Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Raw Rosemary and Sprouted Buckwheat Crust



DISCLAIMER: This recipe is not for those afraid to get their hands a wee bit dirty.

This recipe is a double batch, so you can either halve it if you are using it for a crust or make the whole thing and freeze half for later. For a cheezy rendition mix in 2-4 T of nootch* with the dry ingredients!

What you'll need:
2 C RAW pumpkin seeds
2 C RAW sunflower seeds
1 C RAW coconut flour**
4 C buckwheat sprouts
1 sprig rosemary (leaves only)
1 T EVOO***
1 T onion powder
2 t pink salt
1 t black pepper
1/3 C ground flax seed****
2/3 C water





    Procedure:



    1. mix flax meal and water thoroughly and let sit in your refridgerator for 15 minutes, DO NOT skip this wait time, it really makes a difference in the eggy binding power
    2. grind seeds in food processor into a fine powder
    3. place in mixing bowl with coconut flour, onion powder, salt and pepper; mix thoroughly and break up any clumps
    4. process buckwheat sprouts, rosemary leaves and EVOO until it is  a homogenous mush
    5. add buckwheat mush and flax goop to dry ingredients
    6. using your hands, knead everything
      together until uniform and the mixture sticks together when pressed
    7. take half of the dough and press onto a parchment lined dinner plate and press evenly to the edges to make your pie crust shape of your desired thinness (thicker will hold together, I make mine about 3/4cm thick)
    8. if your dehydrator is like mine, you will need to cut this crust in half and place each half on either side of the center hole 
    9. dehydrate at 41 C for about 2 hours until it is a darker brown and holds together firmly
    10. the remainder of the dough can be frozen or dehydrated into crackers/raw bread



    * nutritional yeast flakes
    ** make sure the coconut flour is raw (like Coconut Secret brand), most brands use pressurized steam to defat their coconut flours. Coconut heats well though, so it's not the worst thing ever.
    *** extra virgin olive oil
    **** you can grind your flax seed yourself or buy pre-ground flax meal, just make sure that you store ground flax seed in the freezer as it will go rancid much quicker than the whole seeds. Basically the general rule of thumb, is the better an oil is for you, the worse it is for you once heated (coconut is fine). That's why it really urks me when brands sell flax-containing baked goods or roasted nuts/seeds as 'healthy'...you might as well inject plaque straight into your arteries.


    This recipe was inspired Sarafae Bedelia (possibly related to Amelia Bedelia?) and her awesome raw vegan blog: addictedtoveggies.com

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