Jump to content
  • Welcome to Celiac.com!

    You have found your celiac tribe! Join us and ask questions in our forum, share your story, and connect with others.




  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A1):



    Celiac.com Sponsor (A1-M):


  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Our Content
    eNewsletter
    Donate

Potato Flour Question


ebrbetty

Recommended Posts

ebrbetty Rising Star

hi guys, I have potato starch flour, but I'm reading Bette Hagmans featherlight flour recipe and it call for potato flour, it says not starch..I was told they are the same thing..guess not..where do I find potato flour?

also, once I make up the 9 cup batch is it a "basic" flour mix to replace reg. flour in most all baking?

thanks


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Carriefaith Enthusiast

I think that they are the same thing... although I could be wrong. When recipes call for one and I use the opposite, the food turns out fine!

ebrbetty Rising Star

in her cookbook it says "the potato flour is not potato starch"..but all I see in the stores is potato starch flour..its only 1 teaspoon per cup to make the featherlight mix

Carriefaith Enthusiast

I would think that the recipe should turn out fine if you use potato starch, but then again I don't bake that much so I could be wrong.

Guest Robbin

I am a little confused about this too. I bought Ener-G brand and it says potato starch flour on the box! Must be the same thing?

2Boys4Me Enthusiast

NO! They are NOT the same thing. Potato starch is very fine, like tapioca starch. Potato flour looks more like all-purpose wheat flour. I can't really describe it very well. The starch is bright white, and the flour looks like it's not such a brilliant white and it's not as finely ground.

Tapioca starch and flour and Tapioca starch flour are the same...Potato starch and potato flour are very different.

I get potato starch at the Asian market or health food store (usually the asian market) and Club House makes a small box of potato flour, it's orange and yellow and about 4" wide by 6" tall. It'll be in the baking section. Look around sometimes they hide it. If the word starch is on the box, it should be starch if it's not, it should be flour. When you open the package you'll be able to tell which is which.

You'll notice the recipes rarely call for potato flour unless you're making a flour blend. Other recipes will call for 1/4 or 1/2 cup starch pretty regularly.

edited to say I have NEVER seen potato starch in a regular grocery store, but potato flour can be found in the baking section...mfg by Club House.

Good luck.

jerseyangel Proficient

Potato starch and potato starch flour are the same things. Some companies just label differently. Potato flour is different--it's much heavier and can not be used interchangably with the starch.


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



plantime Contributor

No, they are not the same. I forget which is which, but one is made from raw potatoes, and the other from cooked potatoes, so they have different properties. I only use the potato starch flour, but it really depends on what recipe you are using. In some of the recipes the two are interchangeable, but not in all.

ebrbetty Rising Star

I have the potato starch flour by ener g..its the potato flour I'm asking about..if you do have it what brand did you get?

Devsmom Newbie
I have the potato starch flour by ener g..its the potato flour I'm asking about..if you do have it what brand did you get?

Ihave potato flour from Bobs Red Mill. Says 100% dehydrated potatoes

jerseyangel Proficient
I have the potato starch flour by ener g..its the potato flour I'm asking about..if you do have it what brand did you get?

Betty, That's the kind I have. It's potato starch. The fact that the word "flour" is in the name is confusing. If your recipe calls for "potato starch", you can use this. If the recipe calls for "potato flour", you need to use another product. They are not the same--the starch is much lighter. :)

ebrbetty Rising Star

thanks patti, yes the bette hagman feather light flour mix asks for potato flour, not starch..I'll have to see if I can find it

ladylibrarian Newbie
thanks patti, yes the bette hagman feather light flour mix asks for potato flour, not starch..I'll have to see if I can find it

I am having the same problem with finding Potato flour. I did find Potato Flour Mix, but not the plaing

potato flour. I also have the bread baking recipe book by bette hagman and I have been unable to find

the potato flour. Can we use the Potato Flour Mix in the Featherlight Recipe???

2Boys4Me Enthusiast

Can you not find Club House Potato Flour on the baking aisle? Club House is owned by McCormick. Maybe it's only in Canada. It's in an Orange and yellow box and with it will be rice flour and minute tapioca. I don't have the vaguest idea what minute tapioca is...I get Tapioca starch from Superstore (Loblaws).

As for the difference between starch and flour, the Potato Starch (or Potato starch flour) will look/feel like cornstarch and the Potato Flour will look/feel like all purpose flour.

GlutenFreeGirlie Rookie

I have been through this same situation- This is my defination based on various answers: Potato Starch is a very fine, starchy flour (like Tapioca Starch). It can be called Potato Starch/Flour and Potato Starch. It is used to thicken sauces or in baking.

Potato Flour is simply dehyrdated, ground potatoes. It has a strong flavor of potatoes and DOES NOT replace Potato Starch. It can thicken sauces, but starch is better. It is good for making soup or baking where the flavor doesn't interfere.

Hope that helps.

ebrbetty Rising Star

looked again today, still can't find it :angry:

ladylibrarian Newbie
looked again today, still can't find it :angry:

I can't find it either. I looked at whole foods in Cary, North Carolina and

they didn't have it. I have to travel 50 miles to the nearest store to find

my Gluten Free Products. Food Lion, piggly Wiggly,Lowes Foods,

Harris Teeter stores around here do not carry anything.

We don't even have a support group around here.

ebrbetty Rising Star

I finally got it today at whole foods..last week I asked them if they would order it in and they did, its bobs red mill potato flour..now I just need to find sweet rice flour, the search never ends lol

Rusla Enthusiast
NO! They are NOT the same thing. Potato starch is very fine, like tapioca starch. Potato flour looks more like all-purpose wheat flour. I can't really describe it very well. The starch is bright white, and the flour looks like it's not such a brilliant white and it's not as finely ground.

Tapioca starch and flour and Tapioca starch flour are the same...Potato starch and potato flour are very different.

I get potato starch at the Asian market or health food store (usually the asian market) and Club House makes a small box of potato flour, it's orange and yellow and about 4" wide by 6" tall. It'll be in the baking section. Look around sometimes they hide it. If the word starch is on the box, it should be starch if it's not, it should be flour. When you open the package you'll be able to tell which is which.

You'll notice the recipes rarely call for potato flour unless you're making a flour blend. Other recipes will call for 1/4 or 1/2 cup starch pretty regularly.

edited to say I have NEVER seen potato starch in a regular grocery store, but potato flour can be found in the baking section...mfg by Club House.

Good luck.

What store did you see the potato flour in? I was in safeway and saw Bob's red mill but I am kind of scared of his with so many people being glutened from his stuff.

2Boys4Me Enthusiast

Safeway and Superstore, but it's not exactly with the other flour, or the Bob's Red Mill displays, the Club House is (trying to remember) might be closer to the pudding/pie filling section of the baking aisle. Also, my Mother-in-law found her potato flour-also Club House brand at Co-op.

I'll try to remember next time I go to the store to look at what it's near. I shop at the Crowfoot Safeway and the Country Hills/Sarcee Trail Superstore, but I don't go to the Superstore as often as Safeway. Only for rice/sweet rice/tapioca flour. They have it on the Asian aisle under a green oval sign that says rice flour. The Club House rice flour and potato flour at Superstore are in the baking section.

We're on Spring Break, so I'm not terribly interested in a field trip to Superstore with the boys, I'll try to check on Monday when school's back in session and get back to you.

2Boys4Me Enthusiast

:o I couldn't find any! We went to Superstore, Safeway and Co-op. I didn't even see the rice flour at Superstore, but they have Asian rice flour one aisle over. At both Safeway and Co-op, I found the Club House rice flour but not potato flour. It's still listed on the website. I guess you could call and find out if it's been discontinued or find a store here that sells it.

I did see (at Superstore in the Middle Eastern section) Manh flour, Chana flour and Pea flour. I think Chana is chickpea, but I have no idea what Manh is. There was another word on the label, something with a "U", but I didn't have a pen, so I couldn't write it down.

Sorry for the false potato flour hope.

Rusla Enthusiast

Is okay I went to see my friends at Bowness Health Foods and they have both potato starch and potato flour in bags in their refrigerators. So, I am fine. That is good for anyone else in Calgary. I get most of my flours there because they are cheaper and they are knowledgeable.

  • 2 years later...
RobinHood70 Newbie

I apologize for resurrecting a 3-year-old thread, but just in case any other Canadians come across this thread, as I did, Club House "Potato Flour" is not potato flour, it's potato starch. After realizing that it was different than my Bob's Red Mill potato flour, I wrote to Club House and asked. They got back to me saying that it's actually potato starch flour (aka potato starch), but that Canadian labelling guidelines allowed them to call it "potato flour" (not to be misleading, but just because that's apparently "the done thing" since real potato flour is so rarely used in cooking). Is that confusing or what?!?

I don't know if it'll get done, but I did suggest that they change the name to make it clear, and that suggestion has apparently been forwarded to the appropriate people.

TrillumHunter Enthusiast

There's another thread on this issue. Somebody said you could take instant mashed potatoes and blitz them in you food processor and voila, potato flour. It makes sense as potato FLOUR is just finely ground, dehydrated potatoes. Heck of a lot cheaper too, as most gluten-free baking calls for very small amounts of potato flour.

ETA--Hi, Robin! See, you're not the only person who ever had this problem.

RobinHood70 Newbie
There's another thread on this issue. Somebody said you could take instant mashed potatoes and blitz them in you food processor and voila, potato flour. It makes sense as potato FLOUR is just finely ground, dehydrated potatoes. Heck of a lot cheaper too, as most gluten-free baking calls for very small amounts of potato flour.

ETA--Hi, Robin! See, you're not the only person who ever had this problem.

Actually, this was the thread that led me to pose the question, since it was implied here that Club House's potato flour is true potato flour, but in fact it isn't. Once I knew that for certain, I wanted to post back to this thread to make sure that people knew that it wasn't.

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      131,747
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Suzanne Dar
    Newest Member
    Suzanne Dar
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.4k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • Russ H
      The EMA test is an old and less sensitive test for anti-tTG2 antibodies. It relies on a technician using a microscope to check for fluorescence of a labelled substrate (typically monkey oesophagus or human umbilicus), giving a simple positive/negative result. It is similar to running a standard anti-tTG2 test but with a high cut-off, making it more specific but less sensitive. Transient rises in tTG2 can be caused by e.g. viral infections and inflammation. Very high levels of anti-tTG2 (>x10 standard range) are almost certainly coeliac disease but moderately raised levels can have several causes apart from coeliac disease. Other food allergies can cause villi blunting but that is much rarer than coeliac disease or other non-coeliac causes. Not All That Flattens Villi Is Celiac Disease: A Review of Enteropathies
    • Theresa2407
      Maybe you have a low  intolerance to Wheat.   Rye, Barley and Malt are the gluten in Celiac disease.  It has always been stated Wheat and Gluten, not just a Wheat intolerance.  Barley will keep me in bed for (2) weeks.  Gut, Migrains, Brain fog, Diahrea.  It is miserable.  And when I was a toddler the doctor would give me a malt medicine because I always had Anemia and did not grow.  Boy was he off.  But at that time the US didn't know anyone about Celiac.  This was the 1940s and 50s.  I had my first episode at 9 months and did not get a diagnosis until I was 50.  My immune system was so shot before being diagnoised, so now I live with the consequences of it. I was so upset when Manufacturers didn't want to label their products so they added barley to the product.  It was mostly the cereal industry.  3 of my favorite cereals were excluded because of this. Malt gives me a bad Gut reaction.
    • Gigi2025
      Thanks much Scott.  Well said, and heeded.   I don't have Celiac, which is fortunate.
    • Scott Adams
      Do you have the results of your endoscopy? Did you do a celiac disease blood panel before that?  Here is more info about how to do a gluten challenge for a celiac disease blood panel, or for an endoscopy: and this recent study recommends 4-6 slices of wheat bread per day:    
    • Scott Adams
      It is odd that your Tissue Transglutaminase (TTG) IgA level has bounced from the "inconclusive" range (7.9, 9.8) down to a negative level (5.3), only to climb back up near the positive threshold. This inconsistency, coupled with your ongoing symptoms of malabsorption and specific nutrient deficiencies, is a strong clinical indicator that warrants a more thorough investigation than a simple "satisfactory" sign-off. A negative blood test does not definitively rule out celiac disease, especially with such variable numbers and a classic symptomatic picture. You are absolutely right to seek a second opinion and push for a referral to a gastroenterologist. A biopsy remains the gold standard for a reason, and advocating for one is the most direct path to getting the answers you need to finally address the root cause of your suffering. Here is more info about how to do a gluten challenge for a celiac disease blood panel, or for an endoscopy: and this recent study recommends 4-6 slices of wheat bread per day:    
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

NOTICE: This site places This site places cookies on your device (Cookie settings). on your device. Continued use is acceptance of our Terms of Use, and Privacy Policy.