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The myriad of benefits and uses of gluten-free buckwheat for food, home, and garden, and how to traditionally prepare for optimal nutrition.
Buckwheat is one of my favorite plants. For gardeners, it produces beautiful flowers that attract bees galore! Cultivation also serves as a valuable cover crop for protecting and improving soil.
As icing on the cake, buckwheat porridge, pancakes, and other food uses are nutrient-dense, gluten-free, and an excellent option for both people and livestock.
Is Buckwheat a Type of Wheat?
While most people consider buckwheat a cereal grain, technically it is a pseudo-cereal, neither grain nor cereal nor grass. Thus, while grain-like, buckwheat is not actually a grain.
Consequently, its English name is quite misleading as it isn’t related to wheat or foodstuffs made with it like bulgur at all!
The edible part of the plant are the seeds that come from the flowers.
Its closest relatives are the perennial herb sorrel as well as rhubarb and knotweed.
History
Buckwheat has a long history of traditional use both in the United States and abroad. Indeed, it is one of the oldest crops still popularly cultivated today with use dating back many thousands of years.
As such, it played a large role in traditional diets and cuisines around the world. More on that below.
First cultivation is thought to have occurred around 6000 BCE in Southeast Asia. It then spread to Central Asia and Tibet, and from that point onward to the Middle East, Europe, and finally the New World.
European Roots
The earliest documentary evidence of buckwheat in Europe is from 1394 in the Netherlands. According to the contemporary Italian botanist Valerio Giacomini, three possible routes brought buckwheat to the European continent. (1)
- The first route tracks through southern Russia, Poland, and Germany eventually reaching Belgium and France.
- A second path runs through Turkey, then to Greece, Hungary, and southern Russia. This route is given credibility by the name of buckwheat in Russian – grechka – meaning “of Greece”.
- The third possibility is via the sea and the port of Venice.
In short, buckwheat has played an essential role in nourishing the populations of Europe for many centuries!
Roasted Buckwheat (Kasha)
Many people are familiar with Kasha, or roasted buckwheat. But traditionally, buckwheat was used in an array of dishes and across so many nations and locations as to provide almost a limitless set of cooking options.
Buckwheat makes a lovely bread consumed in Indian cuisines. (2)
Early American pioneers enjoyed buckwheat pancakes as an important staple. (3)
In Japanese cuisine, buckwheat is the traditional backbone of Soba noodles, although today they are usually commercially made with conventional wheat or a blend.
Across the world and history, buckwheat has left its mark on mealtimes everywhere!
Buckwheat’s Temporary Decline and Modern Resurgence
Most people today are less familiar with buckwheat as a food because of the advent of industrial agriculture and synthetic nitrogen fertilizer in the 19th century.
This resulted in a massive decline in buckwheat cultivation in favor of conventional wheat, corn, and soy. This harmed both the environment as well as people’s health!
But with the return of interest in ancient grains and grain-free eating in the early 2000s, buckwheat is making a strong comeback.
Benefits and Uses
Buckwheat isn’t just for grub!
It has many benefits for both garden and homestead in general.
Gardening
If you haven’t tried cultivating buckwheat in your home garden before, it is time to give it a try! As mentioned earlier, it makes a great cover crop for improving soil quality.
A big plus is that it helps cycle vital phosphorous, one of the big three nutrients plants need to thrive.
Also, unlike a lot of other plants that seem to require chemicals to flourish, buckwheat grows well on its own with little assistance from humans.
Buckwheat plants also will attract a lot of bees to pollinate the other plants in the garden.
Buckwheat Pillow
If you like to sew, making a homemade buckwheat pillow is a beautiful and much more comfortable alternative to heating pads for soothing back pain, keeping warm when feverish, or a myriad of other uses.
Not to mention the high EMF risks from heating pads!
Simply pick a pattern and sturdy fabric and sew all but an inch or two at the top. Fill with buckwheat hulls and sew up the remainder.
To use, heat the buckwheat pillow in the microwave with a small glass of water for about a minute to warm it up.
Make sure you never heat it up without the glass of water! Repeat as needed. You can open up the pillow and change out with replacement hulls as needed when the heat retention ability wanes.
High in Anti-Nutrients
Buckwheat is one of a handful of foods that is exceptionally high in phytase. This is the enzyme that breaks down that pesky phytic acid which protects grains, nuts, legumes, and seeds from spoilage and sprouting until the proper time.
Consumption of phytic acid blocks the absorption of minerals in the food and can also cause gastric distress in sensitive individuals.
A simple soak of buckwheat before cooking or baking easily neutralizes anti-nutrients. Some people even like to add a bit of buckwheat flour to overnight oatmeal and other grains that are low in phytase to facilitate the process.
Buckwheat groats are also high in oxalates. While natural, these substances can build up in the body for some people causing the formation of kidney stones.
Loaded with Nutrition
Buckwheat is loaded with minerals like few other plant foods. It also contains the two important flavonoids, rutin, and quercetin, substances found in the plant’s pigments that are important to human health.
In addition, buckwheat’s protein is high quality (though not complete as a protein standalone for human health), containing all eight essential amino acids.
Just how good? Try 34% manganese, 28% copper, 20% iron, 20% B-6, and 20% phosphorous required on a daily basis.
Magnesium per 1 cup provides 392.7 mg or 98% of daily value.
Since many people are dangerously deficient in magnesium, a simple bowl of breakfast buckwheat porridge would be a good way to remedy the problem (along with regular Epsom salt baths). See the easy recipe below!
The nutritional powerhouse of buckwheat reminds me of lentils and wild rice, other plant foods that could rightly wear the label “nutrient dense”. (4)
Proper Preparation
Buckwheat is one of a handful of foods that is exceptionally high in phytase. This is the enzyme that breaks down that pesky phytic acid which protects grains, nuts, legumes, and seeds from spoilage and sprouting until the proper time.
Consumption of phytic acid blocks the absorption of minerals in the food and can also cause gastric distress in sensitive individuals.
Thus, a simple soak of buckwheat before cooking or baking easily neutralizes anti-nutrients. Some people even like to add a bit of buckwheat flour to other soaking grains that are low in phytase to facilitate the process.
Buckwheat groats are also high in oxalates. While natural, these substances can build up in the body for some people causing the formation of kidney stones.
Low in Calories
Note, buckwheat is also low in calories for just how much nutrition it provides. As Weston A. Price pointed out, this matters not because we worry about restricting calories, but because we need to get enough nutrients in the limited calories we have available to consume each day.
These limited calories are generous in protein. Each cup contains 23 grams. Even better, the protein in buckwheat provides all eight amino acids.
Caveat: the amount of these amino acids isn’t complete from a human health perspective. In other words, you couldn’t eat just buckwheat as your only source of protein and thrive like you could with a single source of truly complete animal protein. Still, when it comes to plant protein, buckwheat is one of the very best.
Flavanoid Powerhouse
It isn’t just buckwheat’s excellent nutrition that should catch our eye. Buckwheat is a heavy hitter in other areas as well, especially its flavonoid content.
Indeed, all of this is why many studies point to buckwheat’s role in promoting human (and animal!) health. Studies have linked it to better cholesterol numbers – lowering LDL and raising HDL – while optimizing total cholesterol and improving LDL/HDL ratio.
Studies have linked it to a wide variety of health benefits, especially for our eyes and cardiovascular system (no surprise there given how much magnesium it contains).
Gluten-free and Paleo
For gluten-free folks, buckwheat is another way to diversify beyond quinoa, oats, amaranth, rice, teff, and other GF flour and whole grain options.
It is also desirable for Paleo eaters who wish to enjoy a grain-like food that has more flavor and versatility than high starch options such as arrowroot and manioc.
Also, as mentioned above, buckwheat is legitimately nutrient-rich and if organic, a very clean option. This compares with organic rice, which still carries the risk of arsenic as do many other gluten-free foods. (5)
Contraindications
While even Paleo people can enjoy buckwheat, those on GAPS, SCD, or other carb-restricted and gut-healing diets should not due to its starch content.
For GAPS, after a couple of years of gut healing, traditional foods like buckwheat are reintroduced and usually tolerated well.
As mentioned earlier, buckwheat is one of a handful of foods that is exceptionally high in phytase and oxalates.
While a simple soak before cooking will eliminate most of the phytates, oxalates are a bit trickier. Thus, for those prone to kidney stones, buckwheat might be better as an occasional feature on the home menu.
In the Kitchen
One of the most common ways to consume nutritious buckwheat is added to oatmeal recipes. For every cup of oatmeal, substitute one-half to one tablespoon of buckwheat flour. Using freshly ground is best, as store-bought buckwheat flour tends to be stale and even bitter.
This doesn’t overly alter the flavor but improves the nutritional profile immensely if you are soaking oatmeal overnight. Adding a small amount of buckwheat flour helps to neutralize phytic acid more effectively than soaking oatmeal alone.
If you like the taste of this traditional food, feel free to substitute even more, and find a balance that you and your family enjoy.
Buckwheat and oats go particularly well together in baking. This recipe for gluten-free carrot cake uses a blend of the two flours to produce a confection that tastes just like wheat.
Buckwheat Porridge
On cold mornings, a bowl of hot cream of buckwheat really hits the spot.
If you are grain-free, it makes a delicious alternative that is reminiscent of the taste and texture of cream of wheat or cream of rice.
Try it and see for yourself!
(1) The Origins of Buckwheat
(2) 13 Best Buckwheat Recipes
(3) Pioneer Food – Buckwheat Flour and the Legends of America
(4) Magnesium Content of Buckwheat
(5) Dangers of Gluten-free Foods
debi
OK, thanks for the tip. I may not try this then as my grinder does not have that ability. 🙂
Love your blog and read it ALL THE TIME!!
Thomas
Thanks Sarah. How long are you soaking buckwheat to de-activate the phytic acid?
Sarah
Soak it overnight or about 8 hours.
debi
Hi Sarah! Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge and wisdom in tradition cooking! Quick question… If I would purchase the whole buckwheat hull, could I grind it myself, cook it per your directions, and still have the consistency of buckwheat porridge? My hubby purchased a grain mill for me this Christmas and would love to utilize it if this process would be more cost effective. (However, I am still learning, so this may be a ridiculous question and make no sense.) Thank you again so much!
Sarah
Hi Debbie, unfortunately, unless your grain grinder has the ability to “flake” grains instead of fully grind them, you will need to buy the partially ground buckwheat groats to get the smooth consistency shown in the photo in the article. I linked to the brand of organic cream of buckwheat I buy. It is available online if you can’t find it locally and it is very reasonably priced.
Heidi
We make buckwheat soup by rinsing the whole or cracked buckwheat. Then I add stir 2 eggs into about 2 cups of BW and let it sit 10 min. Next I bring 4 cups chicken broth to a simmer and add the buckwheat egg mixture. Simmer until it’s soft and tender. We love it. You can add parsley. This soup has been carried down for generations.
Jenya
It is our russian traditional staple food. We cook it whole, roasted, in savory main dishes. Such as beef stroganoff.
Cook same as rice for pilaff, letting it to absorb all water, in a covered cast iron pan. We serve it with meat and rich gravy, and a side salad, which may appear to be kraut.
We rinse it before cooking, to remove debris. I started to soak it recently, and it requires much less water than. I use stock instead of water actually! And add butter and a pinch of nigella seeds. One cup is cooked for three adults because buckweat is very satisfying.
katherine skahan
Hi Elizabeth, Where do you purchase your whole seed buckwheat? Thanks!
Becky
Would it help to gently rinse the buckwheat before cooking it? Doesn’t the soaking water have the phytic acid still in it? Also, why don’t we add ACV or homemade whey to it?
Thank you!!
Sarah
Great questions! The soaking process de-activates the phytic acid so it is no longer an issue. No need to rinse if you don’t want to. And, no ACV or whey is added to buckwheat because it is not a grain. It is a perennial and most closely related to rhubarb, which is a vegetable! You may add a bit of salt to the soaking water if you like … treating it more like a seed than anything else. There is plenty of phytase in buckwheat to break down the phytic acid.
Kara Amerson
Buckwheat porridge is a usual in our house for breakfast. When we went grain free a few years back, we switched from oatmeal and never looked back.
Elizabeth
Buckwheat porridge has been the major food discovery for me this winter. My kids LOVE it and it’s economical too.
I just purchase the whole seed, soak it for 8 hours in water with a teaspoon of ACV, then rinse and wait until it almost begins to sprout. It’s because I am paranoid about phytic acid and don’t dare to buy flours, because I don’t know how long ago they were grounded.
I then rinse it thoroughly (again, paranoid) and add coconut milk. I grind it up a tiny bit with a stickblender (just 3 pulses or so) and let it simmer for 15 minutes. I serve it with a generous blob of butter, raisins, some coconut sugar and spices (cinnamon, kardamum, nutmeg). Perfect comfort food for winter.
I wonder, can I soak raw oat flakes, as in, the flattened oak seed? I don’t dare to make my kids oatmeal anymore.
Sarah
I am a relative newcomer to buckwheat porridge and I love it too! I am experimenting with soaked buckwheat flapjacks. Sourdough buckwheat pancakes are too strong tasting for me … but buckwheat porridge is so mild tasting that I am trying to make flapjacks with cold buckwheat porridge instead. Cold porridge, eggs, spices and a bit of date syrup fried up in ghee or coconut oil. Will let you know how it turns out 🙂
Linda Moreno
Be aware that Buckwheat is extremely high in oxalates. Those who have problems with oxalates should avoid buckwheat. Unlike phyatase, the oxalate can not be removed by soaking.
Sarah
Good point …thanks for mentioning this! However, spinach is much much higher and more subject to consumption in large quantities by people. A 100 gram (about a half cup) portion of spinach has 970 mg of oxalate while the same amount for buckwheat is only about 70 mg. I would not consider buckwheat a problem for the vast majority of people when eaten in moderation. On the other hand, many people seriously overdo spinach in green smoothies, which is why those that are prone to development of painful oxalate crystals in kidneys and other tissues can have serious problems if this pattern of excessive consumption continues.
Maztergee
Thanks for that 🙂