Spiced Irish Oatmeal With Cream and Crunchy Sugar

- Total Time
- 1½ hours
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 6tablespoons unsalted butter, plus more for greasing the pan
- 2cups steel-cut oats
- 1teaspoon ground cardamom
- 1teaspoon ground cinnamon
- 6½cups boiling water
- ½cup heavy cream, plus more for serving
- ½teaspoon kosher salt
- ½cup Demerara sugar, plus more for serving
- Flaky sea salt, for serving
Preparation
- Step 1
Heat oven to 350 degrees. Butter a 2-quart shallow gratin or baking dish.
- Step 2
Cut 2 tablespoons butter into small cubes, and put them in the refrigerator until needed.
- Step 3
In a large skillet, melt remaining 4 tablespoons butter. Add the oats and sauté until they smell nutty and toasted, 2 to 4 minutes. Stir in the cardamom and cinnamon, and sauté for another minute, until fragrant. Scrape oats into the buttered baking pan and stir in the boiling water, cream and salt.
- Step 4
Bake oats for 40 minutes, then give them a stir. Sprinkle sugar all over the oats, and scatter reserved cubed butter on top. Continue to bake for 15 to 20 minutes longer, until the top is glazed and bubbling.
- Step 5
Sprinkle oatmeal with flaky sea salt, if you like. Serve oats with more cream and sugar on the side.
Private Notes
Comments
Well, first of all, I'm grateful I used a 2-quart baking dish, because it was all I could do to get it in the oven without overflowing and spilling. On what postmodern New York planet did you get everything to fit in a 1-1/2-quart baking dish? Do the math ... 7 cups of liquid is nearly 2 quarts. After 40 minutes it was still liquid, and it overflowed the too-small pan and spilled everywhere. Merry Christmas! USE A BIGGER PAN, and do your math beforehand.
Thanks to everyone for your comments. I made the recipe as written (I used Trader Joe's organic steel-cut oats), but instead of the 1.5 quart dish I used a 3.5 quart Dutch oven. It turned out perfectly - no excess liquid -- and the whole family devoured it. I served it with sliced bananas, raisins, and almonds. The pinch of sea salt at the end is crucial; it rounds out the flavors. I hope this note is helpful to readers considering making this!
I am grateful to Ms. Clark for sharing this recipe - in my oatmeal-loving household, this dish was a big hit. To quote my husband, "This tastes like something they would serve for breakfast at a high-end Scottish inn." This recipe is worth making for the visual effects alone - the bubbly sugar-and-butter topping is lovely. To Christa: thank you for the suggestion of using a larger baking dish. Sorry to hear about your mess, but you earned stars in your heavenly crown by warning us.
I would suggest increasing spices by 0.5 tsp each, with the amount of oats the flavoring ends up fairly subtle. Otherwise really good! I was expecting a creme brûlée-style top, which is not what I got (more of a soft caramel) but it still tasted great and mixed into the oatmeal well
A great dish for oatmeal lovers—great with berries and a splash of milk. I used a glass 9x13 like others suggested. I used about half the sugar, and found that to be plenty for us. The butter on the top is prolly unnecessary.
This was yummy. Really appreciated the cardamom and cinnamon. Quite rich. I’d reduce the butter. I agree with those who say to top with sugar and put under the broiler to crisp it up. Next time I’ll reduce sugar in it to do that. Did a 1/2 recipe with prorated amounts. While it had to cook a little longer, it came out the perfect oatmeal consistency. Agree with a sprinkle of flaky salt on top. I used TJs non-dairy heavy cream without issue.
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