Bake

Snack Mix-Style Sesame Sticks

December 20, 2021
4.8
4 Ratings
Photo by Alpha Smoot
  • Prep time 5 minutes
  • Cook time 15 minutes
  • Makes About 3 cups
Author Notes

Sesame sticks are a great vice of mine: I'll strip the bowl of any before you have a chance to get a hand in there.

But, luckily, while it'd be hard to make pretzel wheels, Fritos, or Cheez-Its (never Cheese Nips—never!), sesame sticks are the child's play of the DIY snack food world: If you can make crackers (and you can), you can make sesame sticks. (And yes, that means I should make a batch of my own to bring to the next snacks-centered event I attend—for everyone's sake.)

These don't taste exactly like the kind you'll find in the bulk section of your grocery store (probably because they have 8 ingredients instead of 30 and they're baked, not fried), but they're pretty darn close—and they still tick off all the nutty, crunchy, salty boxes nevertheless.

To Make Them...

- Mix together a simple dough (I used Epicurious' 3-Ingredient Seeded Crackers as a guide) with whole wheat flour as the base.
- Add buckwheat groats for crunch and, following Serious Eats' recommendations, toasted sesame seeds, ground turmeric, garlic powder, and salt.
- Then, whisk the sesame oil, water, and honey and pour the liquid mixture into the dry ingredients as the mixer runs.
- When the flour has disappeared and the dough has come together, roll it between two sheets of parchment paper, as thin as you can get it without driving yourself nuts.
- Score it with a sharp knife or—fun—a pizza cutter. You can cut all the way through, but don't separate any of the stickies (the dough will be too sticky, anyway). then slide the parchment paper onto a baking sheet and freeze for an hour.
- Brush the frozen cracker sheet with oil, sprinkle with more sesame seeds, and bake at 400°F for 15 to 20 minutes—the darker they are (without burning), the more flavorful and crunchy they'll be. Brush a little more sesame oil over top for the last few minutes of baking.
- Don't worry if they're not super crisp when they first come out of the oven—they'll harden as they cool.
- When they're cool, snap them apart with your hands (they'll break easily along the scored lines).

Fellow sesame fiends, we no longer have an excuse to snag the sticks out of the bowl with our pincer-fingers when the other guests step away to get drinks.

And with a reserve of homemade sesame sticks to call our own, we can munch by the palmful, yes, but also strew them atop salads, soups, and dips, too.

Next up: bagel chips.

Adapted from Epicurious and Serious Eats. —Sarah Jampel

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Ingredients
  • 2 cups whole-wheat flour
  • 1/2 cup toasted sesame seeds, plus more for sprinkling
  • 1/4 cup buckwheat groats
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons kosher salt, plus more
  • 1 teaspoon garlic powder
  • 1/4 teaspoon ground turmeric
  • 2/3 cup water
  • 1/3 cup sesame oil (untoasted), plus more for brushing
  • 1 tablespoon honey
Directions
  1. In the large bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, pulse the flour, seeds, groats, salt, garlic powder, and turmeric to combine.
  2. In a measuring cup, whisk the water, oil, and honey.
  3. With the motor running, stream in the oil mixture and mix until the dough has come together and all of the flour has disappeared. Transfer the dough to a work surface and divide in half.
  4. Working with one half at a time, roll the ball of dough between 2 sheets of parchment paper into a thin rectangle, roughly 15 inches by 10 inches. Using a sharp knife or a pizza cutter, score the dough into many little stick-shaped crackers and transfer, parchment and all, to a baking sheet. Repeat with second half of dough, then transfer both to the freezer for about 1 hour, until firm and cold.
  5. Heat the oven to 400°F. When the crackers are cold, brush with more oil and sprinkle with more sesame seeds and salt. Bake for 15 to 20 minutes—I find that the darker they are (before being burnt, of course), the more flavorful they'll be! You can choose to baste with additional oil if you'd like them to be a bit richer. Let the crackers cool completely (they crisp up as they cool), then break them apart into sticks with a spatula, butter knife, or your hands. Snack of them as is or incorporate into mixes, eat them as croutons, etc.

See what other Food52ers are saying.

7 Reviews

Josh J. January 22, 2020
I can contest that the groats are crunchy and perfect. Great recipe!

I doubled the sesame seeds, needing a reason to try to plow thru a 4-lb bucket of seeds. I also found that instead of sprinkling seeds on the oil-brushed sticks before baking, they stuck better if i tossed the finished sticks with a swizzle of honey and more sesame seeds, then let them dry out a bit.

Finally, my oven might be finicky, but I found that 400 deg burned a quarter of them before another quarter turned brown at all. I ended up putting them in at 350 for almost twice the time, watching, and got a much more even brown. This was *after* 15 minutes at 400, mind you.

Way better than store-bought!
julie S. February 18, 2017
Am I missing something, or is there no quantity specified for water?
Sarah J. February 18, 2017
Nope, that was my mistake! It's 2/3 cup.
julie S. February 18, 2017
Thank you - I just added enough water to make the dough come together. These crackers are spectacularly good!
Sarah J. February 19, 2017
So glad you like them! And that you figured out the water situation.
Bascula February 17, 2017
Wouldn't the groats be really hard in this recipe? I am trying to think of something I could substitute for them anyway, so I don't have to go out and buy an ingredient. Suggestions? some form of oats?
Sarah J. February 17, 2017
They're (surprisingly) not too hard—I got the idea from Dorie Greenspan, who uses groats in her multigrain chocolate chip cookies. You should look for medium granulation groats (not the large kind), but if you don't want to go buy them (and who can blame you...), you can substitute chopped nuts or cracked wheat. I think rolled oats would work well, too! The texture of your crackers will be a little different, but they'll still be tasty.