
Yes, provided you use certified gluten-free porridge oats. Standard oats are technically gluten-free but are usually processed in facilities that handle wheat, so cross-contamination is the issue. Look for the certified GF label.
Can I make these vegan?
Honey is, by most definitions, not vegan. The recipes in this collection rely on raw honey for both flavour and binding. If you want a plant-based version, replace honey with maple syrup or a high-quality date syrup, and replace butter with a baking-grade vegan margarine. The result is a different, less floral flapjack, but a good one.
What size tin should I use?
For the Classic recipe, a 20cm square tin gives 20 squares of around 2cm thickness. For the larger recipes (Orange, Fruit & Nut, Pear, Dark Chocolate, all using 250g butter and 450g oats), use a 28cm by 18cm tin. Lining with baking paper, not just greasing, makes lifting and slicing far easier.
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