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Another Diwali Post, a savory one. These crackers are crunchy, delicious, baked and glutenfree. The usual Namak paare (salty crackers) are made with whole wheat flour or a combination of wheat flour and semolina. They are thick wheat crackers spiced with Carom seeds-Ajwain and black pepper. They are deep fried and served along with the sweets to guests who come visit during the festival. The festival has a couple of celebrations spread over some days. Many days for visiting friends and family and days to eat and eat. It starts off with Dussehra(harvest festival and victory day celebration) then Hoi Ashthmi (Celebrating Children- the kids always get to eat Black Chana masala, plain nut free Sooji/Semolina halwa and Deep fried Puri flat bread) and Diwali over 2 days and more after that too.

These crackers are based on Potato Murukku,which is thick noodle type snack. This same soft dough is pushed through a noodle/cookie press type thing, directly into the heated oil and fried till crisp.
I used the dough and made these crisp baked crackers instead. They taste like Murukku/Murukulu, look like Paare, look all pretty with the turmeric hue, and make for fun munchables.

I make small quantities of things to post, so I can make other variations and keep posting:) else we end up with containers full of things to finish:)
From the archives, GF Chickpea Mathri crackers here.

Mash the potato. Add oil if using and mix it in.

Mix brown rice flour, salt, spices, baking powder and add to the potato and mix it into a crumbly mixture.

Add a teaspoon of water at a time to make a soft dough. I needed only 2 teaspoons.
Water needed will depend on the moisture content of the potato and flour used.

Let the dough rest for 5 minutes.
Place the dough on parchment and press a bit with your hand.
Dust some brown rice flour on top and roll it out with light pressure into as thin as possible.
Cut the rolled out dough using pizza cutter into squares or diamonds. Use a fork to prick a few holes in the crackers.

Bake in preheated 370 degrees F for 15 minutes.
Take the crackers out, break them apart and bake for another 8-10 minutes.

Crrrunnchh

Baked Namak Paare- Savory Potato Rice Crackers
Allergy Information: Gluten, Dairy, egg, soy, corn, nut, yeast free
Makes a 4 inch bowl full. Easily doubled, multipled.
Ingredients:
1 small potato – boiled, peeled and mashed. About 1/4 cup
1/4 cup Brown Rice flour
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon Coarsely ground Black pepper
1/2 teaspoon Carom seeds(ajwain) or cumin seeds
a generous pinch of turmeric powder
a generous pinch of baking powder
1 teaspoon extra virgin olive oil (Optional)
2-3 teaspoons water
Method:
Mash the potato. Add oil if using and mix it in.
Mix rice flour, salt, spices, baking powder and add to the potato and mix it into a crumbly mixture.
Add a teaspoon of water at a time to make a soft dough. I needed only 2 teaspoons.
Water needed will depend on the moisture content of the potato and flour used.
Let the dough rest for 5 minutes.
Place the dough on parchment and press a bit with your hand.
Dust brown rice flour on top and roll it out with “light” pressure into as thin as possible. (Keep dusting more flour to avoid dough sticking to the rolling pin and breaking apart).
Cut the rolled out dough using pizza cutter into squares or diamonds.
Use a fork to prick a few holes in the dough.
Place parchment on baking sheet and Bake in preheated 370 degrees F for 15 minutes.
Take the crackers out, break them apart and bake for another 8-10 minutes until crisp to touch.
Cool and store in airtight container.

These crackers are being shared at Slightly Indulgent Tuesdays, Allergy Free Wednesdays, Ricki’s Wellness Weekend, Healthy Vegan Fridays













What type of potato works best? Russet? or a waxy potato? These definitely look great!
Potato and gluten free..
Oh, these crackers looks great!
Thank you for sharing..
Can I subtitute white rice flour for brown rice flour?
yes you can 🙂
thanks for the recipe , much needed
Hi Richa, would this work well with another flour (may be oat or garbanzo bean) in place of brown rice flour?
That is a great question. I’d like the answer for that too please.
Would it be okay to deep fry or shallow fry these? My oven is broken but I want to make these namak :”( please advise?
I havent tried frying them. Make a dryer dough for frying. Let me know if you do try. thanks
Love this recipe.Today I tried squishing the dough into muffin tin compartments (instead of rolling the dough out and cutting). They turned out great and baked evenly because in just had a small amount of dough in each compartment. Thanks, Richa.
Diane in Bloomington, In.
I did them ( in French), delicious with a dip….
the day after I re-heat them in the oven and they turn crispy again
I tried the recipe using white rice flour. It tasted good right out of the oven. After a couple of hours though it turned chewy and inedible. I don’t know what went wrong.
Maybe there was some extra moisture and it needed to be baked slightly longer? I havent tried white rice flour. there are several varieties of white rice too, so it really depends. these crackers stay crispy. the last batch i made lasted about 3 days. in one batch a few were just a teeny bit soft and probably chewy later because they were the center crackers which dint bake enough.
will the recipe work if i use jowar flour instead of rice flour? Thanks in advance.
you might need a bit more or less. give it a try. 🙂