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Sunday, November 7, 2010

Soaked Buckwheat Pancakes


Last night before going to bed I decided to start soaking Buckwheat Flour for this mornings breakfast. (3 cups of flour and 3 cups of Raw Milk.) 

This morning the clocks changed and we actually (somewhat) benefited with an extra hour of sleep. 

THANK you boys!!! Happy Time Changing Day!!!! :) 

This morning I was totally expecting to be up at 6:30 (old time) and 5:30 (new time). Joshua did come into our room around that time but we were able to get him back to sleep for another 2 hours. That is right - we did not get out of bed till 8:30 (old time) and 7:30 (new time!)

Happy Time Changing Day!!!! :) 



The Ingredients:
3 cups buckwheat flour
3 cups soured raw milk or cultured buttermilk
3 eggs, lightly beaten
3/4 tsp fine grained sea salt
1 1/2 tsp baking soda
2 tablespoons melted RAW butter
coconut oil or butter for frying


The Directions:


12-24 hours before you plan to serve the pancakes begin the soaking process. Mix buckwheat flour and sour milk or buttermilk until well combined (see above photo). Cover and place in a warm place (next to oven, on top of refrigerator) for 12-24 hours. The longer the better.


In the morning start preheating your pan over medium-low heat.


While that is heating mix all other ingredients into buckwheat flour/milk mixture. At this point it may be very bubbly, like a sourdough starter. Stir it down a bit, just to take a little air out of the batter. If you don’t do this your pancakes will literally have holes all the way through them.


Add coconut oil or butter to your prehated pan. Ladle 1/4 cup of batter into pan for each pancake. Cook for 3-5 minutes, or until bubbles pop and the top dries out just a bit. Flip and cook for 2 more minutes on the other side, or until nicely browned.


Serve with plenty of grass-fed butter and homemade jam, syrup, molasses, molasses-honey spread, or raw honey. I topped mine with Almond Butter and Coconut.
Recipe Notes: The soaking step in this recipe helps to neutralize the phytic acid in the grain, making them more digestible and the nutrients more available. Culinarily speaking, though, the soaking process just makes for a lighter, tastier pancake. In testing this recipe I have used freshly ground toasted buckwheat for my flour option, though any buckwheat flour should work. Just make sure it is 100% buckwheat. Finally, this recipe makes a lot of pancakes which store well in the refrigerator for days and will freeze well for months.

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