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You are here: Home > Flour & Ingredients > Wholegrain Buckwheat Flour 1kg

Wholegrain Buckwheat Flour 1kg

Common buckwheat (fagopyrum esculentum) was domesticated and first cultivated in southeast Asia, possibly around 6000 BC.  It is a member of the rhubarb family and can be identified by its triangular seeds which ripen in late Autumn. Buckwheat seeds consist of small, black outer hulls encapsulating delicate pyramidal kernels which are violet, faint green, purple, and white.  After careful milling, buckwheat yields a silky calico coloured flour that retains traces of pastel hues.

Our Wholegrain Buckwheat Flour is milled the traditional way, using a stoneground process, from naturally gluten and wheat free wholegrain buckwheat, sometimes known as Sarrasin.  It does, however, contain gluten from the adjacent growing, storage or processing of wheat.

 

Buckwheat flour makes delicious pancakes, blini, noodle and specialist pasta.

This 1kg pack is ideal for the cupboard of all home bakers.

 

 

 

 

Customer rating: CakeCakeCakeCakeCake 1 customer review

£2.15 (£0.22/100g)

Dietary and allergen information:

Contains GLUTEN from adjacent growing, storage or processing of WHEAT.

Not suitable for gluten free diets.

Ingredients:

Buckwheat.

Nutrition

Typical values per 100g
Energy 335 kcal
Energy 1422KJ
Protein 11.9g
Carbohydrate 65.4g
(of which sugars) 1.4g
Fat 2.9g
(of which saturates) 0.6g
Fibre 6.4g
Sodium 0.05g
 

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By Ms Carol Hawthorn

24 Mar 2013 | 18:51 GMT

Rating: CakeCakeCakeCakeCake

I have just used this for the first time in a flan / custard tart, instead of regular flour. My expectations were dubious about the results but the pastry is actually one of the highlights of the dish. The flour seemed to cook better as a pastry than the usual common plain wheat flour. The blind bake produced a lovely 'short' texture. I topped this with egg custard mix and dropped in some frozen strawberries and rebaked. There is something delicious and special about the pastry, it changed while cooking with the filling. It took on the moisture and flavour of the eggs and strawberries and didn't go soggy, more of a stodgy deliciousness. This flour has potential in the baking department!