Oatmeal Lace Cookies

One of my most favorite cookies are lace cookies. They’re a delicate see-through toffee-like cookie that melts in your mouth when you bite into them. You can leave them flat, or shape them in a few different ways and no matter what you choose, they’ll be as beautiful as they are delicious. These cookies are incredibly easy! The batter only requires a very small list of ingredients (that you probably already have in your cupboard) and comes together in one pan in minutes. These are sure to impress!

oatmeal lace cookie recipe

Ingredients Needed

  • unsalted butter
  • light brown sugar
  • dark corn syrup
  • quick oats (NOT old fashioned)
  • flour
  • vanilla extract
  • heavy cream
  • salt

How to Make Oatmeal Lace Cookies

This is a simple overview of the recipe, you’ll find a full printable recipe below!

  1. Preheat oven to 350°F and line baking sheets with parchment paper.
  2. In a saucepan, cook butter, brown sugar, and corn syrup over medium heat until boiling.
  3. Remove from heat and whisk in oats, flour, vanilla, cream, and salt. The batter is a more runny consistency the warmer it is.  As it comes off the heat and cools a little, it becomes a little thicker.
  4. Drop 1-teaspoon scoops of batter 3 inches apart on baking sheets. It will feel weird because you wonder how that tiny thing can turn into a large cookie! But as they cook, they spread out super thin and the sugar caramelizes.
  5. Bake 6–8 minutes until golden and bubbling stops.
  6. Cool on sheet: 1–2 minutes for shaping, or 10 minutes to leave flat. Or, replicate Costco’s Florentine cookies by sandwiching chocolate in the middle of two.
  7. To shape, flip warm cookie and roll around a handle to cool.
  8. Gently remove from parchment and serve.

Different Shaping Options

There are a few different ways you can shape these cookies. See the recipe card for more detailed directions, and be sure to read the “tips” section!

Tips on Shaping

  • Important – Just Try One First! If you’ve never made these before, try shaping just one before you do a whole pan. These are not hard to make, but I think they do take a few to get the hang of how they look and feel. If you overcook them, they’ll crisp up super fast when they come off the pan and can break easily, and if you undercook they’ll be soft and chewy. Just right creates a cookie that literally melts in your mouth, like a thin, crisp toffee.
  • Shaping: there are a variety of ways you can shape and serve these. The recipe card contains more specific directions.
    • Flat Disks: they are delicious plain, or drizzled in chocolate
    • Costco Florentine-Style: You can replicate Costco Florentine cookies by sandwiching these with melted chocolate in the middle.
    • Rolled Cigar: To make a rolled cigar shape, flip the warm cookie upside down and then roll it around the handle of a wooden spoon, or a dowel, and let it cool completely. You can also drizzle with chocolate (optional).
florentine lace cookies

Frequently Asked Questions

What type of oats should I use?

Use rolled oats (old-fashioned) for a classic texture; thick-cut gives a heartier bite, while quick oats work too—avoid instant or steel-cut oats.

Why are the cookies so thin and lacy?

Oatmeal lace cookies are meant to spread thinly; the high butter-and-sugar ratio and thin batter create the characteristic lacy, crispy finish

How should I store baked cookies?

Cool completely, then store in an airtight container at room temperature. They’ll stay crisp for 5–7 days, but may soften after the first day.

How can I shape them into curls?

While still hot from the oven, carefully roll them around a dowel or bottle to create tubes. See our recipe card for full details!

Lace Cookie Recipe
Lace Cookie Recipe

Oatmeal Lace Cookies

5 from 1 vote
"Made from a batter that spreads and separates as it bakes into lacy, brittle, see-through wafers, these fancy-looking cookies crunch when you bite into them and immediately melt in your mouth with the rich taste of butter and brown sugar" – America's Test Kitchen
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 10 minutes
Total Time 25 minutes
Servings30 cookies

Ingredients

  • 4 tablespoons butter unsalted
  • 6 tablespoons brown sugar, packed light
  • ¼ cup dark corn syrup
  • ½ cup 1.5 oz quick oats NOT old fashioned
  • ¼ cup flour 1 ¼ oz
  • 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
  • 1 ½ teaspoons heavy cream
  • teaspoon salt

Instructions

  • Heat oven to 350℉.  Line baking sheets with parchment paper. 
  • Combine butter, brown sugar, and corn syrup in medium saucepan; cook, stirring constantly, over medium heat until boiling. Remove from heat.
  • Off heat, add oats, flour, vanilla, cream, and salt and whisk until well combined.
  • Using 1-teaspoon measure, drop scoops of batter 3 inches apart on prepared sheets.  Bake until golden and no longer bubbling, 6 to 8 minutes. Let cookies cool on sheets for 1-2 minutes if shaping cookies or 10 minutes if leaving flat – see below for shaping tips.
  • Gently remove cookies from parchment and repeat with remaining batter.  Serve.  

Shaping

  • Flat: If you want to simply try the flat disks, they are delicious plain, or drizzled in chocolate.
  • Rolled Cigar: To make a rolled cigar shape, flip the warm cookie upside down and then roll it around the handle and let it cool completely. The trick with rolling is that it has to be at just the right temperature.  After they come out of the oven, you have a short time before they harden up, but they'll also be piping hot!  You'll need to wait until they're cool enough to touch, and then roll them over a spoon handle (or something similar) to shape.
    Once shaped and cooled, you can leave them plain, or drizzle them with chocolate like I did.
  • Costco Florentine-Style: You can replicate these by sandwiching these with melted chocolate in the middle. Florentines are usually made with ground almonds in place of oatmeal, but these will taste very similar! It will spill out the little holes, but just place on parchment until it dries and hardens.

Notes

This recipe yields 30-36 cookies.  However, I suggest you double the batter just because it’s so easy to, and then you’ll have some wiggle room to test out a cookie or two before cooking the whole batch, just to get the hang of it!

Nutrition

Calories: 36kcal, Carbohydrates: 5g, Protein: 0.1g, Fat: 2g, Saturated Fat: 1g, Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.1g, Monounsaturated Fat: 0.4g, Trans Fat: 0.1g, Cholesterol: 4mg, Sodium: 27mg, Potassium: 7mg, Fiber: 0.03g, Sugar: 5g, Vitamin A: 50IU, Vitamin C: 0.002mg, Calcium: 3mg, Iron: 0.1mg
Course: Desserts
Cuisine: American
Keyword: Oatmeal Lace Cookies
Calories: 36kcal
Author: Sara Wells
Cost: $8
Did You Make This Recipe?Snap a picture, and hashtag it #ourbestbites. We love to see your creations on our Instagram @ourbestbites!
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Meet The Author

Sara Wells

Sara Wells co-founded Our Best Bites in 2008. She is the author of three Bestselling Cook Books, Best Bites: 150 Family Favorite RecipesSavoring the Seasons with Our Best Bites, and 400 Calories or Less from Our Best Bites. Sara’s work has been featured in many local and national news outlets and publications such as Parenting MagazineBetter Homes & GardensFine CookingThe Rachel Ray Show and the New York Times.

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Questions & Reviews

  1. I’m in the middle of making these and the mixture is thickening up. Is that ok or do we need to keep it semi warm?

  2. Is there something I could use to replace the corn syrup? Honey or maple syrup? Sugar syrup (the sugar dissolved in water kind)? I’m assuming it gets a lot of its texture from the corn syrup so it might not be an easy replacement 🙂

      1. 5 stars
        I just finished making these and they are great! I subbed molasses with a bit more brown sugar for the corn syrup and the only difference I notice is that they are darker than the pictures.

  3. Sounds like a fun cookies to try. Thank you for sharing the recipe! Can’t wait to try it.

  4. Could you sub half and half for whipping cream? Just cause i usually always have some. I can’t wait to try these!

  5. I love lacy oatmeal cookies! They remind me of my childhood, my mom always made them. Thanks for reminding me about them. They are delicious!

  6. These look beautiful! What’s your trick to getting your chocolate to drizzle in such a fine line?

    1. Add just a tiny bit of oil when you melt it and then put it in a zip-top bag with the tip snipped off to drizzle!

  7. These are so pretty! How many does this recipe make? And could we use dark brown sugar in place of light brown sugar in this recipe?

    1. Sorry I meant to include that! Makes 36 cookies, but I feel like I don’t get quite that many. I actually suggest doubling the batter just because it’s so easy to, and then you have a few to experiment with.