Made from Soy, Almond, and hazelnut flour. The box boasts 1g per cracker, but the label reveals a serving of 3 crackers has 8g total carb, 4g fiber, so 4g/serving or 1.33g/cracker.
The crackers are large, about 4.5" x 2". They are hard and somewhat brittle - about a third of the crackers in my box were broken into 2 or 3 pieces. Several flavors are available; I tried the sesame, and like the taste a lot.
My biggest complaint is the price. A 4 oz box (12 large crackers) is listed on the website at $4.50, but the website shopping fucntion does not seem to be in place yet. I found them locally at $6.25/box, or about 50 cents per cracker.
Overall, a nice change from my homemade flax crackers. But given the price, and the fact that the Flax crackers are almost 0 net carbs, the crackerbread won't be an everyday thing for me.
Based in Forest Hills, NY, they seem to be a bakery, so they may have a storefront with stuff available at the website price. The website also shows low-carb cookies and ruglach.
The crackers are large, about 4.5" x 2". They are hard and somewhat brittle - about a third of the crackers in my box were broken into 2 or 3 pieces. Several flavors are available; I tried the sesame, and like the taste a lot.
My biggest complaint is the price. A 4 oz box (12 large crackers) is listed on the website at $4.50, but the website shopping fucntion does not seem to be in place yet. I found them locally at $6.25/box, or about 50 cents per cracker.
Overall, a nice change from my homemade flax crackers. But given the price, and the fact that the Flax crackers are almost 0 net carbs, the crackerbread won't be an everyday thing for me.
Based in Forest Hills, NY, they seem to be a bakery, so they may have a storefront with stuff available at the website price. The website also shows low-carb cookies and ruglach.

