Healthy Buckwheat Stir Fry with vegetables in just 30 minutes. Itโs nutrient dense and combines your choice of vegetables with grain free, gluten free, nutrient and protein dense roasted buckwheat groats!
Other healthy veggie stir fry recipes our family loves include cabbage stir fry, cauliflower stir fry, and this broccoli mushroom stir fry!
Table of contents
This buckwheat stir fry combines mixed vegetables with kasha, aka roasted buckwheat groats, for a simple meal packed with nutrients.
It’s a healthy 30 minute buckwheat recipe with a handful of versatile ingredients, vegetarian friendly and perfect for clearing out your crisper drawers and pantry, just like vegetable soup or easy vegetable frittata.
Best of all, you can enjoy this healthy veggie stir fry with buckwheat recipe as a healthy lunch idea, side or dinner main with tons of proteins and meals! Growing up, we ate a buckwheat dish with ground chicken burgers.
What is Buckwheat?
Though wheat is in its name, buckwheat is a wheat free, grain free, gluten free seed similar to quinoa. In fact, I’ve nicknamed this pseudo grain as Ukrainian quinoa.
It cooks in just 15 minutes, has a nutty flavor and chewy texture, and Iโm honestly shocked that it isnโt more popular in America.
Buckwheat contains 155 calories and 6 grams of protein, and 5 grams of fiber per cup. It contains antioxidants, all nine essential amino acids, and several vitamins and minerals, including magnesium, zinc, folate, iron, and vitamin B6.
The combination is beneficial to heart health, blood sugar levels, and makes for a great plant based source of protein, perfect for this simple buckwheat recipe!
What is Kasha?
Kasha is roasted buckwheat and also the name give to buckwheat when it is made into porridge by combining the groats with water! For this savory buckwheat dish you will need roasted buckwheat groats or kasha.
So, where to buy roasted buckwheat groats?! Youโll find it in ethnic food stores, particularly Eastern European stores. Itโs also available in several health food stores or could be bought on Amazon, courtesy of Bobโs Red Mill.
Technically you could buy raw buckwheat and roast it in the oven but I havenโt tried. Share if you have.
Ingredients and Substitutions
- Roasted buckwheat groats: Also called kasha, use dark brown roasted buckwheat groats not pale green raw buckwheat. They taste better and hold their shape best for this buckwheat and vegetable stir fry. You could substitute quinoa.
- Water: For more flavor, use homemade chicken broth or vegetable broth instead of water.
- Himalayan pink salt: To season the water. Sea salt will also work.
- Vegetables: I used bell pepper, kale, and marinated artichoke hearts for this healthy veggie stir fry. However, experiment with your choice of fresh or frozen stir fry veggies.
- Aromatics: I used fresh garlic cloves. Adjust the amount to taste.
- Oil: Use any neutral cooking oil like coconut oil, avocado oil, or climate pledge friendly red palm oil (pictured below).
- Herbs: Use finely chopped fresh parsley and basil for fragrant freshness in this buckwheat dish.
If you have a bunch of fresh herbs in your fridge, place them upright in a glass/jar with some water. It helps keep them fresh for an extra day or two!
- Salt: For seasoning. Adjust the amount to taste. Alternatively, you may prefer to use soy sauce or gluten free coconut aminos instead of regular salt for this healthy buckwheat recipe.
How Do You Cook Buckwheat?
Here is how to cook buckwheat for stir fry in 3 simple steps.
- First, rinse the buckwheat well. Then add it to a medium saucepan along with three cups of water and a pinch of salt. Cover with a lid and bring it to a boil over high heat.
- Then, reduce to a low simmer and cook for 15 minutes without touching the lid.
- Finally, remove it from the heat, allow it to stand for three minutes, then fluff it up with a fork.
You can do this at the time of preparing the healthy veggie stir fry recipe or cook it in advance and use day old leftovers for this buckwheat recipe.
How To Make Buckwheat Stir Fry?
- Chop the ingredients: While the buckwheat stands, mince the garlic, cube the artichoke, and chop the kale and bell peppers into strips. Also, finely chop the parsley and basil.
- Sautรฉ the garlic and kale: Heat a large non-stick skillet or wok over medium heat and add a tablespoon of oil. Add the garlic and sautรฉ for 10 seconds. Then add the kale and ยผ tsp salt. Sautรฉ until itโs shrunk by half, stirring occasionally. Then, transfer it to a bowl.
- Stir fry the remaining ingredients: Add another tablespoon of oil into the pan, and add the peppers and another ยผ teaspoon of salt. Stir fry until golden brown and tender crisp. Then add to the bowl with the kale.
- Assemble the buckwheat stir fry: Finally, add the remaining two tablespoons of oil to the pan. Add the buckwheat and briefly stir fry until itโs coated in the oil. Then remove it from the heat, mix in the stir fried vegetables and all the remaining ingredients. Stir gently, adjust the seasoning, and then enjoy this buckwheat recipe immediately!
How to Serve
This vegetable and buckwheat stir fry can be enjoyed as is after cooking or sprinkle on a bit of feta cheese for extra creaminess as seen in the photos.
Buckwheat recipe can be served for healthy sides alongside the protein of your choice like baked chicken breast or
ground turkey meatloaf.
Or keep this a vegetarian friendly meal and add heartiness with fried tofu recipe.
FAQs
I always recommend using a 2:1 ratio of water or stock to the buckwheat groats.
First, it’s important that you’re using roasted buckwheat, not raw. Also, leave the lid completely untouched while it cooks. Otherwise, you can end up with a pan of mush which does not taste good in any buckwheat recipe.
You can enjoy buckwheat in place of grains like rice and quinoa in many dishes, including soups, stews, other stir fries, as a simple side dish, or to make a cold buckwheat salad. You can also enjoy it as a breakfast porridge style dish with sugar, butter, and milk.
Other Healthy Recipes with Grains
- Buckwheat soup
- Quinoa falafel
- Quinoa tabbouleh salad
- Quinoa granola
- Chicken quinoa bowl
- Chicken soba noodles
Buckwheat Stir Fry
Equipment
Ingredients
For the Buckwheat:
- 1 cup roasted buckwheat groats uncooked, rinsed & drained
- 1 1/2 cups cold water
- Pinch of salt
For the Stir fry:
- 1 bunch kale ribs removed & finely chopped
- 4 large garlic cloves minced
- 4 large bell peppers cut into short strips
- 2 cups marinated artichoke hearts drained & chopped
- 1/4 cup coconut oil or extra virgin olive oil divided
- 1 teaspoon salt divided
- 1/2 teaspoon ground black pepper
- 1/2 cup parsley finely chopped
- 1/2 cup basil finely chopped
Instructions
- To cook buckwheat: In a medium pot, add buckwheat, cold water and salt. Cover, bring to a boil, then reduce heat to low and cook for 15 minutes. Do not open the lid. Remove from heat, let stand for 5 minutes and fluff with a fork.
- To make the stir fry: Meanwhile, preheat large non-stick skillet or wok on medium heat and add 1 tablespoon of oil to coat. Add garlic and sautรฉ for 30 seconds, stirring often. Add kale and sprinkle with 1/4 teaspoon salt, sautรฉ until it has shrunk in half, stirring a few times. Transfer to a medium bowl.
- Add 1 tablespoon of oil, bell peppers and sprinkle them with 1/4 teaspoon salt. Sautรฉ until golden brown, stirring occasionally. Transfer to a bowl with kale.
- Reduce heat to low and add remaining 2 tablespoons of oil. Add cooked buckwheat, sprinkle with remaining 1/2 teaspoon salt and ground black pepper and briefly stir it to coat in oil.
- Add previously cooked kale and peppers, artichoke hearts, parsley and basil. Stir gently and turn off heat.
- Serve warm on its own or as a side dish. I sprinkled it with feta cheese but you can keep it plain or use vegan cheese.
Notes
- Store: Refrigerate leftovers in an airtight container for up to 4 days.
- I don’t recommend to freeze it because vegetables will not thaw well.
- Reheat: Reheat in a microwave for a few minutes or saute in a non-stick skillet, so you don’t use more oil, for 2-3 minutes, stirring often.
Awesome Recipe. I am trying this today.
Great! Please don’t be shy to leave a comment and star review ๐
Will make it this week, love buckwheat!
Hope you enjoy it!
It’s looks good! Eating healthy is very important!
It sure is, Tong. Thanks for stopping by. ๐
How much buckwheat do you use in this recipe? There are 3 cups of water and what quantity if buckwheat groats?
I’m looking forward to trying this recipe
Thank you!
1 1/2 cups. It is always 1:2 ratio with buckwheat. ๐ Enjoy!
This stir fry is delicious!
Forgot to add, re. your acne problem. Your dairy theory is spot on (no pun intended), I had the same problem, and have an appointment here in London at the end of this month with an amazing Canadian Naturopath Doctor who is soooo popular it took a month to make this appointment. Her name is Dr Nigma Talib – here is a great article on thoughts about inflammatory foods and the havoc they create on the skin and body:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/wellbeing/health-advice/the-skin-doctor-who-will-change-your-life/
No pun, I appreciate your link. That doctor studied in Vancouver and has a clinic here. So, technically I could visit her. I kind of suspect what I will hear haha. For now, I will try food elimination and see how it goes. I also have read horrible things about coffee causing acne because it raises cortisol which is a hormone and is highly acidic. A week without dairy and coffee already made a big difference. My skin is clearing up and no new acne has appeared yet. I will see how I survive ovulation and period when my acne gets the worst! That is when my hormones go bananas of course. But lately I noticed I had acne and hormone disbalance daily.
So how is your skin now? Please come back and tell me what she tells you. I am really curious to hear what worked for you!
Hi Olena, I tasted this for the first and only time while visiting a friend in Kyrgyzstan, and fell in love with it! I’m so happy you posted this as I couldn’t find a recipe anywhere on the internet, and of course I had purchased a bag of roasted buckwheat groats which have been sitting in my cupboard begging me to cook them ๐
Btw, I live in the UK, and love your blog!
Best wishes, P
Hello. Awe, thank you for your love.:) Yes, Kyrgyzstan was in a former USSR like Ukraine, so we ate similar food. Their food is more Middle Eastern and so delicious! But yes they share many similar ingredients and dishes with Ukraine.
I am curious about the buckwheat and want to try! But I only saw the regular, un-toasted kind so I’ll have to try Amazon. I just tried, and loved,organic hulled barley! (Not the pearled which has lost its germ, nutrients and fiber) I made it as a breakfast cereal, and also cooked it and added to chicken soup. So much healthier than pasta or brown rice, which is usually poisoned with arsenic if it’s grown in the U.S. it’s wildly high in protein and fiber! Now I want to try some other new organic grains and seeds. Like buckwheat!
Really?! Now I want to buy hulled barley. I will check my health food store. I am glad I didn’t buy pearled. See, we learn from each other.:)
The instructions for cooking hulled barley say it takes much longer to cook, so I put it in my slow cooker, expecting it to take hours. I am glad I was home because instead of the 6-8, it was done in 2. It freezes well cooked, according to the package, but I have used all I cooked!
Ha! Olena, I have learned so much more from you! Any little thing you can get from me is a raindrop in the sea of knowledge! I thank you for that. Without the accidental discovery of your blog we’d still be eating junk! We aren’t 100% organic but I’ll say 70, and where it is most important. I wish everyone would begin to question what is in all of those packages that line the grocery shelves.
Awe. Thank you. We are not 100% organic either. It is quite hard to reach that. I know. I frankly not understand why people do not care what hey eat until disaster strikes them…
Yes, some directions on packages are a bit off. For the life of me I can’t remember what type of barley I ate in Ukraine. As soon as I see hulled barley I will remember if that or pearled barley I ate.
Super pretty photos Olena! Love them and that beautiful spring light. And the stir-fry sounds so amazing! Pinned ๐
Awe, thank you, Katie!
I’ve heard others mention dairy as a culprit for acne. Boo! Hope you figure it out. You have me extra interested to try buckwheat! I know it’s out there (it may be in my pantry!) but I don’t cook it obviously. I’ve had buckwheat pancakes before though. What a delicious throw together dish. My kind of food!
Also coffee. I am off of coffee too. Ouch.
I have never tried buckwheat flour recipes. I assume tastes like buckwheat.:)