Miracle Crackers: Grain-Free, Low-Carb, and Keto-Friendly

keto crackers

If you’re anything like me, you know how hard it can be to resist the delectable crunch and pure happiness that comes from enjoying your favorite snack cracker. Unfortunately, when you need to cut carbs it can be hard to find a substitute that truly quenches the cravings. Until now.

The following is an excerpt from The Ketogenic Kitchen by Domini Kemp and Patricia Daly. It has been adapted for the web.


Cracking Crackers

Ingredients – Makes about 12 crackers

  • 2.6 oz sunflower seeds (75g)
  • 2.1 oz chia seeds (60g)
  • 1.6 oz psyllium seed husks (most health stores have these) (45g)
  • 1.6 oz flaxseeds (45g)
  • 1.1 oz pumpkin seeds (30g)
  • 0.7 oz sesame seeds (20g)
  • 2 tsp fennel seeds (10g)
  • 1 1⁄2 tsp sea salt or Himalayan pink salt (8g)
  • 1 tsp dried thyme (1g)
  • 3 good tbsp coconut oil (81g)
  • 7⁄8c boiling water (200ml)

Procedure

These crackers were adapted ever so slightly from the original recipe from Sarah Britton’s book, My New Roots. The trick was to remove the oats. Oats, in general, are a great food, but they are mega high in carbohydrates. After many attempts, here they are: low-carb, grain-free and absolutely delicious.

  1. Preheat the oven to 340°F (170°C ).
  2. Line a baking tray with non-stick baking paper.
  3. Put all the dry ingredients in a large bowl and mix well.
  4. Add the coconut oil to the boiling water so it melts.
  5. Once the coconut oil has melted, add this to the dry ingredients and mix well to form a wet dough that’s kind of cement-like.
  6. Pour the sludge into the lined baking tray and smooth it out with a spatula. If the mix is being really uncooperative, sprinkle it with water so it gets a bit wetter and therefore spreads easier. This means you’ll have to cook them longer.
  7. Press down the mix roughly so it spreads out, then place a second sheet of non-stick baking paper on top of the cracker blanket and carefully apply pressure to make the mixture thinner and so that it covers the whole tray. It’s easier doing it this way than with a rolling pin.
  8. Remove the top piece of baking paper and bake the crackers for 30 minutes. If you can, use a flat surface to flip them over (like you would one half of a cake) and bake for another 20 minutes. If you find the outside bits are going nice and brown but the inside is still a bit raw, break off the cooked bits and keep cooking the middle. They need to be really crisp and golden brown, not raw and wet or soft.
  9. Turn off the oven and leave them to cool fully and dry out before breaking up into rough squares or rectangles for serving.
  10. If after a day or so you find they need to be crunchier, stick them back in the oven for a blast. The main thing is to let them truly cool down before you store them, or any residual heat will make them sweaty and soggy. Ewww.

Recommended Reads

Make Your Own Apple Kimchi

Sweet Fermentation: Strawberry Kvass

 

Enter your email to sign up for our newsletter and save 25% on your next order

Recent Articles

All In The Sting: Health Benefits of Honey Bee Venom

Tired of trying different traditional medicines to relieve inflammation and joint pain? We have the perfect solution: honey bee venom.

Read More
seed detective

Seed as a Common Resource: Crops and the People Who Nurture Them

Seeds strengthen our connections to what we grow and eat; they are intrinsic to our identity and our future. I cherish seed as a common resource that all the world should be able to access freely.

Read More
seasonal desserts

Seasonal Desserts: Apple Spice Bundt Cake & Pumpkin Pie with Hazelnut Crust

Nothing says “fall” like a homemade cake or pie! Add a twist to your apple or pumpkin-flavored seasonal desserts that will have your guests begging for more.

Read More
recycling mushrooms

Mushroom Composting and Recycling Projects

Cultivating mushrooms on various substrates has many benefits — from composting, mycoremediation, and creating value-added consumer goods. It helps reduces waste and helps the environment!

Read More
lambsquarter

How to Use Lambsquarter from Root to Plant to Seed

Before yanking out the next patch of lambsquarter you find in your yard or garden, consider trying one of the many edible and medicinal uses of this “super weed.”

Read More