Best 4 Buckwheat Galette Recipes

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"Buckwheat galette", also known as "galette de sarrasin" or "blé noir", is a traditional French dish originating from the region of Brittany. It consists of a savory pancake made from buckwheat flour, filled with various savory ingredients and cooked on a hot griddle. This versatile dish can be enjoyed for breakfast, lunch, or dinner and can be customized with a wide variety of fillings, making it a popular choice for both home cooks and restaurant chefs. If you're looking to indulge in this delectable dish, here are some tips and tricks to help you create the perfect buckwheat galette."

Here are our top 4 tried and tested recipes!

GALETTES COMPLèTES (BUCKWHEAT CREPES)



Galettes Complètes (Buckwheat Crepes) image

If you can make pancakes for breakfast, you can certainly make crepes for dinner. These savory ones from Brittany - which use buckwheat flour and are filled with Gruyère cheese, ham and egg - are nutty, earthy and incredibly satisfying any time of day. Loosen the batter, if needed, using beer, water or hard cider; it all works equally well. Once you get the hang of the tilt and swirl, you can have your family fed in minutes, and unlike those nerve-shredded times when you brightly declare "It's breakfast for dinner, kids!" - which children everywhere know is a sign that something is wrong for Mom - this is one instance where you can announce it, and mean it: Everything is actually alright. Galettes complètes are meant to be a meal.

Provided by Gabrielle Hamilton

Categories     brunch, dinner, lunch, snack, one pot, main course

Time 8h30m

Yield 6 crepes

Number Of Ingredients 7

3 large eggs
1 1/4 cups/150 grams buckwheat flour
1/4 teaspoon kosher salt
6 large eggs
6 ounces Gruyère cheese, grated (about 2 cups)
8 ounces thinly sliced jambon de Paris (or other ham)
Kosher salt and black pepper

Steps:

  • In a large bowl, whisk 3 eggs with 1 cup water until frothy and uniform. Sift in buckwheat flour, and whisk until as smooth as a new can of paint. Season with salt and whisk to combine. Cover batter and refrigerate overnight (at least 8 hours, or up to 24 hours).
  • Heat a 10-inch nonstick skillet over medium-low. Ladle in 1/4 cup of batter, then quickly tilt the pan in a clockwise motion to swirl the batter all the way to the edges into a perfectly round, very thin pancake. The batter should disperse quickly; if it is too thick - and doesn't swiftly radiate to cover the width of the pan - you'll need to stir a few extra tablespoons of water into the batter and try again with a second crepe. Expect to lose the first two or three crepes as you get used to the swirling motion, the amount of batter to add and the hotness of the pan. When all three factors align, you can make six savory crepes in about as many minutes.
  • When you feel you have the hang of it and are ready to go live, ladle in 1/4 cup batter, swirl and allow crepe to set for just 10 seconds. Crack an egg in the center, and use the back of a spoon or a small rubber spatula to spread the egg white, which will allow the egg to cook evenly in the amount of time it will take the cheese to melt and the galette to crisp. Sprinkle about 1/3 cup Gruyère across the surface, then tear 2 or 3 pieces of ham and set them flat on top, surrounding the egg yolk.
  • Allow the crepe to crisp up and brown on the bottom while the egg cooks sunny side up, and the ham warms through, 3 to 4 minutes. In Brittany, these are cooked on a large, round cast-iron griddle, and the four sides of the galette are folded in to become a large square before being slid onto a plate. This is harder to do in a slope-sided pan, but try it if it suits you - you'll want to fold the sides about 1 minute before the egg is done cooking. Otherwise, an open round is just fine. Slide it onto a plate, and repeat with remaining galettes.
  • Season with salt and pepper. Drink with hard cider, not too cold.

BUCKWHEAT GALETTE



Buckwheat Galette image

A galette is like a crepe, but served only with savory items like ham, cheese, and eggs. Buckwheat galette is a specialty from Brittany, where my father is from in France.

Provided by Sebastien Rouxel

Categories     main-dish

Time 2h15m

Yield 12 servings

Number Of Ingredients 13

2 1/2 cups buckwheat flour
1/2 cup all-purpose flour
1 Egg, large
2 cups milk
3/4 cup Water, add more water if needed
1/4 cup Sparkling Apple cider
1 3/4 ts salt
1 pound Sliced Black Forest ham
1 pound Shredded Gruyère cheese
12 Eggs, large
Salt and pepper
Salad greens
Sparkling apple cider, for serving

Steps:

  • For the crepes: In a bowl, whisk together both flours and salt followed by the egg, milk and cider, making sure there are no lumps. Add the water: you may need more or less depending on how much the flour will absorb. Cover and let rest 2 hours to overnight prior using (does not need to be in the refrigerator).
  • When ready, check the fluidity of the batter. You may need to add up to another cup of water so the galette isn't too thick. It should be the consistency of a thin batter. Pre-heat oven to 400 F. Prepare a crêpe pan with non-stick spray, then wipe it so there's no excess. When pan is hot pour a few ladles of the batter evenly and cook about 2 minutes. Add ¼ cup, each Gruyère and ham, followed by a cracked whole egg. Fold each side of the galette so it looks like a square and cook an additional 2 minutes until it's set. Place in the oven for 2 minutes to set the egg.
  • Finish the galette with greens tossed with olive oil, vinegar, salt and pepper. Enjoy with a glass of Sparkling Apple Cider from Brittany.

BUCKWHEAT GALETTES



Buckwheat Galettes image

adapted from Saveur by "Diamonds for Dessert" - http://diamondsfordessert.blogspot.com/2010/01/buckwheat-galettes_24.html - overnight resting time is not included

Provided by ellie3763

Categories     Breakfast

Time 30m

Yield 10 galettes, 10 serving(s)

Number Of Ingredients 6

1 1/2 cups buckwheat flour
1/2 teaspoon sea salt
1 egg, beaten until foamy
1 1/2 cups water
2/3 cup water
1 cup milk

Steps:

  • Combine the buckwheat flour with the sea salt.
  • Mix in the egg.
  • Whisk in 1 1/2 cups water and continue mixing for a few minutes, until batter is "smooth and elastic" (stated in the original recipe).
  • Cover your bowl with plastic wrap and let rest in the refrigerator overnight.
  • When ready to make the crepes, mix the milk and the 2/3 cups water into the batter.
  • Heat a 10 inch pan over medium heat. Spray the pan with nonstick cooking spray or brush with some melted butter.
  • Pour in 1/4 cup of the batter and quickly swirl it around the pan till evenly coated. Cook for 2 minutes, or until the edges start to peel away from the side of the pan and the crepe starts to brown. Flip the crepe over and cook the other side for about one or two minutes. Repeat with the rest of the batter.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 83.1, Fat 1.9, SaturatedFat 0.8, Cholesterol 22, Sodium 138.8, Carbohydrate 13.9, Fiber 1.8, Sugar 0.5, Protein 3.7

GALETTE DE BRETAGNE (BUCKWHEAT CREPES FROM BRITTANY, FRANCE)



Galette De Bretagne (Buckwheat Crepes from Brittany, France) image

This authentic recipe is from a small fishing village in Brittany France, and makes up a huge amount (about 100 galettes) which are like crepes but for savoury fillings. The recipe is from a local restaurant so use the CHANGE feature to scale the amounts down to your needs. Do try and use real buckwheat flower. Hard to find but worth it. The trick is to prepare before hand, so get your mixture ready, then grate your cheese and prep your ham, spinach etc. Note that the ingredients only caters for the galettes and not the fillings which you make to order. For the usual filling described below, plan on also having an egg, two thin slices of ham, and a handful of spinach leaves per galette.

Provided by minkymorgan

Categories     Dessert

Time 25m

Yield 100 serving(s)

Number Of Ingredients 6

5 kg buckwheat flour
100 g rock salt
30 eggs
3 liters milk
3 liters water
500 g butter

Steps:

  • Put the dry buckwheat flour and salt into the bowl, then with a spoon push the mix to the edges of the bowl leaving a hole in the center.
  • Then pour some of the milk and add some of the eggs into the center of the bowl.
  • With a spoon slowly fold in a little of the flour into the liquid and mix, always keeping the liquid soupy in texture.
  • Continue to slowly add the milk and eggs to the center of the bowl and fold in the flour in this way so the mix is never sticky but rather always soupy.
  • Doing this results in a non-lumpy mix that is very smooth.
  • Mix for a few minutes with an electric mixer, while slowly adding the water to the bowl while mixing.
  • Add the water as the flour thickens so that the mixture doesn't become sticky.
  • The final mixture should be more watery than you would expect for North American pancakes, roughly the the consistency of melted chocolate.
  • note: A secret tip for this recipe is to add at this point a table spoon of beer to the mix for every egg you added, as the malty beer really brings out the flavor of the buckwheat.
  • Leave for a few hours in the fridge.
  • After the mix is chilled, check the consistency, if it is too hard (most likely) then add enough extra water to make mix smooth.
  • Again, it should be smooth, silky and as runny as melted chocolate.
  • The mix is now ready to use.
  • To make each galette, heat up two elements on your cooker.
  • One at maximum temperature, the other on a medium heat.
  • Place a very flat griddle or large frying pan on the maximum temperature hottest element of the cooker to heat up.
  • Add 5 grams of butter to the heated frying pan and wait till it melts and turns brown.
  • Then wipe the whole frying surface with paper towel to remove the butter leaving the pan lightly greased.
  • Don't be afraid to reuse your paper towel and skip fresh butter between galettes.
  • Lift your frying pan slightly off the grill, and add one ladle of mix to the hot pan, so it covers a large surface very thinly.
  • Quickly tilt the pan so the mix runs over the whole surface evenly to the edges.
  • Try not to add a second ladle to the pan - this doesn't work well, better to live with some holes in the galette.
  • Cook the galette for 10-15 seconds on the highest heat, then start to lift the edges of the whole galette up from the pan with a non-stick flat mixing spoon.
  • When you can get a good edge up with the spoon, move the pan to the lower heat element of the cooker.
  • Lift up a good edge of the galette from the pan with the spoon, and with your fingers lift up the whole galette off the non-stick pan and then flip it over.
  • The underside should be golden brown with a very few brown spots.
  • Keep the pan on the lower medium heat.
  • Now add the fillings to the top of the galette's cooked side.
  • filling note. A usual filling is made like this: sprinkle on a little grated Gruyère cheese, then break an egg yolk (discard the white before hand) over the cheese in the center of the galette.
  • To this, add 2 slices of diced ham onto the runny egg yolk, and then top it off with a handful of torn spinach leaves.
  • The trick is not to overfill the galette.
  • Alternatively try different types of cheese, like brie or cheddar, or skip the egg, or skip the ham/spinach.
  • Try out loads of combinations - it's like pizzas, you can design your own.
  • Let the toppings cook for up to about 1 minute.
  • This is the reason to only use egg yolks, if runny they are nice, egg whites however are not nice undercooked.
  • Now, Fold the cooked edges of the galette into the center to make a square, to hold the filling.
  • Use a spatula to press down on the folded mix so it holds its shape.
  • Carefully flip over the parcel, again press down on it with a spatula.
  • The galette should have nice golden colour and some little brown spots on it.
  • Serve immediately.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 244.4, Fat 8.1, SaturatedFat 4.1, Cholesterol 70.8, Sodium 78.4, Carbohydrate 36.9, Fiber 5, Sugar 1.4, Protein 9.2

Tips:

  • When measuring buckwheat flour, spoon it into the measuring cup and level it off with a knife.
  • To make sure the galette cooks evenly, preheat the oven and baking sheet before adding the galette.
  • If the galette starts to brown too quickly, cover it with aluminum foil.
  • Let the galette cool for a few minutes before slicing and serving.

Conclusion:

Buckwheat galette is a delicious and versatile dish that can be enjoyed for breakfast, lunch, or dinner. It is a great way to use up leftover vegetables and herbs, and it can be easily customized to your liking. With its crispy crust and savory filling, buckwheat galette is sure to be a hit with your family and friends.

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