Jump to content
This site uses cookies. Continued use is acceptance of our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. More Info... ×
  • 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):
    GliadinX



    Celiac.com Sponsor (A1-M):
    GliadinX


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

Bread Recipee


happy4dolphins

Recommended Posts

happy4dolphins Enthusiast

HI,

I've tried making my own white bread in the oven yesterday and something went wrong. When it came out it was cooked on the top and burnt on teh bottom and edges and un cooked in the middle. I jsut want to have a pb and j sandwhich.

I"ve bought the Kinickinick bread, but wanted to learn how to do it my self. Does anyone have a good workable reciepee?

Nicole


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Tierra Farm
Daura Damm



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):
Lakefront Brewery


jerseyangel Proficient

Hi Nicole,

How do you feel about using a mix? The Gluten Free Pantry's French Bread Mix is super easy to make, and tastes and smells like real bread!

Nantzie Collaborator

A lot of pans are dark grey nowadays (rather than the light gray they were 15 years ago), which holds in more heat. If I'm using a dark pan for something, I bring the temperature down a notch (325 rather than 350 for example) and then bake it longer. It seems to work for me. Also, was your oven rack in the middle? Sometimes if the rack is too low, you'll get a burnt bottom because that part is too close to the heat.

With a done top, a burnt bottom and undone in the middle, I'd bring the temp down a notch and cook it longer to compensate for the lower temperature. That may give the inside time to to cook to catch up with the outside .

Nancy

TriticusToxicum Explorer
  Nantzie said:
With a done top, a burnt bottom and undone in the middle, I'd bring the temp down a notch and cook it longer to compensate for the lower temperature. That may give the inside time to to cook to catch up with the outside .

Nancy

I sometimes throw a piece of foil over the top if the crust is getting too dark.

GFBetsy Rookie

Try the yeast bread recipe from www.eatingglutenfree.com. It always turns out very well for me.

BabySnooks Rookie
  happy4dolphins said:
HI,

I've tried making my own white bread in the oven yesterday and something went wrong. When it came out it was cooked on the top and burnt on teh bottom and edges and un cooked in the middle. I jsut want to have a pb and j sandwhich.

I"ve bought the Kinickinick bread, but wanted to learn how to do it my self. Does anyone have a good workable reciepee?

Nicole

Dear happy,

I suggest using Anna's bread mix. I have had success with baking it in both in glass pans and metal pans and it comes out beautiful! It also tastes like real bread and looks like it, except of course gluten-free bread doesn't rise as high as regular bread does. Every other bread or mix I have tried has been disgusting. The Bob's Red Mills bread went right into the garbage disposal! Try Anna's.....I think you will be pleasantly surprised. In her directions, she says to bake only about 15 minutes before covering with foil and baking the rest of the way covered.

Sharon

GFBetsy Rookie

One other suggestion:

You could try decreasing your oven temp 25 degrees or so, too. It might be that your oven cooks a little hotter than the test ovens they developed their directions for - which would contribute to the "burned on the outside, raw on the inside" problem.

Betsy


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Smith & Truslow
Food for Life



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):
Holidaily Brewing Co.


Matilda Enthusiast

..

Archived

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


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):
    Food for Life



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      129,639
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Alice 6
    Newest Member
    Alice 6
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):
    Skout Organic


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.2k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):
    GliadinX




  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):
    NutHouse! Granola Co.



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • DebD5
      I would like to say you saved me. I’ve been so sick the last few years, celiac since 1997. And reading your post about the other glutens/grains that can be sensitive to celiacs, is the only thing that has ever helped me. Since going off a carbohydrates/grains, even gluten-free ones, My chronic pain is  85% better. I’m actually losing weight which, that’s a long story but was impossible. I definitely am like you. Thank you so very much for posting. For some of celiacs I do believe this is the magic key. 
    • DebD5
      I 100% believe if you were sticking gluten items, especially flour, and breathed it in you could be glutened. I’m a celiac for almost 30 years. For the first ten years as a celiac I’d help my polish family make pierogis at Christmas time. I would only cook them at the stove and I didn’t touch anything with my hands using spoons. But the flour is in the air. And I’d get violently ill for 1-2 weeks after the last few years I did it. Wearing a back is a great suggestion and washing your clothes and showering when you get home. Good luck. And I’m so sorry your parents are emotionally supporting you. 
    • DebD5
      Have you had your thyroid checked? I was diagnosed at 24 with celiac. Lost my period permanently at 32. Found out six months after I lost my period that I had 1 ovary with 1 follicle. I had a child already but wanted more. Ended up having two more children with one ovary and one follicle. But my doctors theories are if I would have gotten my thyroid checked sooner and fixed through medication, maybe things would look different. Who knows. I only share my experience so you question your doctors and advocate. Always see an endocrinologist for thyroid care fyi. Actually always see the specific Dr for your specific ailments. I’d also consider seeing a gynecologist that specializes in...
    • DebD5
      This. Scott said it beautifully. Document and start a trial gluten-free diet. I can also recommend an inflammation dietitian I saw last summer if interested. She’s the only one who helped me on a path to healing through an elimination diet. Which is tricky with your little one. But I completely trust her, she’s very expensive though. I figured out I’m sensitive to so many things and follow a gluten-free diet religiously. Just had an upper and lower endoscopy/colonoscopy and zero signs of celiac disease so they said. I’m a celiac since 1997. But my 33 yr old daughter is very gluten intolerant since 20 yrs old. 
    • DebD5
      I so appreciate you talking about this. Honestly I’m so sick the most part of the last 15 years, I’m going to cross reference your list with my own. Celiac since 24 yrs old diagnosed in 1997. I just saw a specific celiac GI specialist at the celiac disease center in Chicago and when I told her all the food reactions I was having she said she believed me but there was no clinical evidence to support my reactions(I felt so unseen, she recommended I see a gut psychologist, what the heck). I react with severe body aches to bloating and dizziness to exhaustion:  most lectins except berries and low lectin veg, no eggs, no nightshade veg, no dairy, all carbohydrates including no gluten-free...
×
×
  • Create New...