These gluten-free vegan waffles are nutty with buckwheat flour and crispy with brown rice flour. And they are easy as anything! Serve them with maple syrup for a perfect weekend breakfast.
My Saturdays start out with tons of plans but very little planning. All through the week I keep in my head a running list of all the things I just have to do on that glorious day filled, at least from afar, with nothing but time. It's the day I will sleep late. The day I will call those friends I've been meaning to for weeks now. The day I will finally run that important but easy-to-put-off errand.
But come Saturday morning, it's quite a different story.
Well before the alarm can go off the cats start singing for their breakfast at the door and the dogs start licking our faces in hopes of getting us out of the house for a walk. Soon, unable to sleep with all this activity, either Desi or I gets up and gives in. And from there on the day pretty much spirals into a madly busy flurry of things that just have to get done, including a super-long walk for the irrepressible wag-tails.At the end of the day, though, it still feels like nothing really did get done.
In the midst of all this activity, I try my best to make breakfast a little more special than it usually is, although I just as easily give in to Desi's invitation of oatmeal.
This past weekend, I did find the time to cook up a recipe that had been floating in my head for a while now: gluten-free vegan waffles that are richly nutty with buckwheat and crispy with brown rice flour.
Each time I make Whole Wheat Vegan Waffles I try to make them just a little different. But I realized I almost always include wheat flour, either whole-wheat flour or whole-wheat pastry flour. This time I substituted the wheat with buckwheat which really has no relation to wheat. It is a darker-colored, rich-tasting wholegrain flour that's a pretty popular addition to gluten-free pancakes and other desserts.
I also threw in some brown rice flour which I love because I knew it would make the waffles crispy. Some oat flour, which always adds a fresh, clean taste and lots of healthy goodness, also went in. The waffles turned out beautifully although they did take almost twice as long to get perfectly done in the waffle iron than my whole-wheat waffles usually take. We polished them off with some of the Apricot-Walnut Syrup left over from the previous Saturday's crepes.
Here's the recipe now for my vegan and gluten-free waffles. Enjoy, all!
More vegan waffle recipes
- Classic Vegan Waffles
- Vegan Sourdough Waffles
- Vegan Gluten Free Sourdough Waffles
- Vegan Sourdough Pumpkin Spice Waffles
- Vegan Wholegrain Waffles with Wheat Germ and Flax
- Vegan Buckwheat Waffles
Vegan Gluten-Free Waffles with Buckwheat and Rice Flours
Ingredients
Dry ingredients
- 1 cup buckwheat flour
- ½ cup oat flour
- ¼ cup brown rice flour
- 1 tablespoon baking powder
- ¼ teaspoon baking soda
- 1 tablespoon sugar
- ¼ teaspoon salt
Wet ingredients
- 1 ½ cups nondairy milk
- 1 teaspoon apple cider vinegar
- 2 tablespoon flaxmeal (whisked with 6 tablespoon water to make two flax eggs)
- 2 tablespoon avocado oil or any neutral oil
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Instructions
- Whisk the dry ingredients in a large bowl, then add in the wet ingredients one after the other and mix with a whisk or spatula until the batter comes together and there are no dry bits.
- Heat a waffle iron and spray lightly with oil. Pour ½ cup of batter in the center. You might need more or less based on the size of your waffle maker so tweak accordingly.
- Bake until done. A lower heat setting will produce softer waffles, a higher setting will produce crispier waffles.
- Serve rightaway with maple syrup.
Love these vegan gluten-free waffles with buckwheat and brown rice flours? Check out more vegan breakfast recipes on Holy Cow Vegan!
lili
Can bananas be substituted for the Oil?,.. or what would you suggest?
Vaishali
Leave out the oil altogether. Add more liquid if batter is too dry.
k.briann
hi there -could I sub something for the oat flour?
Vaishali
Hi, yes, try any other gluten-free flour, like rice flour, or an all-purpose gf mix.
Mary Ann Combs
These had a wonderful flavor and texture. I had a difficult time getting them out of the waffle iron. They had a crispy texture so I guess they were done. How do I get them out without destroying the looks of them. Any suggestions?
What do you coat the iron with to prevent sticking. I used coconut oil and that was better than crisco in getting them out.
Vaishali Honawar
Hi Mary Ann, I just use a spray like Pam and I never have any trouble getting them out.
sirisha
I already tried this recipe for 3 times and we all love it.Happy that it is gluten free and eggless.Thanq for the recipe.
Vaishali
Sirisha, thanks for the feedback-- so happy you liked the waffles. Reminds me I should makes them this weekend. Hugs.
Anonymous
Tried the recipe today and really enjoyed it (as did my husband and 3 yr old son). Followed the recipe exactly (with exception on the soy milk- didn't have soy so substituted cow's milk- gasp! but they turned out great anyway). I also ground up some oatmeal to make the oat flour- I used an omega juicer but a food processor would probably also work. Thanks for posting!
Kia
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