
Raw Buckwheat & Flax Flatbread
May 8, 2008Decent raw bread recipes are hard to come by. Breads heavy in flax have a very strong flavour and can be a touch bitter, other recipes require you to shove stuff through a juicer as well as dehydrating. I have been trying out more raw food cuisine recently, on a health kick, and have come up with this recipe. This bread has a pretty mild flavour compared to straight flax seed/meal breads, and if – like me – you enjoy the taste of buckwheat, you will probably love this bread.
It’s high in omega oils, fibre, B-vitamins, and several minerals, including manganese. Buckwheat is a seed rather than a grain, and contains no gluten – it’s closely related to rhubarb. Freshly ground meal from seeds are the best, otherwise buy your flax and buckwheat meal from a health store with a high turnover so it’s fresh, and keep it in the fridge or freezer. It’s also a good idea to keep your seeds in the fridge so the oils don’t break down or go rancid.
Required Appliances
Dehydrator with temperature setting option of 40ºC (104ºF) or lower.
Ingredients
1½ cup ground buckwheat or buckwheat flour/meal
1 cup ground flax seeds or flax meal
1 teaspoon sea salt
2 cups filtered water
⅓ cup sunflower seeds
⅓ cup whole flax seeds
⅓ cup pumpkin seeds
¼ sesame seeds (white, black, or a mix)
1 tbsp poppy seeds
1 tbsp nutritional yeast (optional)
Method
Mix buckwheat and flax meal in a bowl. Add salt, nutritional yeast (optional), and water, mix until well combined. Stir through sunflower, flax, pumpkin, sesame, and poppy seeds. Spread the batter evenly over 2 dehydrator trays. Dehydrate at 40ºC (104ºF) for 4 hours, flip the bread over, then dehydrate for another 1-4 hours, depending on how dry you want your bread. Cut each tray of bread into 8-9 slices (8 if round tray, 9 if rectangular). Store in refrigerator. Makes 16-18 slices.
Serving Suggestions, etc
+ A great “bread” for morning “untoast.”
+ An awesome raw pizza base.
+ A bun for burgers or sandwiches.
+ You can use different seeds in the bread to suit your own tastes.
+ Add finely chopped onion, crushed garlic, pepper, herbs, and/or spices for fancy flavour variations!
+ You might need to add a little more or less water to the thick bread batter depending on the water content of your flax and buckwheat meal.
+ Instead of water – and for extra tastiness and vitamins – you could use fresh celery juice or a mix of celery and carrot juice.
+ The longer you dehydrate the bread, the dryer it will be, and the longer it will keep – up to two months in the refrigerator. (Well-dried bread is great to take camping or on road trips!)
+ Less dehydration time makes a soft pliable bread with a great texture. It will keep for about a week in the fridge.
+ I use nutritional yeast that contains vitamin B-12. (Note: nutritional yeast is sometimes called savoury yeast. It’s not the same as brewer’s yeast or other yeasts!) While nutritional yeast is not strictly raw, it’s handy if you like to add extra vitamins to your food.
+ Read more about raw food preparation on the FAQ page.




I find this recipe very interesting…I´m interested in raw recipes because I follow the Seignalet diet, which recommends that 70% (at least) of the diet should be raw. I´m surprised about raw recipes, I didn´t think that could be that delicious.
Nice to discover your blog, I will continue visiting your for sure.
Nice regards
I am so excited to try this! When I do, I’ll link back to you.. (it probably won’t be for several weeks as I’m moving and am going to buy a dehydrator)..
Do I need to soak the buckwheat and flax for this flatbread recipe?
No soaking required!
I would love to try this, but I don’t own a dehydrator. I there an alternative method?
If you can set your oven to a low temp, under 40-50ºC, then yes – many new ovens have low settings for warming plates these days. Any higher temperature and you start destroying omega oils. If you live in a hot, dry climate (eg. a desert) then sun-drying is also an option. I’ve heard of people who heat up their oven to it’s minimum, then dehydrate with the door open… that is an incredible waste of power, though! My dehydrator has a low temp setting, and cost under AUD$100 – you don’t need a fancy one if you aren’t insanely committed to raw dehydrated foods (too much thinking ahead for my liking! Eating alot of dehydrated food results in a high fat diet, too, and is less fresh.). Little dehydrators use far less power than ovens.
this looks good- I love buckwheat.
Hello,
I’m a 70% raw foodie and appreciated your Buckwheat/Flax flat bread recipe post. I was wondering how thin/thick to spread the mixture on the deydrator trays. I have the commercial Excaliber dehydrator. The sheets are about 12×12
thanks, Tara!
I’m not sure, Tara – I have different tray sizes… It would probably do 2 trays, I think.
Been raw for about one year and it has been one of the best transformations of my life
Love the community. Have you tried making corn chips with white corn? amazing!!
I just made this recipe. It’s in the dehydrator right now! I can hardly wait!
Thank you for posting this.
I am considering writing a cookbook (uncookbook??) on raw, vegan, gluten-free recipes as a follow-on to my gluten free cookbook that I just published in February.
I really appreciate all of the resources that you make available on your sidebar! What a blessing you are!
JoDee