
This Week’s Challenges
- Signature: 🍪 Slice‑and‑bake picture biscuits (a patterned log you chill, slice, and bake)
- Technical: 🌾 Hobnobs (oaty biscuits, chocolate‑topped; with a judged variation)
- Showstopper: 📦 Biscuit time‑capsule box with five keepsake biscuits inside
🍪 Slice‑and‑Bake — History & Where It’s Big

First, the patterned slice‑and‑bake. Bakers tint dough, build a design like a log, chill, then slice for identical pictures. The idea echoes 20th‑century icebox cookies and modern patterned cookies seen across Europe, the U.S., and Japan. Today, creators push precision: clean edges, even bake, sharp images.
Where it’s big: U.S. home baking (icebox heritage), Japan cafés and convenience bakes, and Europe’s holiday tins.
Did you know? Color makes doneness tricky—bakers can’t read browning well, so timing matters.
Hobnobs — Oat, Tea, and Texture

Next, Hobnobs. These oat biscuits sit between cookie and granola bar in texture. Traditionally, you get a plain base or a chocolate‑coated top for snap + sweetness. On the show, a caramel/feathered finish raises the difficulty. Therefore, bakers must nail even oats, set caramel, and a crisp, dry bake.
Where it’s big: the UK (supermarket staple), with cousins in Scotland’s oatcakes and Nordic oat biscuits.
Did you know? Moisture is the enemy—any steam softens the snap.
📦 Time‑Capsule Box — Gingerbread Meets Memory

Finally, the biscuit time‑capsule. It borrows gingerbread‑house engineering and sugarcraft display work. Today, bakers build edible boxes with dowels/boards, then fill them with five themed keepsakes. As a result, structure + storytelling decide success.
Where it’s big: UK show displays and global cake‑decor competitions.
Did you know? Royal‑icing glue needs a matte, dry surface—glossy chocolate weakens joins.
Make sweet Halloween memories—build a cookie house together.
🎯 How the Bakers Fared
Clean slices, crisp oats, and solid joins rose to the top. Conversely, underbaked centers, thick chocolate, and unfinished builds cost time and polish.
🌟 Star Baker & Elimination
- Star Baker: Tom. Because he stayed consistent, then delivered a faultless time‑capsule cottage—precise detail, clean bake, and strong structure.
- Eliminated: Leighton. Because his ambitious piano box ran out of time and earlier rounds fell short—soft bakes, messy finishes, and incomplete assembly.
👉S13E1 — Cake Week: Swiss Roll, Fondant Fancies, Landscape Cake
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