Fresh, melty boobie biscuits recipe—soft lactation cookies packed with oats, flaxseed, and chocolate chips.
Hi, I’m Ella, your Aussie home cook and snack–obsessed new mum friend. If you have a hungry bub, a busy household and a craving for something sweet that also feels purposeful, you’re in the right place. Today I’m sharing my boobie biscuits recipe, the one I perfected during endless nap windows and 2 am feeds.
These are soft in the middle, a little crisp on the edges and packed with oats, flax and brewer’s yeast. They taste like a proper treat, store beautifully in the freezer and are easy enough to mix while the kettle boils.
Before we start, a gentle note from one mum to another. Cookies alone cannot fix supply. Every body is different and breastfeeding questions deserve personalised support. Feed or pump often, rest where you can, drink water and talk to your health professional or a lactation consultant if you have concerns. This boobie biscuits recipe sits alongside those foundations. It offers a nourishing, morale–lifting snack for long days and longer nights, with ingredients many parents find helpful.
I first baked these for my sister after her little boy arrived during a heatwave in Brisbane. Our kitchen looked like a cereal aisle had exploded, I was in thongs and a messy bun, and the timer kept competing with newborn squeaks. When she sent a photo of herself, baby snoozing and crumbs on her shirt, she wrote, “These taste like a hug.” That is exactly the energy I want for you from this boobie biscuits recipe.
Boobie biscuits, also known as lactation cookies, are classic Aussie biscuits or Australian cookies baked with a few ingredients that are traditionally linked to supporting milk supply. The big three you’ll see again and again are rolled oats, flaxseed meal and brewer’s yeast. They sit in a buttery, lightly spiced biscuit dough with chocolate chips or dried fruit for joy. My boobie biscuits recipe keeps sugar modest, relies on pantry staples and bakes up into sturdy little cookies that travel well in nappy bags.
Some families call them lactation biscuits recipe or lactation cookies recipe. Call them what you like. I call them permission to pause for five minutes, put the kettle on and eat something delicious with one hand.
Let’s talk through the most common mix–ins you’ll find in any recipe for boobie biscuit and how I use them.
Oats bring fibre, slow–release carbs and a cosy flavour that makes biscuits taste homey. They are the backbone of this boobie biscuits recipe and give each cookie a tender, chewy bite.
Ground flaxseed adds plant omega–3s and soluble fibre. It soaks up moisture and gives the dough a slightly nubbly texture that I love. It also helps the cookies hold together well if you make the dairy free or egg free variations.
This is the slightly malty secret behind the classic lactation cookies taste. Use brewer’s yeast made for cooking, not active baking yeast. A little goes a long way. I balance it with vanilla and brown sugar so the flavour is round and pleasant, never bitter.
I often fold in finely chopped almonds or pepitas for healthy fats and crunch. If you need a nut free lunchbox version, skip the nuts and use sunflower seeds and extra pepitas. This boobie biscuits recipe works either way.
I am firmly pro chocolate chip in a lactation cookies recipe, because happiness matters. But I’ve included fruit options too, like chopped dates or apricots, that taste very Australian and feel a touch more wholesome.
Evidence on galactagogues is mixed, and that’s okay. I like to be honest about that. Think of this boobie biscuits recipe as a nourishing snack with ingredients many mums enjoy during breastfeeding, not a magic pill.
You will need a large mixing bowl, a whisk or wooden spoon, a baking tray and baking paper. A hand mixer makes fast work of creaming butter and sugar but isn’t essential. For measuring, I provide cups and grams. If you bake often, a small digital scale is brilliant. Scooping the dough with a tablespoon or a small ice cream scoop keeps your cookies the same size so they bake evenly. This boobie biscuits recipe yields about 28 standard cookies or 20 larger bakery–style ones.
28
servings15
minutes12
minutes140
kcal35
minutesA chewy, oaty lactation biscuits recipe that uses rolled oats, flaxseed meal and brewer’s yeast, finished with dark chocolate chips or dried fruit. Gentle sweetness, freezer friendly and perfect with a cuppa.
This boobie biscuits recipe was developed in my Aussie kitchen and is forgiving and flexible for tired parents.
160 g plain flour or all–purpose flour 1 cup plus 2 tbsp
1 tsp baking powder
1 tsp ground cinnamon
1/2 tsp fine salt
30 g brewer’s yeast 3 tbsp
40 g flaxseed meal 1/3 cup
240 g rolled oats 2 2/3 cups
150 g unsalted butter, softened 2/3 cup
100 g light brown sugar 1/2 cup packed
80 g caster sugar 1/3 cup plus 1 tbsp
1 large egg at room temp
2 tsp vanilla extract
60 ml milk of choice 1/4 cup
150 g dark chocolate chips 1 cup
or 150 g chopped dried apricots, dates or sultanas
optional 70 g chopped almonds or pepitas 1/2 cup
optional 2 tbsp desiccated coconut for a classic Aussie biscuits twist
Use 150 g coconut oil or plant butter and swap milk for oat or almond milk.
Use a good 1 to 1 gluten free baking flour and certified gluten free oats or quinoa flakes.
One of my favourite things about this boobie biscuits recipe is how easily it bends to your pantry and your cravings.
Swap half the butter for peanut butter or almond butter and add 1 tbsp chia seeds. Throw in chopped dates. The result tastes like a breakfast cookie and keeps you full through a morning cluster feed.
Use chopped dried apricots, a handful of crystallised ginger and a pinch of ground ginger with the cinnamon. Very Australian, very nostalgic.
Stir in desiccated coconut and chopped dark chocolate. Sprinkle a little coconut on top before baking for texture.
Replace 2 tbsp flour with cocoa powder and fold through white chocolate chips. My friend Mia swears the double chocolate version got her through a week of sleep regressions.
Use the flax egg method and increase milk by 1 tbsp. Bake 1 minute longer. The cookies stay tender and hold together well thanks to the oats.
Fresh dough can rest in the fridge for up to 48 hours. Scoop and bake straight from cold, adding 1 extra minute to the time. Baked biscuits keep in an airtight tin at room temperature for 4 days. For the freezer, cool completely, then pack into snap–lock bags or containers with baking paper between layers. Freeze for up to 3 months. Thaw on the bench for 15 minutes or pop a frozen cookie in the microwave for 10 to 12 seconds. A warm cookie during a late feed is honestly heaven.
A little story. When my daughter arrived, I felt like I was learning a new language that only she spoke. On day four, when emotions were big and sleep was not, a midwife knocked and said, “Love, grab something to eat.” I opened the fridge and found a tin of these, a gift from my neighbour, Rosa. I ate one cold, standing in front of the open door, and cried happy tears. It was not the oats or the brewer’s yeast. It was the feeling of being cared for.
That is why I keep a tin of this boobie biscuits recipe near the kettle whenever a friend has a baby. I label the container with a heart and the phrase “for long nights and lovely mornings.” These cookies have now seen hospital wards, mother’s group picnics, late Zooms with far–away grandparents and more pram walks than I can count. The recipe has become part of our family folklore. I hope it becomes part of yours too.
Rolled oats, flaxseed meal and brewer’s yeast are the signature trio. They give the cookies a hearty texture and a malty, wholesome flavour. Many parents choose these ingredients while breastfeeding. The rest of the dough looks like a classic Aussie biscuits mix, which is why these taste like normal cookies everyone enjoys.
Anytime you need steady energy. Some parents like one with breakfast and another mid afternoon. Others prefer one after pumping sessions. There is no strict timing. Think of them as a helpful snack, not a prescription.
Yes. Use dairy free butter and a flax egg to make them vegan. Use a gluten free baking blend and certified GF oats or quinoa flakes to make them gluten free. The dough is forgiving. Follow the swaps in the notes and bake a test cookie to check timing.
Every body is different and research is mixed. Hydration, frequent feeding or pumping and rest remain the biggest drivers of supply. Many mums enjoy these cookies as part of a healthy snack rotation and feel they support energy and routine. If you have supply concerns, please see a lactation consultant or your health professional.
Absolutely. This boobie biscuits recipe was made for gifting. Bake, cool and package in a tin with a little note of reheating tips. If your friend has allergies, make the appropriate swaps. I also like to deliver a few savoury muffins and a bag of chopped fruit. New parents need snacks they can eat with one hand.
I love a good lamington or ANZAC as much as anyone, but there is something special about a biscuit that feels designed for a stage of life. My boobie biscuits recipe is sweet without being cloying, sturdy without being dry and easy without any faff. It is also flexible. If all you have is quick oats, use them and reduce milk a little. If you are out of chocolate chips, chop a block.
If your baby is allergic to dairy, use plant butter. The recipe can handle your real life.
If you bake one thing in the haze of early parenthood, let it be this boobie biscuits recipe. It delivers comfort, slow carbs and a moment of calm with your cup of tea. It welcomes friends and visitors who say, “Can I bring anything” with a simple answer.
It freezes like a dream and turns into the kind of biscuit you will still bake after the baby days are past, simply because it tastes like home.
You have got this. Put the oven on, line a tray and let me keep you company while you stir. When the timer goes off, take a deep breath and steal a cookie for the cook. You deserve it.
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