Buckwheat has nothing to do with wheat. Quinoa is technically a seed. Amaranth fed the Aztecs. Pseudocereals are seeds that cook and bake like grains — with more protein, more minerals and a lot more personality than the neutral rice-and-corn crowd. In gluten-free baking, they are the flavour upgrade.
What pseudocereal flours do in gluten-free baking
These flours are boosters, not blank canvases. Their protein adds genuine structure and better browning, and their flavour — earthy, nutty, sometimes grassy — turns a polite bake into an interesting one.
The trade-off is intensity. Most pseudocereal flours work best at 20–30% of a blend; push much past that and the flavour starts running the show. They also drink more liquid than rice flour, so expect slightly thirstier doughs. Buckwheat is the exception that can carry a recipe almost alone — crêpes and blinis have been proving that for centuries.
How does this family differ from its neighbours? Compared with grain flours, pseudocereals trade neutrality for character and nutrition. Compared with legume flours, they lean earthy rather than beany, and they behave better in sweet bakes. If a recipe tastes flat, this is usually the shelf that fixes it.
Meet the flours
- Buckwheat Flour — bold, earthy and structurally generous. The pseudocereal that can headline: crêpes, pancakes, blinis, noodles and rustic breads.
- Quinoa Flour — protein-rich with a grassy, slightly bitter edge. Brilliant in savoury bakes and crackers when kept to a modest share of the blend.
- Amaranth Flour — nutrient-dense and assertive. A small-percentage booster for tortillas, crackers and bread blends; too much makes bakes dense.
- Kañiwa Flour — quinoa’s smaller Andean cousin, milder and without the bitter coating. A lovely specialty buy for porridge bakes and pancakes.
The family at a glance
| Flour | Texture & flavour | Best for | Role | Watch out for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Buckwheat | Robust, earthy, slightly tannic | Crêpes, pancakes, rustic breads | Base or booster | High contamination risk — buy clearly labelled GF |
| Quinoa | Fine, grassy, faintly bitter | Crackers, savoury bakes, blends | Booster | Flavour dominates above ~25% |
| Amaranth | Fine, earthy-sweet, strong | Tortillas, crackers, small bread shares | Booster | Density when overused |
| Kañiwa | Fine, mild, nutty | Specialty blends, porridge baking | Booster | Spelling varies: kaniwa, kañiwa, canihua |
Best for…
| Bake | Reach for |
|---|---|
| Pancakes & crêpes | Buckwheat, alone or with rice flour |
| Bread | Buckwheat or quinoa at 20–30% of the blend |
| Cookies & crackers | Quinoa or amaranth for snap and depth |
| Batters | A spoonful of buckwheat in a rice-flour batter |
Building a blend from this family
Pseudocereals slot into the booster position of a blend, not the base — with buckwheat as the occasional headliner.
- Base: something neutral from the grain flours — white rice or sorghum.
- Pair with: 20–30% buckwheat, quinoa or amaranth for flavour, protein and browning.
- Starch: tapioca or potato starch to lighten what is naturally a heavier crowd.
- Binder: psyllium in breads; flax pairs beautifully with buckwheat’s earthiness.
A note on coeliac safety
Here is the catch with this family: naturally gluten-free does not mean safe on the shelf. Buckwheat in particular is routinely grown, milled and packed alongside wheat, and tests on products without a gluten-free claim regularly find real contamination. Quinoa and amaranth flours carry the same risk to a lesser degree.
The rule is simple. If a pseudocereal flour is going into your baking as a main ingredient, buy it certified or explicitly labelled gluten-free — the ingredient name alone proves nothing. And bulk bins are never safe for coeliacs, however tempting the price per kilo.
Keep exploring
- The full gluten-free flour library
- Gluten-Free Grain Flours — the neutral bases these flours love
- Legume Flours — the other protein-forward family
- Best Flours For…
- Flour Substitutions

