I can't believe I have never done this before - make dry biscuits (crackers). They are so delicious and yet so easy, so healthy, so cheap and so wrapping free!!
Like many families, mine loves biscuits and dip. I have tried for a long time to buy the 'healthiest' version of dry biscuits - without GMOs, without MSG, without palm oil. It's difficult finding good ones though. I recently stood in the dry biscuit section at my local shops and was left, well 'dry', particularly now that I am trying to dramatically cut plastic wrapping from our household.
So frustrated with the (lack of) options, and no longer wanting to create waste from packaged biscuits, I wondered what it would take to actually make nice crackers. These past few weeks I have been looking for recipes. For some strange reason, it had not crossed my mind to make savoury biscuits before. I have always preferred making my own sweet biscuits with good natural materials, but never these....mmm, silly really considering how easy it is.
After a little bit of research, I now have a long list of recipes that I'd like to experiment with and adapt. This was my first attempt tonight that got the thumbs up from my personal food critics.
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| After mixing and kneading the dough I chopped it into segments. |
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| After rolling them thinly, I painted a little olive oil on top and sprinkled poppy seeds on some. |
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| Ready to eat plain, with cheese or with dip. This afternoon Maia and I went to the cheese shop in Maleny and came home with a couple of tasty cheeses to have with our new experiment. |
This is a vegan recipe.
Basic Cracker Recipe
- 1 cup of plain flour
- 45 ml olive oil
- 60 ml water
- large spoonful of sesame seeds
- a sprinkling of salt
Instructions:
- Mix all the ingredients together.
- Chop into segments
- Roll as thin as you can without them breaking apart.
- Brush a little olive oil on top and sprinkle some extra seeds if desired.
- Cook at 200C/390F until just going brown on the edges (approx 10-12 mins)
- Remove and cool.
Flavour Variations
To add variety to this recipe I could add parmesan cheese, ground pepper, garden herbs (rosemary, oregano and thyme), chia seeds, seaweed strips, finely chopped garlic or kale. I might try replacing the water with mashed pumpkin. The options are endless.I'm keen to try out some of the other recipes too and test out some gluten free options too.
I am so surprised at how easy this was. I'm confident I can completely miss the biscuit aisle now - hooray.





I'll give your recipe a try, Morag - they look delicious! I've been making wheat crackers for some time and recently have expanded into sourdough wheat crackers. We much prefer homemade to store-bought "healthy" crackers (which are expensive and in our opinion far less tasty than homemade). Store bought crackers always taste like sawdust to me - over processed grains are hard to tolerate when you're used to really fresh, local flour.
ReplyDeleteI also like the ability to flavour crackers to my taste - herbs de provence, rosemary, garlic, onion, sea salt... so tasty. The sourdough ones actually taste like they have parmesan cheese baked in!
Sourdough crackers sound amazing - I must try these! Thanks for sharing.
DeleteThese look delicious Morag - will try these with the kids :-)
ReplyDeleteHope you have fun with them!
DeleteThey look fabulous, being coeliac, I would need a GF option. Thanks for the idea :)
ReplyDeleteI'm experimenting with this and will post the results of my gluten free version this week.
DeleteI recently made some gluten/grain free crackers from almond meal, hemp kernels, chia seeds and water. Very easy and tasty. I bake mine as one large thin sheet and break into irregular shapes. Alternatively you could score bake then break into squares.
ReplyDeleteThey look really good Morag!
ReplyDeleteSounds good, but I am in US & need to switch from ml to oz or cups. Maybe I can find that in a cookbook. Love your blog & wish my garden looked like yours. We are having a horrible heat wave & drought. Thanks for sharing. Mary Ann
ReplyDeleteMorag, your could try 'rolling' them with your pasta maker, or roll them thinly in a big square and then chop into triangle - corn chips!!! I've seen a recipie recently using chick pea flour and I thought that would be great for the extra protein!
ReplyDeleteJust inspired to pull out the pasta maker!
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