This is my own adaptation of Sue Gregg's recipe. 
I love these!  We make a triple batch every Sunday.  I add
bananas, blueberries & chocolate chips (not all at the same time) and
then freeze the extras. 
We usually use a combo of spelt & raw oat groats! Now that we are going GF, I am going to need to come up with a new combo.  I am thinking Quinoa, Almond & Coconut flour.
Many times I used sprouted spelt so don't have to soak.  
Apple juice and even water can be substituted for milk for those with any dairy issues (and soak in w/only whey or lemon juice). When using sprouted grains I have found it best to increase the whole grains to 2 cups.  My families favorite combo is just spelt & oats (equal portions of each)
I have also made them into little silver dollar pancakes and then
dehydrated them lightly to make pancake crackers.  I was thinking about
adding some coconut meat (since I have so much) and then make crackers out of them.
Blender Batter Pancakes
4-6 servings (I normally triple/quadruple this recipe)
1 1/2 cups buttermilk (or other soaking medium - kefir, sour milk, whey, lemon juice) 
1 1/2 cups whole grains
2 tbs Virgin Coconut Oil
2 tbs Raw Honey (can sub raw Agave too)
2 eggs
1 tsp vanilla extract
1/2 tsp baking soda
1 tsp salt
1 1/2 tsp baking powder
Combine buttermilk, oil, honey and whole grains in a blender and blend
on high for 5 minutes.  Add liquid if necessary to keep a vortex
constantly going in the blender.  Make sure to do the FULL 5 minutes.
Soak overnight or up to 24 hours.  Add remaining ingredients and blend briefly.  Cook pancakes on a lightly greased griddle on lowest heat until bubbles in the middle of the pancake begin to break. Flip once.  
This can also be cooked in the waffle maker.  I served it with raw butter and maple syrup.
Sue Gregg suggests a combination of any of the following grains- brown rice, millet, kamut, spelt, wheat, seven grain mix, buckwheat (use only 1 cup for 4 servings as it expands), hulled barley, corn, quinoa or oats.
I'm a big fan of this recipe from Sue Gregg. I've tried various combinations of grains, but always end up coming back to oats and barley. I use 1/2c oats and 2/3c barley (the barley expands). Straight barley is good as well, but is less filling.
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