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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Oct 2004
    Location
    San Francisco Bay Area
    Posts
    241

    Default Flaxless Cracker Recipes

    Hi all!

    I have discovered that I don't care too much for the taste of flax. I've tried both brown and golden and I'll only eat the crackers if they have lots of stuff on them. Has anyone had luck with flaxless crackers? Or significantly reducing the amount of flax in a recipe? I'm wondering how little I could put in with it still holding together.

    Thanks!

    Olive

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Aug 2004
    Location
    Southern Maryland
    Posts
    1,431

    Default

    I got this from another website - they tasted like kinda cheesy to me. Nutritional yeast is not always raw - so that is up to you.

    "Bell Pepper Crackers

    1 whole bell pepper (not green)
    1/4-1/3 C cashews
    salt to taste
    spices (opt)
    1 slice of jalopeno
    1-2 TBS of nutritional yeast flakes (opt)

    blend all ingred till smooth. pour onto a teflex and dehydrate over night, flip over onto the mesh sheet and dehydrate until done (not moist and a bit crispy).
    we use these like bread, or a tortilla. if made thick enough, it can be be a scooper!

    This is a response that was provided to someone who did not have pine nuts

    I just made these yesterday. I used 1 whole bell pepper with about 1/4 to 1/3 c cashews and a pinch or two of salt. The I did another batch using the same amount of pine nuts instead of the cashews. Both batches tasted great and cheesy, and I guess I'd call it closest to cheddar. The pine nuts just added a, well, pinier taste. Spikier, if that makes any sense. Suffice to say both batches have already been well consumed!

    I didn't use any tumeric since I had red bell peppers and I already dug the color

  3. #3

    Default

    Those bell pepper crackers are GOOD! I, too, haven't adapted to the flax crackers (except the banana flax crackers I love so much) and when sweetlips shared this recipe with me, it was much better than any flax ones I had tried before.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Oct 2004
    Location
    San Francisco Bay Area
    Posts
    241

    Default

    Ooooh, I'll have to try these! I love nut. yeast and have no intention of giving it up--I think it is a healthy living food, even if it's not raw. I also like it for the B12. I'll have to try the banana flax ones too. I think part of the problem might be putting garlic in the crackers. I just don't do well with raw garlic and the powdered tastes weird.

    Thanks!

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Sep 2004
    Location
    Wichita, Kansas
    Posts
    535

    Default

    Thanks Sweet lips sounds good! Sigh so many recipes so little time.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Sep 2004
    Location
    Australia
    Posts
    199

    Default

    I made up a batch of the Capsicum Crakers last night and i have eaten most of it straight out of the dehydator this morning, they are lovely.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Oct 2004
    Location
    Milton Keynes, Bucks, United Kingdom
    Posts
    244

    Default

    Oooooh these sounds YUMMY! how thick should they be before drying them?
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    It is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society
    --Krishnamurti
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    My private corner on the net--> http://www.makeitraw.com
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Oct 2004
    Location
    San Francisco Bay Area
    Posts
    241

    Default

    I made the red pepper crackers, but they didn't turn out the way I thought they would. Flavor was great--reminds me exactly of the uncheeses I used to make! I'm thinking that maybe I didn't blend it smooth enough? My crackers came out slightly lumpy and very cracked/lacy. They were also sort of fruit leather softness. Maybe too high humidity right now? Or maybe I didn't spread it thick enough?

    Any ideas from people who make these alot? They have a lot of promise!

    Olive

  9. #9

    Default

    Hey Olive,

    For the lumpiness, I'd say it was probably due to not blending enough

    The cracked/lacy-ness, I'd say maybe not thick enough

    The fruit leather softness, didn't dry long enough. No time was specified (I don't think) so you kinda have to allow them to dry as long as it takes till their nice and crispy/crunchy. Even turning them onto the the try and off the sheet when they're firm enough. Mine were nice and crispy but they dried a long time.

    Try 'em again one day!

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Aug 2004
    Location
    Denver, then Seattle, Des Moines, Denver
    Posts
    460

    Default

    I had raw taco chips at Ecopolitan last night...they were AMAZING! They had some flax seed in them but they weren't predominantly flax seed. But...just a thought for those experimenting (add taco seasoning). They were incredible with guacamole.

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Oct 2004
    Location
    San Francisco Bay Area
    Posts
    241

    Default

    Success!!! I made the Sprouted Grain Crisps from Cherie Soria's Angel Foods book and they are incredible! Light, crispy and crunchy without the raw-grain floury taste or weird (to me) flax texture of some other raw crackers. You'd never think someone could get so happy over a dang cracker, but I about danced around my kitchen when I ate one! Between this and her Herbed Cheese Spread recipe, the book is worth getting!

  12. #12

    Default

    Hi......wondering if anyone has come up with addtional flaxless cracker recipes since Olive first posted this in January. I too am not a huge fan of flax.

    Thanks!
    Smileen
    "The Future is Now"

  13. #13

    Default

    I don't like the taste of flax alone either, but if you grind it finely, and only add a reasonable amount, it will help to hold the cracker together. The resulting taste will be mostly from other ingredients. You can also mask the taste of flax with a strong spice flavor.

  14. #14

    Default

    Thank you!
    Smileen
    "The Future is Now"

  15. #15

    Default Flaxless Cracker Recipes

    Olive, I love the bell pepper crackers as well, but if I want a cracker that looks and tastes like a saltine, I make the onion bread recipe that has been posted on this forum and just omit the Nama Shoyu and add a teaspoon or Celtic sea salt instead. Sprinkle sunflower seeks on top and dehydrate until crispy. Depending on the weather this may take 2 days at 105 degrees. I flip them over onto a mesh screen half-way to finishing drying. They are white and buttery tasting and keep a very long time in a plastic bag in the refrigerator. Even though they are made with onions, for some reason mine don't have a strong onion taste and I even eat them with raw almond butter. Wish I had a picture to post. I have a digital camera but haven't figured out yet how to post pictures. The crackers are really pretty.

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