N.B. I used plain wheat flour instead of the gluten free flours as we were allowed to do this if we couldn’t find the specialist flours.
Ingredients:
1 cup (138 g)(4.9 ounces) Sweet rice flour (also known as glutinous rice flour)
3/4 cup (100 g)(3.5 ounces) Tapioca Starch/Flour
1/2 cup (65 g)(2.3 ounces) Sorghum Flour
1 cup (200 g)(7.1 ounces) Dark Brown Sugar, Lightly packed
1 teaspoon (5 ml) Baking soda
3/4 teaspoon (4ml) Kosher Salt
7 tablespoons (100 g) (3 ½ ounces) Unsalted Butter (Cut into 1-inch cubes and frozen)
1/3 cup (80 ml) Honey, Mild-flavoured such as clover.
5 tablespoons (75 ml) Whole Milk
2 tablespoons (30 ml) Pure Vanilla Extract
Directions:
1. In the bowl of a food processor fitted with a steel blade, combine the flours, brown sugar, baking soda, and salt. Pulse on low to incorporate. Add the butter and pulse on and off, until the mixture is the consistency of a coarse meal. If making by hand, combine aforementioned dry ingredients with a whisk, then cut in butter until you have a coarse meal. No chunks of butter should be visible.
2. In a small bowl or liquid measuring cup, whisk together the honey, milk and vanilla. Add to the flour mixture until the dough barely comes together. It will be very soft and sticky.
3. Turn the dough onto a surface well-floured with sweet rice flour and pat the dough into a rectangle about 1 inch thick. Wrap in plastic and chill until firm, about 2 hours, or overnight.
4. Divide the dough in half and return one half to the refrigerator. Sift an even layer of sweet rice flour onto the work surface and roll the dough into a long rectangle, about 1/8 inch thick. The dough will be quite sticky, so flour as necessary. Cut into 4 by 4 inch squares. Gather the scraps together and set aside. Place wafers on one or two parchment-lined baking sheets. Chill until firm, about 30 to 45 minutes. Repeat with the second batch of dough.
5. Adjust the rack to the upper and lower positions and preheat oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit (180 degrees Celsius).
6. Gather the scraps together into a ball, chill until firm, and reroll. Dust the surface with more sweet rice flour and roll out the dough to get a couple more wafers.
7. Prick the wafers with toothpick or fork, not all the way through, in two or more rows.
8. Bake for 25 minutes, until browned and slightly firm to the touch, rotating sheets halfway through to ensure even baking. Might take less, and the starting location of each sheet may determine its required time. The ones that started on the bottom browned faster.
9. When cooled completely, place enough wafers in food processor to make 1 ¼ cups (300 mL) of crumbs. Another way to do this is to place in a large ziplock bag, force all air out and smash with a rolling pin until wafers are crumbs.
Nanaimo Bars
Ingredients:
Bottom Layer
1/2 cup (115 g)(4 ounces) Unsalted Butter
1/4 cup (50 g)(1.8 ounces) Granulated Sugar
5 tablespoons (75 mL) Unsweetened Cocoa
1 Large Egg, Beaten
1 1/4 cups (300 mL) Gluten Free Graham Wafer Crumbs (See previous recipe)
1/2 cup (55 g)(1.9 ounces) Almonds (Any type, Finely chopped)
1 cup (130 g)(4.5 ounces) Coconut (Shredded, sweetened or unsweetened)
Middle Layer
1/2 cup (115 g)(4 ounces) Unsalted Butter
2 tablespoons and 2 teaspoons (40 mL) Heavy Cream
2 tablespoons (30 mL) Vanilla Custard Powder (Such as Bird’s. Vanilla pudding mix may be substituted.)
2 cups (254 g)(8.9 ounces) Icing Sugar
Top Layer
4 ounces (115 g) Semi-sweet chocolate
2 tablespoons (28 g) (1 ounce) Unsalted Butter
Method:
2. For Middle Layer: Cream butter, cream, custard powder, and icing sugar together well. Beat until light in colour. Spread over bottom layer.
3. For Top Layer: Melt chocolate and unsalted butter over low heat. Cool. Once cool, pour over middle layer and chill.









Love the tooth pick idea!
Did you refrigerate your crackers before baking them? I find that chilling the cut out crackers on the tray before putting them in the oven helps them stop spreading.
Welcome to the DB. Once you are in it, you don't you wanna leave 🙂 It is inspiring and lots to learn from…
Beautiful beautiful bars, just love the pictures!
Sawadee from Bangkok,
Kris
I never realized graham crackers seem to be a uniquely North American product. Beautiful job. I have a hard time eating just one.
Wow, I've been so busy this past 24 hours I've not been able to respond to everyone's comments until now.
@powderate Yes I did spell it wrong, although the spellling we were given was Nanaimo and not Nanimo. I have no idea which is correct.
@winnie, @mandym @kelly-jane @nina – thank you!
@ap269 @gala @tia A last minute moment of inspiration that paid off
@ramblingtart Curling is the funniest sport I can think of
@ashafsk @mamatkamal – if only that were possible I would be extremely fat
@julia melanger – the blue plate is from Ikea
@deerbaby Grahams are sweet, apparently like digestives tho I think they remind me of the now defunct Abbey Crunch. Nothing like jacobs.
@marymoh You'll have to move to London or me to Scotland!
@foodwithstyle, thank you I will investigate your blog
@kitchenbutterfly They were very good for being able to leave lying about if you were busy!!
@jenny My fridge was full so I put the cracker dough in the garden when it had snowed and was sub zero out there. They felt cold when I put them in oven so as good as the fridge.
@bakeinparis Thanks for the welcome!
@annmartina It's strange we can't get them at all in the UK, if they're THAT nice you'd think we could!
AMAZING! both the baking and photography!