I have news! I can’t believe I haven’t told you all sooner. Seems like most big blogger announcements involve engagements (nope), babies (definitely not) and cookbook deals (not yet).
Here’s mine: I’m going down to Austin, Texas, for the whole month of February with my good friend Ali! We’re going because it’s cold and we can. It was Ali’s idea and I’m so glad we’re actually making it happen.
I can’t wait to sample Austin’s finest street tacos with Ali and clink margaritas with Jeanine. I’m eager to soak up some of the city’s youthful energy and open up to new possibilities. I’m looking forward to an exercise in minimalism, too. I’m only bringing the bare essentials for the month and it should be a good reminder of how little I really need.
Cookie and Henry are coming along, too, of course. We booked an amazing, light-filled house on Airbnb that has a fence built all the way around it, so I won’t worry so much about Cookie, and one of my friends is renting my place while I’m gone. It has all worked out pretty perfectly so far.
Ali is far more organized than I am and created a spreadsheet of kitchen tools that we should bring. I haven’t looked at it yet, but you can bet I’ll be moving “cocktail shaker” to the top. I don’t think my waffle maker will be coming along with me so I’m getting my fill of waffles while I still can.
You all know that I have high standards when it comes to waffles. They must be: a) crisp on the outside, b) fluffy on the inside, and c) light but made with whole grains so they stick with me for longer than a couple of hours.
These 100 percent buckwheat waffles meet all of those qualifications and then some. So what else? They possess buckwheat’s rich, nutty flavor, which makes them more unique than my go-to oat waffles. Plus, since they’re made with buckwheat flour, I can share them with my gluten-free friends. I think you’ll love them!
Don’t have a waffle maker? Try some buckwheat pancakes instead!
PrintGluten-Free Buckwheat Waffles
- Author:
- Prep Time: 10 mins
- Cook Time: 10 mins
- Total Time: 20 minutes
- Yield: 5 small waffles 1x
- Category: Breakfast
- Method: By hand
- Cuisine: Gluten free
This simple, 100 percent buckwheat flour recipe yields light and crisp waffles that are nice and fluffy on the inside! This recipe yields waffles for two to three people, so multiply the recipe as needed.
Ingredients
- 1 cup buckwheat flour
- 1 tablespoon sugar (I used coconut sugar)
- 1 ¼ teaspoons baking powder
- 1 teaspoon baking soda
- ¼ teaspoon salt
- ¼ teaspoon cinnamon
- 1 ¼ cups buttermilk, shaken (see notes to learn how to make your own with any kind of milk)
- ¼ cup (4 tablespoons) melted butter or coconut oil
- 1 large egg
- Topping suggestions: maple syrup, almond butter and/or fresh banana slices
Instructions
- Preheat your waffle iron. If desired, preheat oven to 200 degrees Fahrenheit to keep waffles warm until you’re ready to serve.
- In a medium-sized mixing bowl, whisk together the buckwheat flour, sugar, baking powder, baking soda, salt and cinnamon.
- In a liquid measuring cup or another bowl, whisk together the buttermilk, melted butter and egg. Pour the wet mixture into the dry mixture and stir them together until there are only a few small lumps remaining. Give it a few more stirs if you see any liquid that hasn’t fully incorporated. Commenter Monisha says her waffles turn out lighter and more crispy if she lets the batter rest for 5 to 10 minutes, so you might want to give that a try.
- Pour batter onto the hot waffle iron plates, close the waffle iron and cook until the waffles are barely letting off steam and they are lightly crisp to the touch (this might take longer than your waffle iron suggests). Carefully lift waffle out of the waffle iron and serve immediately or place in the oven to keep warm. Avoid stacking the waffles or they will lose their crispness. Repeat with remaining batter as necessary. Serve with maple syrup, almond butter and/or sliced banana on top.
Notes
Recipe adapted from my buckwheat pancakes.
How to make your own buttermilk: Measure 1 tablespoon + ¾ teaspoon vinegar into a 2-cup capacity liquid measuring cup. Pour in any variety of milk until you reach the 1 and ¼ cups line (regular cow’s milk, almond, soy, oat, rice, low-fat coconut milk should all work). Let the “buttermilk” rest for 5 minutes before using.
Make it dairy free: Make your own buttermilk with non-dairy milk and use coconut oil instead of butter.
Storage suggestions: These waffles freeze very well in sealed, freezer-safe bags. Just pop them in the toaster to warm them up.
▸ Nutrition Information
P.s. Here’s a fun interview I did with Angela of Eat Spin Run Repeat. Thanks for having me, Angela!
Abby @ The Frosted Vegan
Ahh how fun!! I’m a little jealous since it’s gross and rainy here in WI today, so soak up the sun and eat allll the tacos for us up here in the Midwest : )
Melinda
Try adding some ground cardamom and top with lingonberries!!
Kate
Yum!
Katrina @ Warm Vanilla Sugar
Oh wow!! You girls are going to have a flipping blast!! Gah, I definitely need to get away from the cold too. Today is brutal!! Waffles would make my life better for sure :)
Mandy
Austin is so fun! I lived 30 miles away in San Marcos while in college, so a good amount of my time was spent in Austin. I live in Houston now, whish is also awesome in a different way, but my brother now lives in Austin, so we visit often. Enjoy!!
Jeanine
You can borrow my waffle maker if you start to have withdrawls :). Feb is going to be so fun! Crossing my fingers for good weather for you – it’s in the 70’s this week!
Absolutely Tara
So glad you posted these, as I LOVE waffles, but haven’t had one in years due to my gluten allergy. I know there are gluten substitutes (like buckwheat) out there, but rather then spend the brain power on finding them, I’ve just stayed away from baked goods. HOWEVER, looking at these make me want waffles. So on the recipe list they go! Thanks for sharing.
Kate
Thanks, Tara! I hope you’ll give these a try. I also have some oat waffles if you can do GF oats. Love them both!
Kimberly | Chic & Sugar
Austin sounds fun – enjoy! I can’t believe I don’t own a waffle maker. I definitely need to step up my game in this department!
Lauren
WOWEE these look delicious – yum yum, perfect afternoon snack ey? ;)
Kati
Lucky you! I would love to go to Texas right now. The weather is not too pleasant up here in Maine right now. Oh and these waffles look and sound amazing!!
Kathy
Austin has so much good food! Can’t wait to see what you find here. Torchy’s Tacos is a must as well as the new Fork and Taco. They are making some interesting veggie tacos there.
Kate
Thanks, Kathy! Just added your suggestions to my list of things to do in Austin. :)
Melissa
This is so cool! I’m 100% jealous. And those waffles look stellar. I’m still restocking all my flour from the move (far too many months ago to have this excuse). Buckwheat flour is on the list.
katie @ butterlust
THESE WAFFLES! My boyfriends GF mama is coming in town this weekend and I’m 100% making them for her!! Also, “in town” is Austin…I’d LOVE to meet you ladies for coffee or something while you’re here!!!! There is so much amazing food/fun things to do, I think you’re going to love it. :)
Kate
Thanks, Katie! Hope you all love these waffles! Can’t wait to visit, hope we can meet up!
Sara @ Cake Over Steak
First of all, super jealous that you’re about to spend a month in Austin, especially with those amazing ladies! Secondly, I love love loved your pumpkin waffles, so I’m sure these must be amazing as well. And I ALWAYS love your photography, Kate! It’s so clean and happy.
Kate
Thanks, Sara! I can’t wait. I bet you will love these waffles, too!
Erika
I hope you have a great time in Austin. I live in Bastrop, a hip little historic town outside of Austin. If you want to get out of the city, maybe take a hike in the lost pines, I’d be happy to meet up and show you around!
Kate
Thanks, Erika! Just added your suggestion to my list of things to do in Austin! :)
Liz @ Floating Kitchen
Oh this is so fabulous. Sounds like a wonderfully fun, sun-filled trip. And I can just imagine all the yummy things you two will be whipping up! Yeah!
Bell Santiago
These sound delicious, I hope you have lots of fun in Texas! <3
★★★★
dana
These look amazing, friend! Hope you girls have fun in Texas!!
Dani @ DaniCaliforniaCooks
I love buckwheat! I don’t have a waffle maker, so I may try and turning these into pancakes. And adding blueberries :)
Kate
Hey Dani! These waffles were adapted from my buckwheat pancake recipe. Here it is: https://cookieandkate.com/2013/buckwheat-pancakes/
Liz @ I Heart Vegetables
That’s awesome! I LOVE Austin :) Eat as many street tacos as you can!
claire
mmmm….
Are there such things as savory waffles? I want a pierogi in waffle format. just a thought. ;)
Kate
Yes! I haven’t tried savory waffles yet, but they’re on my list. I bet these would be great with some cheese and chives mixed in, maybe with a fried egg on top. I’ve been wanting to try that with my oat waffles!
Graham @ Glazed & Confused
Very much jealous of your little journey to Austin! I’ve never been but I’ve been dying to go.
In the meantimes, these WAFFLES. These. waffles. though.
So delicious! Pinning for this weekend :)
Millie | Add A Little
How exciting! I’m sure you’ll have a lovely time!! Thee waffles looks awesome too Kate! Pinned!
Tessa | Salted Plains
Kathryne, these waffles!! So pretty. I’m thinking girls night breakfast-for-dinner with these buckwheat beauties? ;)
Kate
Yes!!! Let’s make waffles soon.
Clever Girl Reviews
I really need to find a good vegan waffle recipe! These are makingme hungry and I just had a bowl of steel cut oats!
Amy @ Thoroughly Nourished Life
Your trip sounds like so much fun! I would love to go away for a month with one of my best friends and just spend some time exploring a different city! Maybe one day :) Guess I should just plan a weekend to start off with, and what better start could it get than a plate full of these waffles! I love that they are instantly Amy friendly, and I love the taste of buckwheat so much. I can’t wait to follow along with your Texas adventures :)
Angela @ Eat Spin Run Repeat
These look delicious Kate, and what a fun adventure you’ve got ahead! I’m also getting a little cold getaway escape at the end of February, but unfortunately it’s only a few days, not a whole month. Still, a little is better than nothing! I hope you have an awesome time and I can’t wait to hear about it!
Teffy
I really need to get myself a waffle press!! I honestly can’t remember the last time I had waffles, must’ve been too long ago!
Looks super yum!
Laura (Tutti Dolci)
I don’t think I’ve ever craved a waffle more, love the almond butter topping. Have a great time in Austin, what a fun trip!
Trish @ Well Worn Fork
I love that there’s maple syrup AND almond butter :-)
Kristy
Hopefully we don’t get another cold spell in Austin! It’s great weather this week, but you never know what Austin weather is going to do. Just make sure you bring a coat – just in case ;-).
I normally wouldn’t leave suggestions, but based on your blog posts I think you’d really enjoy these restaurants:
Mother’s Cafe – great vegetarian/vegan food and some stellar vegan pancakes for brunch – http://motherscafeaustin.com/
Casa de Luz – a one-of-a-kind vegan,organic, gluten free buffet-style eatery with a yoga studio – and if you go there for dinner you can check out House Wine afterward.
http://www.casadeluz.org/
http://www.housewineaustin.com/
Kate
Kristy, thank you so much! Can’t wait to try those places.
Yana
Can I grind buckwheat to get a flour out of it? Or does an actual buckwheat flour need to be purchased?
Kate
Yes, I believe you can grind your own! I bought buckwheat flour and it is very fine, so be sure to grind yours well.
Tessa | Natural Comfort Kitchen
Kate, you nearly have me convinced to invest in a waffle maker. One more recipe and I think I’ll be there. I’d love to see a city dining guide when you come back from Austin–it’s on my list of food trips to take!
Kate
That’s a great idea, Tessa! Thanks!
Sarah @ Making Thyme for Health
How fun! Austin is a great city and they have a bunch of really good vegan/veg friendly restaurants. You should check out Blue Dahlia Bistro. The food is awesome and there’s a couple of cute boutiques next door for shopping. Oh, and I’m sure Cookie and Henry will love strolling around Lady Bird Lake with you.
I’m a big fan of buckwheat flour so these waffles look perfect to me. I love the almond butter/maple syrup drizzle on top.
Kate
Thank you, Sarah! I just added your suggestions to my list. Can’t wait!
Kelly
Have a fun trip! I hear great things about Austin. Love this wg waffle recipe too!
Megan - The Emotional Baker
What exciting news, Kate! I’m sure Cookie will have a blast with Henry ;) These waffles look amazing – love that you used buckwheat!
Sarah @ SnixyKitchen
What a fun trip!! You’re going to have such a great time – I can’t wait to see what you all cook together. I’m so giddy with excitement over these buckwheat waffles! I STILL don’t have a waffle maker, but I need one soon now – Can I babysit yours while you’re in Austin;P
Kathryn
You guys are going to have such a blast in Austin! I’m so jealous of all the amazing food (and margaritas!) that you’re going to get to sample ;) As well as the sunshine…
I love buckwheat waffles; they’re my absolute favourite! I can’t wait to try your version.
Kate
Thanks, Kathryn! I can’t wait. Hope you give these waffles a try soon, they are my new favorites!
Denise Carlin
Hi Kate,
Hope you have great fun in Austin! And find some amazing recipes to share. It is that time of the year when things get a little blah feeling, so have been looking for new things to cook. Wish I was going with. Who is Henry? Glad you are taking Cookie.
Kate
Thanks, Denise! I will definitely be sampling all the Mexican food I can while I’m there. Recipes coming soon! Meet Henry: http://instagram.com/p/yNNRh0jm-N/?modal=true
Mariah
Kate:
This post is awesome for two reasons. One: I’m GF and always run out of breakfast ideas. Two: I just road tripped to Austin last weekend. I suggest Elizabeth St. Cafe in SoCo, Rainey St for bar hopping, and of course the origional Whole Foods on 6th is majestic. Have fun! :)
Kate
Hope you love these waffles, Mariah! Thank you for the suggestions. I just added them to my Austin list!
Joanne
So jealous of your trip!! I want to be someplace warm SO BADLY. You are going to have so much fun!
It’s a good thing today is Friday and I have all weekend to make these…because I don’t think I could wait much longer than 24 hours!
Flor
I love all of your waffle recipes and these are up there in terms of my favs. Just freezed a whole batch to make waffle sandwiches for my preschooler. Yay me!
★★★★★
Kate
Hooray! Thanks, Flor!
Becky
Just warning you.. once you visit Austin for an entire month, you will want to move here! I did the same as you did back in July and moved back to Austin in September (I lived here previously). It’s a great city!
Take the doggies to Bull Creek park off 360/Capital of Texas Hwy where they can run in the water (which is gorgeous!). Be sure to go to Mount Bonnell and also the lookout over the 360 bridge at sunset (bring a bottle of wine and snacks!). So many awesome things to do in Feb/March. Enjoy!
Kate
Thanks, Becky! I added those to our list!
Lesley
I just made these waffles and they’re perfect. Thank you so much for sharing this recipe. I’ve been searching for a waffle with protein and low carbs but all the crispy waffles seems to have starches in them. These were easy and I ate them with peanut butter yogurt. Yum.
Well done!!
★★★★★
Kate
Excellent! Really happy to hear it. Thanks, Lesley!
Food, Faith, and Other Fabulous Finds
Thank you so much for sharing such a delicious waffle recipe!! Even better, I can share these with my gluten free friend.
★★★★
chelsey
these were really really wonderful, and they made my favorite leftovers of any waffle recipe I’ve made. They were just so melt-in-your-mouth…I found that they were far better eaten with apricot jam rather than maple syrup. Thank you so much for this recipe!!
Kate
Thank you, Chelsey! Glad you’re enjoying them. I actually had some leftover buckwheat waffles for breakfast myself. I’ll have to hunt down some apricot jam!
Samantha H.
Hi Kate,
These waffles are amazing! I made them for breakfast this morning and as you mentioned they are light and delicious.
Thank you!!
Samantha
Kate
Thank you, Samantha! Happy to hear you enjoyed these waffles!
julie
hello kate!
I’ve been reading for a little while now, but i must break my silence by saying: these waffles are soooo good!
I’m not gluten free, but i love me some buckwheat! I’m a southern girl living in the northwest so these types of things are comforting (buckwheat and whenever i can find okra – not often)!
I made these after i acquired a cool vintage on-stove waffle iron. My husband has requested i make these again and again! They have such an interesting flavor and texture- so much more complex than your average one-note waffle. They’re crisp on the outside and fluffy on the inside- delicious! whenever i make a batch it makes about 5 small waffles. All disappear quicker than you can say ‘ready-set-eat’ :)
Kate
Thank you, Julie! It’s so nice to know that you’re reading along. Glad to hear that you’re both loving these waffles. Your waffle iron sounds awesome!
Monisha
Made the Buckwheat waffles this morning – they were so light and crispy ! Thank you ! Do you know if I can use vanilla or almond extract too ?
Kate
Thanks, Monisha! Sure, I think you could add a small amount of vanilla and/or almond extract without affecting the outcome.
Tor Ring
Looking for Heart Friendly.
Printed out Buckwheat Kind. Stopped printing at page15.
As I see it I will make my own which has been a Success, but substitute with Buckwheat or Oatmeal! Thank You.
Kate
Hope you love the pancakes, Tor! Next time, look for the “print” button right above the recipe itself and you won’t have to print so many pages. I’m sorry about that!
Carolyn
My waffles stuck to the iron :( I tried oiling the iron for round two and it still didn’t work out. Maybe because I tried the substitute buttermilk and used a flax egg. The burnt crisps I saved were yummy though!
Kate
Oh no, I’m so sorry to hear that, Carolyn! Cleaning waffle grates is just about my least favorite thing to do. :( I am surprised they stuck, given the amount of fat in the recipe.
Alexis
KATE! I’m a new-ish follower of your blog (this is my first comment…I think haha!). I love it so much! So far, your spinach artichoke enchiladas and quinoa vegetable soup are huge hits in my house! Anyway, what’s that delectable-looking sauce you put on your waffles besides the maple syrup?? Thanks a bunch!
★★★★★
Kate
Welcome, Alexis! Thank you for saying hello! So glad you’re enjoying my recipes! That sauce is just almond butter, actually. I buy mine at Trader Joe’s and it’s runny enough to drizzle like that! If yours isn’t and you want to give it a try (peanut butter would be great, too), you could just mix some maple syrup into it until it’s nice and pourable.
Sandra
Thank you so much for sharing this recipe! I’m gluten intolerant and appreciate an easy gf waffle recipe (aka no need to beat egg whites). I just made a double batch (so we can keep some in the freezer for a quick breakfast or snack) and my kids and I love them! This will definitely be one of my go-to waffle recipes. :)
Kate
Yay! Thank you, Sandra. They’re my favorite, too.
Rowena
This is so delicious. Thank you so much for sharing.
Kate
Thank you, Rowena! Glad you enjoyed them!
Brandy
Wow! These were great this morning. I recently learned that I’m sensitive to almost all grains and pseudograins – but not buckwheat! I was excited to give it a try and I love waffles. The hint of cinnamon in these was perfect. I made the dairy free version with homemade almond milk and ate mine with a drizzle of maple syrup. My eats-all-grains husband liked them too with butter and syrup on his. Thanks for the great recipe.
Kate
Thanks, Brandy! I’m so glad you found these waffles. I bet you would enjoy my buckwheat pancakes, too!
Monisha
Hi Kate – your website has made me look forward to breakfasts ! No more boring store bought cereal!
I have noticed that with the Buckwheat waffles if I let the batter sit a bit they turn out very airy and light wheras If I use them right away they are softer .Should I be letting them rest awhile( just like the Oat waffles?)
Thanks and looking forward to your book . congratulations!
Kate
Hi Monisha! Glad you’re enjoying my breakfasts. That’s an interesting observation. Sounds like these waffles probably do benefit from a rest!
Colin
Hi there,
Made these waffles (Oat and Buckwheat both)and can seriously say that they are absolutely the best waffle recipe that is gluten-free I have ever used, seen or heard of! I have tried over a dozen GF waffle recipes and none have them have turned out half decent. This is the ONLY recipe (this and the Oat recipe) that have turned out extremely well!
I make these all the time now and use them as part of a breakfast, toasted from frozen, and as a dessert after a long day.
Wonderful recipe that will be hand printed and put in our cookbook that I will use and hand down to my kids!
-Colin
★★★★★
Kate
Woohoo!!!! Thank you, Colin! :D
Robin
Absolutely fantastic! Great flavor…..and the batter was so easy to deal with.
I’ve been looking for a 100% buckwheat waffle recipe that did not entail having to beat egg whites…..and fold in.
Thank you!
RF
Kate
Thank you, Robin! Glad this recipe was the ticket! I’ve tried whipping and folding in egg whites, and I honestly don’t think it makes much of a difference.
Tara Carter
Just made these for my family!!! I am showing our 9 yr old Thatcher free can be fun and delicious. Thanksformaking this so easy
Kate
I’m glad you all enjoyed the waffles, Tara!
Emma in Oz
I just made these & they are yum! I made buckwheat pancake but don’t understand how I missed buckwheat waffles for so long. Both me & my 7yo daughter are coeliac & she absolutely loved them to! We have now declared every Sunday to be waffle Sunday!
Kate
Waffle Sunday, love it! So glad you two enjoyed these!
Ariel
Only on Sundays? Wow you are brave! I feel like I could eat these every single day ohmygod.
★★★★★
Diane
I made these waffles and they were delicious. I had made some 100% buckwheat muffins that I actually threw away, so I was prepared not to like these. But now they ar my go to waffles.
Raquel
You can’t even imagine how amazing these waffles were!!! I made my own butter milk using almond milk and apple cider vinegar and it worked out really well! I am so happy that I found these dairy-free and gluten-free waffles. I put maple syrup and strawberries on mine! Can’t wait to make them again thanks so much for sharing this outstanding recipe!
Charity
We just made these buckwheat waffles because I’m going gluten-free right now. These were great! Nice and crisp on the outside! The only adjustment is I made it with almond milk because I’m allergic to mammal products(alpha galactose). Thanks for the great recipe!!
Kate
Glad you enjoyed the waffles, Charity! Yay!
Susan
The buckwheat waffles were amazing! My family loved them! We made extra for the freezer for school mornings. They reheat wonderfully! I usually don’t post comments on thing, but these were sooo good crisp, light and fluffy. Will be making more of your recipes!
★★★★★
Natalie
I’m just wondering which you would recommend for guests. The oat waffles or the buckwheat ones?
★★★★★
Kate
Hmm, the oatmeal waffles have a more traditional waffle flavor. I’d probably go with those.
Lou
Hi there! Beautiful post and pics :-). Can you explain how to make the buttermilk? I saw in the notes, but it doesn’t say to use butter, but then it says you can substitute coconut oil for butter. Are you supposed to use butter?
Thanks so much!
Kate
Hi Lou! Buttermilk doesn’t actually have butter in it. You can make it according to the notes, and choose to use either butter or coconut milk for the batter.
:D
I made these this morning (added vanilla extract and double the cinnamon). It is delicious! It’s crispy on the exterior, light and airy on the inside. Really love it! This recipe is a keeper.
Van
Wow, these were sooooo good. Not grainy at all. I doubled the recipe. It was enough to feed my family of 5 plus two left over. They were frozen for a quick weekday breakfast. Thank you sooo much.
Van
I forgot to rate it. Oops
★★★★★
Pat
I love this recipe and I can’t eat eggs so I substitute applesauce. I also use Maple Sugar. Yumyum
★★★★★
Peter Piper
Can these waffles be used as “bread” to make sandwiches? I’m gluten intolerant and I would die for a sandwich right now!
Heather
With intolerance to several foods (including preservatives) I’m always looking for new ways to use buckwheat flour. This recipe made 3 in my waffle maker but it’s deep. One waffle fills you up. The other two waffles are now in the freezer. I love the slight hint of cinnamon in this recipe. The taste & texture are perfect. I’ve measured out a double recipe of the dry ingredients into a quart size freezer bag, mixed it then squeezed all of the air out for a quick batch during the week.And-great reminder not to stack these so they can cool & stay crispy. I put mine on a cooling rack. Thank you!
★★★★★
M Smith
Hi, these waffles are NOT crispy. Very thin crust formed over a cake-like consistency. Followed your recipe exactly and even let batter sit for 5 minutes before pouring onto hot waffle iron. Did not remove waffle until browned. I guess being web savvy and using the right buzz words for a good SEO trumps being ethical. Shame on you for writing authoritively about things you don’t know about to make money off of us.
★
Kate
Hi M, I am disappointed to hear that your waffles didn’t meet your expectations. They certainly turned out crispy for me (which I believe you can see in my photos). Plenty of other commenters attest that their waffles are nice and crispy, too (see their comments above), so it may have to do with your waffle iron, your measuring technique, letting the batter rest longer than specified or not letting the waffles cook long enough. Your review seems awfully harsh, and I assure you that I am not ashamed of posting well-tested healthy recipes. “We live in a world where most people still subscribe to the belief that shame is a good tool for keeping people in line. Not only is this wrong, but it’s dangerous. Shame is highly correlated with addiction, violence, aggression, depression, eating disorders, and bullying.”
― Brené Brown, Daring Greatly: How the Courage to Be Vulnerable Transforms the Way We Live, Love, Parent, and Lead
Denise Rinehart
Thank you Kate, for having the courage to reply in a mature and non confrontational, yet an especially helpful teaching manner. Agree 100% that shaming someone is nonproductive and terribly damaging to children and adults for a productive society. Feeling remorse, regret, rectifying and apologizing for wrongs we have done is an entirely different thing, of which it seems you need not feel nor do for having posted a recipe that a reader did not enjoy, nor have an outcome with which they were not pleased. I appreciate your recipes and attitude of support of healthy living for our bodies and minds. Many variables are present in baking beyond our immediate control or on first try: air temperature, altitude, humidity or airdity as well as the ones you mentioned. I quite frankly don’t feel you are taking advantage of me or anyone else monetarily or otherwise. I do love to read the comments others have to find out what worked/didn’t work, substitutions that work/didn’t work, ingredients available in different parts of world, or additions to ingredients, etc. Judging others on how they perform, who they are, intentions they have is not okay nor welcome. So thank you for taking a stand. Bake and Blog on!
Kate
Thank you very much, Denise. I wish I could say that the original comment didn’t bring me down when I read it, but it’s easy to remember the one negative comment out of 100. I appreciate your support!
Tamara
I love your buckwheat waffles! I used them in my vegetarian Buckwheat Waffle With Spinach, Crimini, and Caramelized Onions. I linked to your recipe in the post as well as in the notes. I left out the cinnamon, but made no other changes. I always want to acknowledge the work of others, so I hope this is appropriate! Thanks for a great recipe! My post should be out later today…
★★★★★
:D
Absolutely the BEST 100% buckwheat waffle recipe ever. Better comes out thick, but the outcome is crisp exterior, tender interior, light and delicious which is how I love my waffles. This is the ULTIMATE recipe.
★★★★★
Jennifer Templin
These are some of the best waffles I’ve ever had! Thank you for the recipe! My family is patiently trying many gf recipes with me and they loved these waffles! We let the batter rest and that did make them extra yummy!
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you, Jennifer! Glad you all enjoyed them. If you’re eating oats, I think you would also love my gluten-free oat waffles!
Erika
I have now made this recipe twice. Both times they stuck. And I followed the recipe as written, no substitutions, additions, etc.
I wonder if it has to do with the iron temperature setting. My waffle iron can be adjusted from 1-6. 1 is low and slow. 6 is hotter and faster. Most waffles work well on 5.
Any idea if a cooler slower setting would work better.
(I ended up using the remaining batter for pancakes, instead of waiting for the iron to cool so I could clean it and start over.)
Kate
Hi Erika, I’m super bummed to hear that these stuck. Cleaning off those grates is the worst. I always have my waffles at the max heat setting, so I don’t think that a lower temp will help. My best tip would be to wait until there is no steam seeping out of the sides of the maker before checking the waffles. (If in doubt, wait longer.)
Sasha
Hi Kate I just made these following a batch of your oat waffles (greedy us!). These are so light and crisp up beautifully, even in our el-cheapo waffle maker. We dont eat lots of buckwheat so we prefered the flavour of the oat waffles over these. Thank you.
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you, Sasha! So glad you’re enjoying these.
Alex
My husband didn’t think buckwheat waffles were possible without regular flour until I showed him this recipe.
He made them for us this morning and we both marveled at their delicious flavor. I love the extra crunch that this all buckwheat waffle provided.
Thanks!
★★★★★
Kate
So glad you both loved the waffles! Thanks, Alex!
Martha
I printed out your waffle recipe and tried it tonight. I’m afraid that it didn’t turn out too well. The one waffle I cooked (in the waffle iron) didn’t rise at all, stuck to the iron and then fell apart when I took it out to place in a warming oven. I turned the rest of the batter into pancakes, which weren’t too bad. I used Almond milk to make the buttermilk, which you said was ok. The only thing different was that I had only half as much dark buckwheat flour as I needed so I finished the cup of flour with buckwheat groats that I had ground into flour. Could that have been the problem?
I am very new at using alternative (GF) flours so I cold use all the help I can get! Thanks!
★★★
J.w.
Not good:(. When you can taste the baking powder in the waffles..more than necessary.
Kate
Sorry this one didn’t work out for you, JW!
Terry
I was skeptical, but these turned out really well. They DO take a little longer to bake, though.
Kate
Yes, they certainly do, but I hope the flavor was worth it!
Nicole
These turned out so well- best at home waffles we’ve ever made. We can’t do eggs so I used a 1/4 cup of applesauce instead. I also subbed in a little almond flour for part of the buckwheat flour. Can’t wait to make these again.
★★★★★
Kate
I’m thrilled to hear these worked with those substitutions, Nicole. Awesome!
allie
easy and kid-approved. i use 1 T of flaxseed instead of egg and i don’t bother with the buttermilk, i just use almond milk for sake-of-ease. this is a recipe that i use at least once a week. these waffles also freeze well and perk up again in the toast oven. thanks for sharing this recipe!
★★★★★
Kate
Perfect! And yes, I love how easily freeze-able these are, too!
Susan
These are amazing! My kids love them too! Good for freezing.
★★★★★
Iza
I really like this recipe. I used it a few times already, although I had to add less flour, and slightly more liquid. I also skipped the butter, so my waffles are lighter :)
Kate
Great! I’m glad your variation worked out for you, Iza.
Humberto
Awesome recipe, we just had a delicious waffle breakfast with your buckwheat waffle recipe. Thank you very much!!
★★★★★
Shannon
have made these twice now… delicious, especially when hot and crispy. added 1/2 tsp almond extract. wonderful when reheated in the oven or toaster :)
★★★★★
Kate
Yum! I love popping these in the toaster, too.
nurp
It really worked! I love it, crunchy, lightweight. Thanks a million <3
★★★★★
Kate
You’re welcome! So glad these worked out for you.
Flo
I just made these for breakfast this morning! I had wanted for so long to try buckwheat in crepes, waffles or pancakes. They were delicious! Thanks for this recipe!
★★★★★
dr.kikker
Really really good! Love them! I did 1/3 of flaxseed flour and 2/3 buckweit and they were still perfect!dr
Kate
Great to hear!
Michelle
These are crisp and tasty but stuck in my waffle maker. I’ve used coconut oil as coating with other waffles but that didn’t work with this one. Any suggestions?
Kate
Does your waffle maker have a non-stick coating on it? You shouldn’t need the additional oil. Try a non-stick that has a higher flashpoint. Hope this helps!
Emmanuelle
Thank you, Kate, for this recipe! That’s exactly what I was looking for! I have just bought a waffle maker so I can now experiment your recipe. Have a nice day!
★★★★
Kate
You’re very welcome, Emmanuelle! I appreciate the review. :)
Emmanuelle
Hello Kate, I experimented my new waffle maker but very sadly I discovered that it is of poor quality :-( so I couldn’t make a decent waffle… Soooo I decided to use your recipe to make pancakes instead and wow! They turned out to be the best buckwheat pancakes I have ever eaten!! Slightly crispy on the outside and so fluffy inside! I used almond milk instead of buttermilk and it worked perfectly. So a big thank you again for that recipe! :-) :-) :-)
★★★★★
Alexia Galletti
Can almond milk or regular milk be used as opposed to a type of buttermilk?
Is it just the taste that would be altered?
Thanks!
Alicia
I started this recipe and realized that after we moved I did not have any baking soda. I substituted Siggy’s vanilla yogurt 8 ounces for the baking soda. The texture came out very good and the flavor was excellent as well with just a hint of vanilla. This is one of the better waffle recipes I have come across for texture and flavor thanks.
★★★★★
Kate
That’s great! It’s nice when that happens. Sometimes you just have to work with what you have. Thank you, Alicia.
Michele Meola
I was having a craving for buckwheat and tried your waffle recipe. All I can say is FABULOUS! Thanks!
★★★★★
Kate
Perfect! Thanks for the review, Michele.
KT McClune
These turned out beautifully!
★★★★★
Kate
Great! Thanks, KT for the review.
Beth Ritter
Excellent recipe. I doubled it, to freeze some. I also added some chopped strawberries. I will certainly make this again. Great taste, and texture– without having to beat the egg whites separately. Thanks!
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you, Beth for sharing!
Phoebe Saltzstein
My 4 year old son and I love these. Thanks!
★★★★★
Kate
You’re welcome!
Victoria
These waffles were the best. I waited the 10 minutes as suggested and they were amazingly crisp and tasty.
Kate
That’s great! Yes, waiting is key and it’s so hard to wait! Thank you, Victoria!
Helen
I’m in England had to go gluten free a couple of years ago. Last week I was in Brussels for work and had a buckwheat waffle in a cafe. It was a revelation. Today I bought a waffle maker and your recipe was the first I used. I tinkered a little – instead of buttermilk I used watered yogurt, but the batter was too thick so I added water until it was the right consistency. Also I left out the cinnamon and most of the sugar because I wanted waffles I could eat with savoury or sweet toppings. I read all the comments too, for tips, so I rested the batter. It worked so well! Each pair of waffles took 10 minutes to cook – longer than the 7 mins suggested in my new waffle maker’s instruction book – and they came out light and crisp and delicious, and didn’t stick at all. Thank you!
★★★★★
Kate
Thanks for sharing what you did, Helen! I appreciate your details and review.
Ema
Just made it exactly the same, it was very light and delicious….keeper recipe. Thanks
★★★★★
Kate
Thanks for sharing, Ema!
Rebecca
Loved this recipe, doubled it for morning after sleepover breakfast and not a crumb left. I’ve made a ton of your recipes and they all turn out great! Thank you. Nutritious and indulgent.
★★★★★
Kate
These are so good! I’m glad you and your guests agreed, Rebecca.