Lembas Bread Recipe [Canon Accurate!] - Celebration Generation (2024)

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You needn't be a Tolkien Fan to enjoy this Lembas Bread Recipe... but if you are, all my nerding out about Elven bread in the commentary will make more sense!

Lembas Bread Recipe [Canon Accurate!] - Celebration Generation (1)

Originally published February 7, 2015. Updated on 9/6/22

I originally wrote this post almost a decade ago, as a handful of us Lord of the Rings fans were preparing for a journey of our own - traveling to The One Ring .Net's "One Last Party".

With the new “Rings of Power” series out, seems like a good time to update this post with more photos and video!

Back in the day, I decided that it the Elvish waybread would be make ideal snacks for our trip, and great for the hotel room (along with our Homemade Miruvor!).

It’s cheaper than airport food, healthier- especially in light of the travel, looong hours, etc we are about to subject ourselves to - and, you know.. thematic.

The problem?

None of the Lembas recipes out there seemed... legit. They were just fairly generic bread products with the look of Lembas.

Elvish bread may be a fictional food, but if I’m going to make a special food for one of the rare occasions we travel and socialize... I want it to be as canonical as humanly possible!

Besides, as a huge lord of the rings fan, this creative problem solving was a good way to keep me distracted while waiting for our departure date!

So, I spent an entire day digging into the minutiae of J.R.R Tolkien’s Middle Earth, as it related to Elven custom, mentions of agriculture / food, and more.

I also spent a lot of time cross referencing, and brainstorming real-world equivalents to foods and ingredients that were mentioned.

I’ll get to those details in a bit....

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The Results

In the end, I developed a terrific Lembas bread recipe, that fits pretty much all of the descriptions, and is nutritionally sound.

It’s terrific, and has a great taste - subtle, elegant, and complex. Ethereal, even.

Additionally, it has a nice texture. When creating this way bread, I deviated from the idea of hard tack, as that’s just not good eating. This Lembas Bread Recipe is actually pleasant to eat!

While I wouldn’t go so far as to say that a bite will fill a stomach for an entire day, my lembas is QUITE filling, on account of the way it was designed.

They are incredibly nutritionally dense, and make a fantastic travel/convention snack, second breakfast, or even as a part of afternoon tea.

As an update on the trip, our own “fellowship of the ring” had a GREAT time, met a lot of fun people, and yeah - the Lembas came in handy!

I made a batch when redoing this post, and it had been a few years since I last made some lembas.

... I forgot how GOOD it is. First bite, and I said to my husband “Yep. That really does taste like what I’d imagine elves would eat”.

It may sound like a weird combination of flavours on paper, but it’s really, REALLY tasty, in practice!

We posted a bunch of photos from the LA “One Last Party” trip to album on my Facebook costuming page. Check out that album here!

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Some ridiculousness the morning of the big event!

What is Lembas Bread?

The facts are these...

Lembas is a type of Elvish bread / cake / biscuit from Tolkien's writings.

First made by Yavanna from a special corn, it was nutritious, and known to be ridiculously sustaining - that "One small bite will fill the stomach of a grown man", etc.

It's generally theorized that Lembas was based on hard tack - a very dry and bland bread product used for military rations and some traditional Newfoundland cooking.

"Eat little at a time, and only at need. For these things are given to serve you when all else fails. The cakes will keep sweet for many many days, if they are unbroken and left in their leaf-wrappings, as we have brought them. One will keep a traveler on his feet for a day of long labour, even if he be one of the tall men of Minas Tirith." - Fellowship of the Rings

"The food was mostly in the form of very thin cakes, made of meal that was baked a light brown on the outside, and inside was the colour of cream." - Fellowship of the Ring

Like other products of the elves, it was some degree of repellent to evil creatures.

In the Lord of the Rings trilogy movies, Lembas was shown to be a crumbly white biscuit type food that was presented to Frodo Baggins and Samwise Gamgee and the other members of the fellowship.

A large store of lembas was provided to them by the elves of Lothlórien, for them to live on for the majority of their journey.

Apparently the movies used an unsweetened shortbread that tasted awful. They were presented wrapped in leaves, and tied up with twine.

Tolkien has said that they contain honey, and the "fruit of the Mallorn tree", which was described as " Its fruit was a round nut with a silver shale" in Unfinished Tales.

Oh, and as one other challenge to this little exercise?

Half of our little fellowship is allergic to gluten.

So.. lots of random information to work with, in addition to my own assumptions... and nutritional goals for the finished product.

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Designing This Lembas Bread Recipe

If I'm going to make something based on a book, I'm going to make it as "canon" as possible. So, here we go!

To me, I picture real lembas bread as a sweet thing, but not a DESSERT thing. They straight up mention its sweetness, after all.

I picture some of the sweetness coming from the (canon!) honey, but also from dried fruit, which would contribute to the nutrition of it.

Dried apples would work best given the colour description of the interior, but I decided that thinly sliced apricots are more in line with the flavour profile I was picturing.

I decided that there should be a small amount of spice for complexity, and a pinch of herbs to bring it back from being too desserty.

In the end, I went with rosemary and cardamom. (Cinnamon also works, if you don’t have cardamom on hand)

In terms of "fruit of the mallorn tree", I am choosing to interpret that as almonds. Sliced almonds, specifically.

Now, in terms of the nutritious / sustenance properties of Lembas... I wouldn't have used white flour even if we weren't working around gluten issues. There's just no real nutrition in all purpose flour.

I decided to use a small amount of masa flour, due to the canonical Lembas being corn based. As I have no access to Elven magical corn, it'll have to do 🙂
Also, I'm supplementing it with protein powder and ground flax meal to contribute to nutrition. Non-magical, non-Valar corn is only slightly more nutritious than wheat flour, after all.

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A Few Notes

You can use maple syrup instead of honey, in the same amount.

If you can’t use oat flour, feel free to use sorghum or light buckwheat flour instead.

Choose your protein powder wisely! If it's something you don't like to drink, it'll make the bread taste weird.

Unflavoured protein powder can be used in place of vanilla protein powder, just add 1 teaspoon vanilla extract at the same time as the milk.

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How to Make Lembas Bread

In a large bowl, mix butter and honey together just until combined – do not cream it or over beat it.

Add milk, gently mix until combined and smooth.

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In a separate bowl, whisk together remaining ingredients.

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Add dry ingredients mix to butter and honey, mix until combined and a thick dough forms.

Wrap dough in plastic film, chill for 1 hour.

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Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F, line 2 baking sheets with parchment paper.

Generously sprinkle clean work surface with corn starch, roll dough to ½″ thick.

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Cut into 3-inch squares, and carefully transfer each bread piece to a prepared cookie sheet, leaving 2″ between each.

Cut a shallow “X” into each cake, if desired.

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Bake for about 15 minutes, or until the edges start to turn light golden brownish colour, and the tops are barely turning light brown.

Allow lembas to cool on cookie sheets for at least 5 minutes before moving, cool completely before serving, or transferring to an airtight container for storage.

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Warm lembas is fragile... but SO irresistible!

If you want to get fancy with it, wrap them in leaves, and tie with twine - see below for info!

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Wrapping Your Lembas

While these Lembas biscuits can be stored in normal containers and served on plates like any other bread or cookie type product, where’s the fun in that?

If you have the time and inclination, may as well go the extra step and wrap your pieces of bread up in leaves... or “leaves”, if that works better for you.

Natural Leaves

As pictured, we used fresh collard greens to wrap our Lembas, then tied with some kitchen twine.

Another fresh option would be to use banana leaves, if you have access to them.

Both fresh leaf options are best if you’re going to use the Lembas the same day, I wouldn’t recommend them for longer term storage.

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Artificial “Leaves”

There are two main ways to do artificial leaves: Buy some large silk floral leaves at your local craft or floral supply shop, or make a “leaf” packaging from craft foam (which I detail below).

When you’re using either of these artificial leaf options, I recommend wrapping your Lembas in plastic wrap before using the “leaves”, as neither of these options is food grade on their own.

Craft Foam Leaves

If you’re looking for something with a bit more longevity - or is a bit more robust for long journeys! - you can use craft foam.

When I’m making craft foam “Mallorn leaves”, I make a template first, about the size of one Lembas, with about ½" border all around it.

From there, I draw a line out from the center of each side, an inch or two longer than the square itself.

Then, I joined each corner of the square to the end of each line, with a wide arc. This creates 4 “leaves” radiating out from the square, as shown below:

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Use your template to cut the shape out from thin sheets of green craft foam. If you’re feeling fancy, you can use a gold or silver pen to draw veining on the leaves.

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Place your wrapped Lembas in the middle of one foam piece (veining side down, if applicable), and wrap the “leaves” up and over the lembas.

Tie with kitchen twine. To secure.

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Repeat with remaining pieces.

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More Fandom Recipes!

Looking for more Tolkien - or just fandom in general - recipes? I’ve got you covered. Here are a few covering Tolkien, and Doctor Who, as well as some Convention Food recipes!

"Con" Brownies (Gluten-free)
Convention Sloppy Joes
Dalek Sugar Cookies
Fish Sticks & Custard
Hotel Room Smoothies
Miruvor - Quick Version
Roasted "Convention" Chili
The One CHEESE Ring

Lembas Bread Recipe [Canon Accurate!] - Celebration Generation (19)

Share the Love!

Before you chow down, be sure to take some pics of your handiwork! If you Instagram it, be sure to tag me - @CelebrationGenerationCA - or post it to My Facebook Page - so I can cheer you on!

Also, be sure to subscribe to my free monthly email newsletter, so you never miss out on any of my nonsense. Well, the published nonsense, anyway!

Finally, if you love this recipe, please consider leaving a star rating and/or a comment below, and maybe even sharing this post on social media!

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"But first... let me take an Elfie..."

Lembas Bread Recipe [Canon Accurate!] - Celebration Generation (21)

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4.83 from 34 votes

Lembas Bread

You don’t need to be a Tolkien Fan to enjoy this Gluten-Free Lembas Recipe... but if you are, all the nerding out in the commentary will make more sense!

Prep Time15 minutes mins

Cook Time15 minutes mins

Chilling / Cooling Time1 hour hr 5 minutes mins

Total Time1 hour hr 35 minutes mins

Course: Snack

Cuisine: elvish, Gluten-free

Servings: 12 3" biscuits

Calories: 323kcal

Author: Marie Porter

Equipment

  • 2 Baking Sheets

  • Parchment Paper

Ingredients

  • 1 cup Unsalted butter softened
  • cup Honey
  • 2 tablespoon Milk Or unsweetened almond milk
  • ½ cup Masa Flour
  • ½ cup Gluten-free oat flour Or Sorghum flour
  • ½ cup Vanilla protein powder*
  • ½ cup Sliced almonds
  • ½ cup Thinly sliced dried apricots
  • ¼ cup Coconut Flour
  • ¼ cup Ground flax seed flax meal
  • 1 tablespoon Tapioca Starch/Flour
  • 1 teaspoon Baking Powder
  • 1 teaspoon Xanthan Gum
  • ½ teaspoon Salt
  • ¾ teaspoon Cardamom
  • ¼ teaspoon Dried Rosemary finely crumbled/chopped
  • Corn starch for rolling

Instructions

  • Mix butter and honey together just until combined – do not cream it or over beat it. Add milk, gently mix until combined and smooth

  • In a separate bowl, whisk together remaining ingredients. Add dry mix to butter and honey, mix until combined. Wrap dough in plastic film, chill for 1 hour.

  • Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F, line baking sheets with parchment paper.

  • Generously sprinkle clean work surface with corn starch, roll dough to ½″ thick. Cut into 3″ squares, and carefully transfer biscuits to prepared baking sheets, leaving 2″ between each. Cut a shallow “X” into each cake, if desired.

  • Bake for about 15 minutes, or until lightly golden. Allow cakes (biscuits?) to cool on cookie sheets for at least 5 minutes before moving, cool completely before serving.

  • If you want to get fancy with it, wrap them in leaves, and tie with twine. (I used collard greens).

Notes

* Choose your protein powder wisely! If it's something you don't like to drink, it'll make the bread taste weird.

Nutrition

Calories: 323kcal | Carbohydrates: 24g | Protein: 8g | Fat: 23g | Saturated Fat: 11g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 3g | Monounsaturated Fat: 8g | Trans Fat: 1g | Cholesterol: 48mg | Sodium: 158mg | Potassium: 222mg | Fiber: 4g | Sugar: 12g | Vitamin A: 694IU | Vitamin C: 0.1mg | Calcium: 90mg | Iron: 2mg

Lembas Bread Recipe [Canon Accurate!] - Celebration Generation (22)

Related posts:

Con Food - Hotel Room Smoothies!Miruvor RecipeThe One CHEESE Ring!Savory Tomato Shortcake
Lembas Bread Recipe [Canon Accurate!] - Celebration Generation (2024)

FAQs

What is lembas bread based off of? ›

Though the grain used to make Lembas is called “corn” it is most likely similar to wheat. In British usage, "corn" was any grain crop; what North Americans call “corn”, British have historically called “maize”.

What is the Lebanese bread in Lord of the Rings? ›

Lembas bread, the magical Elven food, sustains the Fellowship on their arduous journey. Here's what Tolkien tells us about lembas: "the food was mostly in the form of very thin cakes, made of meal that was baked a light brown on the outside, and inside was the colour of cream."

Is lembas bread the Eucharist? ›

A thin wafer which sustains the good and repels the evil on a great journey. This should sound very familiar if you are Catholic. Lembas is Tolkien's symbol for the Eucharist! At Mass, the priest consecrates thin wheat wafers which then become the Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity of Jesus.

Is lembas bread in the books? ›

Lembas, also known as "waybread" or "Elven bread," is a special food item in J.R.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings. It is a type of hard, nutritious bread that is made by the Elves and given to the members of the Fellowship of the Ring during their journey.

What is special about Lembas bread? ›

It is a type of hard, nutritious bread that is made by the Elves and given to the members of the Fellowship of the Ring during their journey. Lembas is described as having a sweet taste and being able to sustain a person for a long time, providing them with energy and strength.

How old is Treebeard? ›

Tolkien provided few specifics about Treebeard's age, but he is estimated to be at least 11,000 years old, having tended to the trees before the Elves woke up in Middle-earth.

Who gave Frodo lembas bread? ›

The Galadhrim had a large store of lembas in Lothlórien. Galadriel gave some of it to the Fellowship of the Ring upon their departure. Frodo Baggins and Samwise Gamgee subsisted on it through the majority of their journey from there into Mordor.

Why are there potatoes in LOTR? ›

Root vegetables that were apparently among the staple foods of the Hobbits. How they came to exist in Middle-earth is something of a mystery - in principle, they should not have appeared east of the Great Sea for several thousand years after the War of the Ring.

Why couldn t Gollum eat bread? ›

Anything tainted with evil will burn when touched with anything elf-made, which is why Gollum also can't eat lembas bread.

What is the Catholic eating of bread? ›

When we eat and drink the bread and the wine of the Supper with expectant faith, we thereby have communion with the body and blood of our Lord and receive the forgiveness of sins, life, and salvation. In this sense, the bread and wine are rightly said to be Christ's body and blood which he gives to his disciples.

What is it called when you eat the bread at church? ›

For thousands of years, the Church has continued a practice called communion, or depending on different church traditions, the Lord's Supper or the Eucharist. Communion uses bread as a symbol for Jesus' body and wine as a symbol for His blood.

What does lembas mean? ›

Lembas is a magical elvish waybread that has some unique properties - and none of them include immortality. Lembas is derived from an older dialect of Sindarin where it was called lennmbass - which means is derived from lenn meaning “Journey” and bass meaning “Bread” so that is how we get “Waybread”.

Why does the elvish rope burn Gollum? ›

He complains that it "burns and freezes" him and demands that it be taken off of him. The rope burns Gollum in the book due to his dark tainted soul and body.

What is the quote about Lembas bread? ›

Legolas: “Lembas bread. One small bite will fill the stomach of a grown man.” Merry & Pippin: “Cool story Bro.”

How many did you eat Pippin? ›

Legolas : Lembas! Legolas : One small bite is enough to fill the stomach of a grown man! Merry : [to Pippin] How many did you eat? Pippin : Four.

Why does the Elvish rope burn Gollum? ›

In conclusion, Gollum's association with a potent thing of great evil made him become repulsed by all elven things, even when he was no longer in possession of the Ring. So that is why Gollum said the elven rope around his neck was burning him. Elves and evil are sort of yin and yang in the Tolkien-verse.

What is cram Tolkien? ›

Cram was a biscuit-like substance made by the Men of Dale and the Lake-men, and shared by them with the Dwarves of Erebor. It was said to be nutritious, and was used as sustenance on long journeys, as for example by Thorin and Company on the last stage of their quest. When Gimli tasted lembas, he compared it to cram.

What does Wonder Bread have in it? ›

Ingredients: Enriched wheat flour, Water, Sugar, Yeast*, Vegetable oil, Salt, Calcium propionate, Vegetable monoglycerides, Sodium stearoyl-2-lactylate, Sorbic acid, Enzymes, Ascorbic acid, May contain added wheat gluten, Diacetyl tartaric acid esters of mono- and diglycerides, L-cysteine hydrochloride.

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