South African crunchies are a delicious, easy, traybake filled with oats, coconut and flavoured with golden syrup. This recipe whips up in a few minutes. If you love Anzac biscuits you will love these.

There are two types of crunchies in South Africa. One is a baked oat and coconut bar flavoured with golden syrup. The other is a chocolate bar which consists of a honeycomb covered in milk chocolate. Both are deliciously delightful in their own way.
Crunchies (the baked biscuit bar that is) remind me of my childhood. They are a biscuit that was made in my family's kitchen, as well as my friend's and neighbours' family kitchens. These quick and easy biscuits were present at every bake sale. And very much like the Malva Pudding, every family has their own recipe.
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Crunchies vs Anzac Biscuits
In my mind – they are pretty much the same biscuit, just formed differently. I had my suspicions the first time I tasted an Anzac biscuit here in New Zealand, way back in 2019.
My hand-written crunchie recipe that I have been using for decades now was very similar to the many Anzac Biscuit recipes I had looked at.
For the purpose of Salty Ginger – I stepped away from my handwritten and well-loved recipe to have a look at my 1978 copy of Cook and Enjoy It. Why you may ask? Well, I wanted to see what this classic recipe book had to offer in terms of a traditional crunchie recipe.
My hand-written crunchie recipe and the multitude of Anzac biscuit recipes I looked at called for a 1 to 1 to 1 ratio of flour, oats and coconut, in cups that is. The Cook and Enjoy It recipe called for a 1 to 4 to 3 ratio of flour, oats and coconut. I played around with the ratios and came up with something in between this recipe and mine because at the end of the day I wanted a biscuit or cookie and not a straight-up granola bar.
What I ended up with were the best South African crunchies recipes I could muster! Not as sweet tasting as my Anzac/Original Crunchie recipe, but equally delicious.

What You Need for this Recipe
Equipment
This recipe requires a few mixing bowls, a kitchen scale, and 9"x9" or 23x23cm cake or brownie tin, and some baking paper.
Ingredients
Rolled oats and desiccated coconut make the crunchie, giving the…you guessed it, the crunch.
Butter makes it better, but baking margarine will do fine.
The golden syrup adds a nice light syrup flavour but can be substituted with honey or maple syrup.
Milk or water to add a bit more liquid to the batter.
Baking soda can be replaced with an equal amount of baking powder.
White or brown sugar can be substituted for either in this recipe.
Note - crunchies are egg-free oat and coconut bars.

Substitutions/Variations
Substituting Plain/All-Purpose/Standard Grade Flour with Self-Raising/Self-Rising Flour: If a recipe calls for ½ teaspoon to 1 teaspoon of baking powder per cup/150 grams of plain flour, simply use self-raising flour and leave out the baking powder. For recipes that need more than 1 teaspoon of baking powder per cup (150 grams) - simply add in the additional baking per cup (150 grams).
For this recipe, I would substitute the flour gram for gram and remove the additional baking soda.
Salt is a crucial ingredient in all baked goods. I use table salt in all my recipes. One teaspoon of table salt equals 1.5 teaspoons of Morton Kosher Salt equals 2 teaspoons of Diamond Crystal.
Making Crunchies
1 - Preheat the oven to 200°C/180°C Fan. Grease and line a baking sheet, slice tray or cake tin (about 23x23cm or 9"x9").
2 - Combine the flour, oats, coconut, sugars, cinnamon and salt in a mixing bowl.
3 - Melt the butter and golden syrup together either in the microwave or on the stovetop. Combine the baking soda and milk or water. Stir the baking soda mixture into the butter mixture.


4 - Pour the wet ingredient into the dry ingredients and stir well until combined. Press the biscuit mixture into the bottom of the prepared tin and bake for 25 to 30 minutes. Rotate the tin halfway through the bake if needed.
Remove from oven and allow to cool for 10 to 15 minutes before slicing into 20 equal slices.


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Pro Tips for this Recipe
You may need to rotate your biscuits halfway through, especially if your oven runs hot in a particular corner.
Slice the crunchies while they are still warm!
Weighing & Measuring Ingredients
Weighing ingredients with a kitchen scale is more accurate than using measuring cups. All my recipes are developed and tested using grams only.
However, I have activated the metric-to-cup conversions. Simply click on "cups" or "metric" for your preferred measurements. For these conversions, cups are equal to 240 millilitres/8 fluid ounces, tablespoons are 15 milliliters and teaspoons are 5mL.
Ovens and Air-Fryers
The temperatures stated are for conventional ovens. For convection, fan-forced, fan-assisted, or air-fryers, the temperature must be reduced by 20°C/25°F.
For baking, make sure the oven is fully preheated, and that the rack is in the middle of the oven. Open the oven as little as possible. For best baking results use an oven thermometer.
Remember that all ovens work slightly differently and bake times may need to be adjusted for your specific oven.
Bakeware: Metal bakeware is superior when it comes to baking biscuits, cookies, brownies, muffins and quick bread, scones, cakes. These heat up and cool down faster than glassware. Glassware is heavier, heats up and cools down slower than metal and is more suited for bread puddings, pies, crisps, crumbles and cobblers.
All my recipes are currently tested at sea level.
Storage and Freezing
Crunchies can be stored at room temperature in an airtight container for 2 weeks.
South African Crunchies FAQ
Yes! I have made crunchies using honey before and the result was a delightfully honey flavoured biscuit. For this recipe, in particular, substitute out the golden syrup with an equal amount of honey.
Yes - simply substitute the baking soda with baking powder for this recipe.
Golden syrup or light treacle is an inverted sugar syrup that is made by refining sugar through the addition of an acid. It has a similar consistency to honey.
Rate & Review!
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Recipe Card

Crunchies (South African Oat and Coconut Bars)
Equipment
- 9x9 Inch (23x23cm) Square Cake Pan
Ingredients
- 150 grams rolled oats
- 150 grams desiccated coconut
- 150 grams plain flour (all-purpose/standard grade)
- 100 grams white granulated sugar (caster/granulated)
- 55 grams light brown sugar
- 1½ teaspoon ground cinnamon (optional)
- ½ teaspoon table salt
- 125 grams butter (1 stick plus 1tbsp)
- 90 grams golden syrup (maple syrup/honey)
- 4 tablespoon milk or water
- ½ teaspoon baking soda (bicarb/bread soda)
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 200°C/390F. Grease and line a baking sheet, slice tray or cake tin (about 23x23cm or 9"x9").
- Combine the flour, oats, coconut, sugars, cinnamon and salt in a mixing bowl.150 grams rolled oats, 150 grams desiccated coconut, 150 grams plain flour, 100 grams white granulated sugar, 55 grams light brown sugar, 1½ teaspoon ground cinnamon, ½ teaspoon table salt
- Melt the butter and golden syrup together either in the microwave or on the stovetop.125 grams butter, 90 grams golden syrup
- Combine the baking soda and milk or water. Stir the baking soda mixture into the butter mixture.4 tablespoon milk or water, ½ teaspoon baking soda
- Pour the wet ingredient into the dry ingredients and stir well until combined. Press the biscuit mixture into the bottom of the prepared tin and bake for 25 to 30 minutes. Or until they have nice deep golden brown colour. Rotate the tin halfway through the bake needed.
- Remove from oven and allow to cool for 10 to 15 minutes before slicing into 20 equal slices.
Notes
Nutrition
Nutrition information is an estimate. If scaling the recipe remember to scale your cook and bakeware accordingly. All temperatures stated are conventional, unless otherwise stated. Recipes tested in grams and at sea level.


Laiqah
Thursday 15th of August 2024
Best! Kids love this! Even better half dipped or drizzled with chocolate. Thanks Salty Ginger.
Tiffany
Tuesday 6th of August 2024
I loved this recipe! I added in chunks of milk chocolate with peanut butter 🤍 Everyone LOVED them !🤍
Jenny
Wednesday 8th of November 2023
If I dont use coconut, how much of the oats and/or flour should I use instead?
Henk Dunckley
Saturday 20th of January 2024
Hi. Thanks for your suggestions... my new favorite cookies! Practice do make perfect! With another few attempts we have perfected your crunchie recipe in our airfryer oven... 175°C max for 35 minutes with the fan on, and then another 7 minutes rest in the warm oven to "dry out" a little. They come out deliciously yummie everytime, not burned, not dry or over-baked, just perfect!
Thank you for your recipe and advice. Ps, we have now memorized the ingredients, quantities and of course baking time, temperature etc. and baking paper makes an easy to clean perfect bake...
Mary-Lou Watkins
Wednesday 8th of November 2023
Hi. I have not tested a no-coconut crunchie recipe. So I can't be sure of the exact extra amount of oats but would probably use the same amount as there is coconut in the recipe. But I cannot guarantee the outcome.
Henk
Saturday 4th of November 2023
Hi Mary-Lou, thanks for this recipe. I made it a few times and it came out perfect mostly, although once it burned at 180°C at 30 minutes with the airfryer fan on... is 180°C recommended for this type of airfryer oven or is it too hot; 30 mins. too long? (It is a bit of a try and try again affair for me)
Mary-Lou Watkins
Saturday 4th of November 2023
Hi,
Thank you so much! I'm glad to hear you like the recipe! It is definitely one of my favorites :)
All the temperatures stated on my site are for conventional ovens. For convection, fan-forced, fan-assisted, or air-fryers, the temperature must be reduced by 20°C/25°F - and I'll add this into the recipe card as well.
Air-fryers are basically small fan-forced ovens and the temperature must be reduced by 20°C. Overall, most recipes state a temperature for conventional ovens unless they say "fan", because it is recommended that baking typically take at a more "gentle" speed. That being said, I have baked in a fan-forced oven successfully before. I have left a link for my ovens article for further reading. I have never baked in an air-fryer, but would personally drop the temp by 20°C and check on the baked goods about 5-10 minutes before the stated time to get a handle on how quickly things bake in the smaller oven.
Keep in mind that most recipe books and/or blogs are written for conventional temperatures, but again, because all ovens are different, it is something you need to learn and become acquainted with typically through trial and error. But the crunchies or Anzac biscuits are the easiest recipes to test and gauge how your specific oven/air-fryer is fairing.
Best of luck! ML
Aislinn
Wednesday 11th of January 2023
This looks delicious but will instant oats also work for this recipe?
Mary-Lou
Wednesday 11th of January 2023
Hi!
Thank you. I haven't tried instant oats in this recipe, but it might work if it's the plain unflavoured, unsweetened quick oats. However, definitely stay away from the flavored instant oat packages.
Happy Baking! Mary-Lou