Wednesday, February 11, 2009

I'd like to thank Tammy from http://www.cookin-at-home.com/ for offering the following information:

Beware of spices which contain wheat flour! Many manufacturers use wheat flour to keep spices from clumping.

Knox un-flavored gelatin is readily available in regular grocery stores in the baking supplies area. It adds moisture and helps bind ingredients. It is a welcome addition to bread recipes with gluten-free flours.

Besides commercially prepared Egg Replacer, Flaxseed can be used as an egg substitution. Mixing one tablespoon ground flaxseed with two tablespoons warm water for each egg. Let it sit after adding. If you are soy tolerant, add one half teaspoon lecithin to this mixture plus one teaspoon baking powder to help the leavening process. When substituting this mixture for a regular egg, add one extra.

Duck eggs are often tolerated by those who have problems with chicken eggs. They can be hard to find. Look for them in Chinese markets.

Coconut milk is a good substitute for cow and soy milk.

Xanthan gum can be substituted for guar gum.

Rice bran can be substituted for rice polish.

Sweet rice is a rice that is low (10 to 18 percent) in the starch compound called amylose.

White rice can NOT be substituted for sweet rice (it is not sticky enough).
Tapioca flour works roughly the as tapioca starch.

Gluten free breads should be beaten by hand with a wooden spoon or spatula. A whisk doesn't work - the batter should be a bit too thick for this. The mix master over-beats them and they get too fine a texture and tend to fall.

If you put 1-1/2 teaspoon of cream of tartar and 1-teaspoon of baking soda in for two loaves, they do not interfere with the yeast but help the bread to rise and keep it up during baking. Limit the use of potato, bean, arrowroot and tapioca flour to about 25-percent maximum. If the bread is 'sticky' when baked, cut these flours down further.

See also: Gluten Free Recipes

~ ~
Audrey :)
http://mytupperware.com/audreyoka

3 comments:

"Hello... It's Me Again..." said...

I found this post very interesting! I didn't know most of this info so it was very helpful. I'm going to print it and put it in my cookbook for future reference.

Have a great week!

Jamie
www.oktxok.blogspot.com

Mandy said...

Thank you, I didn't know a lot of this!! Happy Valentines Day.:)
-Mandy

Linda said...

I've been thinking about adding cream of tartar to my bread, but wasn't sure if it would work. Now I'll give it try.