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Nutty blue poppy seeds grown in Britain. |
These beautiful dark seeds of the breadseed poppy (Papaver somniferum) are most used in baking, added to batter or dough, or as a topping for biscuits and bread.
Try them toasted and stirred into mash or sprinkled on salads, veg or pasta.
A tasty and nutritious addition to sweet or savoury baking. Add to doughs, cake mix and batters, or use as a topping for bread, biscuits and more.
Or toast and sprinkle on salads, coleslaw, vegetables or pasta, add to curries, or stir into mash. Also good in chutneys and dressings.
Unpasteurised seed - do not consume raw.
Blue Poppy Seed
No allergens
| Typical values | Per 100g |
| Energy | 2200kJ (525kcal) |
| Fat | 42g |
| of which saturates | 4.5g |
| Carbohydrate | 28g |
| of which sugars | 3.0g |
| Fibre | 20g |
| Protein | 18g |
| Salt | <0.01g |
| Calcium | 1,440mg |
| Magnesium | 347mg |
| Iron | 9.8mg |
| Zinc | 7.9mg |
Suitable for vegans and vegetarians
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Registered in England and Wales as Hodmedod Ltd, The Studios, London Road, Brampton, Beccles, Suffolk, NR34 8DQ, UK; company number 08151811.
I often find fava beans a bit bitter (is it just me?!) so have previously just used them in quite heavily flavoured dishes. Not these ones though - no bitterness at all - just really tasty. I often eat them just with a bit of seasoning and drizzle of oil!
This unusual flour is something everyone should try. I use it in sourdough and yeasted bread, and it makes an unusually dense dough that is actually rather textured and nice to stretch and fold even when using at 50:50 with white. It has a very nice flavour with a long prove - and so far has never over-proved on me by going liquidy. Aside from its unusual flavour and appearance, I have achieved a good firm and edible crust that doesn't turn into nasty shards
I make fantastic tasty hummus with Carlin Peas . I cook up the whole pack, then freeze in very small batches., equivalent to a canful, and they defrost overnight. I sometimes add butter beans or flageolets and vary the flavour with all sorts,…paprika, sun-dried tomatoes, aubergine etc. Or I can add them frozen to meat or veg stews, stir fries etc. love them!!
Really like this dish, great flavour and some real substance to it!
Fantastic grain for making risotto's and stews creates a really great creamy texture during cooking without the addition of dairy (although the addition of dairy elevates everything!) They don't overcook unlike rice so its almost a foolproof alternative, the end results are a moreish bite to the cooked grain.