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

Onion Rings And Hamburger Buns


Guhlia

Recommended Posts

Guhlia Rising Star

I made onion rings for the first time tonight. They are completely gluten free and delicious. I used Bette Hagman's pancake recipe to coat the onion rings. Next time I will use less sugar as they turned out slightly sweeter than I had envisioned. Anyway, any gluten free pancake batter would work. I used sweet onions in mine. They were nice and crunchy, while still staying soft inside, just like an onion ring's supposed to be. I deep fried them on the stove on medium heat, flipped them after the bottoms were browned, the drained them on paper towels before serving. Yum! My avatar is a picture of them...

I also made hamburger buns using Bette Hagman's Easy Pizza recipe from her Fast and Healthy cookbook. Instead of forming the dough into a pizza crust, I dropped large spoonfulls into a mammoth muffin tin (made 5 nice sized buns). They were excellent. I brushed the tops with butter before baking and I baked at 425 for about 12-14 minutes. They were fabulous. My family liked them better than any of the other gluten free breads I've made. My daughter (only two years old) ended up eating ONE AND A HALF full sized cheeseburgers she liked the buns so much. I highly recommend trying this. This pizza recipe also makes phenomenal breadsticks. Just mix as directed and then, with heavily greased hands, form breadstick shaped logs and brush with garlic butter, top with basil or parsley, bake at 425 for about 10 minutes. These were the best breadsticks I have ever had, gluten free or not. My family agreed that they were fabulous and FAR better than Chebe.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



2Boys4Me Enthusiast

Thanks Angie. I'm putting those in my "make these soon" file. It'll have to wait until after Dec. 11. We're going to Disneyland on the 4th! I can hardly wait.

dragonmom Apprentice

I've tried onion rings before and they were a disaster--thanks I love onion rings. :P

Guest nini

I've made onion rings before with one of the gluten-free pancake batters, they were really yummy. Oh and last night I made one of Bette Hagman's pizza crust recipes and it was surprisingly really good.

TinkerbellSwt Collaborator

I have never tried to make my own buns. I have, however, made onion rings. I have a recipe for Japanese Tempura Batter, which I think is very similiar to pancake mix.. My rings looked just like your pic of them

Sweetfudge Community Regular

mmm, good foods! i can't wait to try them both. i don't have anything to make hamburger bun shapes...can I just form the dough into a circular shape and bake it liek that? will it work? i've tried kinnickinnick's buns, and they're okay, kinda grainy and fall apart easily.

Nantzie Collaborator

I make hamburger buns using what's called a "muffin top pan". I use cooking spray, and then just pile the dough in there and spread/push it out to the edges. I got mine at a local cooking store, but here's a link so you can see what type of pan I'm talking about.

Open Original Shared Link

Nancy


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



mamaw Community Regular

Guhlia

Your onion rings look yummy!!!!I don't have B. Hageman qucik & Easy book.... could you possibly post the recipes here? I think alot of us would love to have your pizza from the book & the pancake recipe.....

oh yes, does anyone have a tasty waffle recipe?

thanks

mamaw

Guhlia Rising Star
mmm, good foods! i can't wait to try them both. i don't have anything to make hamburger bun shapes...can I just form the dough into a circular shape and bake it liek that? will it work? i've tried kinnickinnick's buns, and they're okay, kinda grainy and fall apart easily.

You will need to make rings using aluminum foil. Should be easy enough. The dough is stiff enough that a foil ring should keep it in place while rising. These aren't grainy at all, at least we don't think so. We use Kinnikinnick flours to make them. They definitely don't fall apart easily. They are super good. I'm making more for tonight's dinner.

Mamaw, I will post the recipe as soon as I can. :)

lonewolf Collaborator

Guhlia - you inspired me! I made onion rings tonight using Roben Ryberg's recipe. They turned out great and my kids all loved them. We'll be gong fat free for a few days though, not used to all that grease.

Cheri A Contributor

I have made rings from aluminum foil for buns. They work great!

Guhlia Rising Star

From Bette Hagman's The Gluten Free Gourmet Cooks Fast & Healthy... Easy Pizza recipe...

1-1/2 cups gluten-free flour mix (3/4 cup white rice flour, 1/2 cup potato starch, 1/4 cup tapioca starch)

1-1/2 teaspoons baking powder

1 teaspoon xantham gum

1/2 teaspoon salt

1 teaspoon sugar

7/8 cup lukewarm water

1 tablespoon rapid-rising yeast (1 packet)

1 egg or 1/4 cup liquid egg substitute

1 tablespoon vegetable oil

Preheat oven to 425F.

Spray a baking sheet or 15" round pizza pan with vegetable oil spray.

Blend together the flour, baking powder, xantham gum, and salt. Set aside. Add sugar to the water and stir in the yeast. Let bubble slightly.

In a mixing bowl, beat with a hand mixer at low speed the egg, oil, and the yeast water. Beat in half the flour mixture. With a spoon stir in the rest.

Pour the batter onto the prepared baking sheet and spread with a spatula to a 12-1/2" circle with slightly raised edges. Allow to rise about 10 minutes and then spread on the sauce, cheese, and other toppings. Bake for 25 to 30 minutes. Serves 6.

Okay, now here are MY directions... They're much quicker and easier.

1. Dissolve yeast and sugar in water.

2. Mix all other dry ingredients in mixer until well combined.

3. Add egg and oil to water/yeast combo and mix with fork until egg is mixed in thoroughly.

4. Add wet mix to dry mix slowly while mixer is running and mix for a minute until well combined.

5. Pour dough onto pizza pan and spread out with heavily GREASED hands.

6. Perforate dough surface using a fork.

7. Preheat oven to 425 while dough rises for 10 minutes.

8. Bake crust for 20 minutes.

9. Remove from oven, top with sauce, cheese, and toppings.

10. Bake for another 5-10 minutes until cheese is beginning to brown on edges and melted throughout.

11. Cut and serve.

For hamburger buns, reduce water by one tablespoon. Use muffin tin or roll tin. Roll dough balls that are about 1-1/2" and flatten in greased tin until dough is touching edges on all sides. Cups should be no more than 1/2 full, dough doubles in oven. Do not perforate. Brush tops of rolls lightly with butter or margarine before baking.

This recipe also makes GREAT stuffing!!! Last night I was finally over my cold and decided to tackle my very first Thanksgiving dinner. I managed to make stuffing completely from scratch (bread and all) in about 2 hours. It was the best stuffing I've ever eaten, husband and daughter agreed. I used a mini loaf tray (It has about 12 1" loaves, very cool) and I didn't brush the loaves with butter. These tiny loaves were really easy to cut up into little cubes.

jerseyangel Proficient

Angie,

Your avatars absolutely make my mouth water! I am still planning on trying your donuts--I keep forgetting to buy a thermometer for the oil. :blink:

I think I will try the hamburger rolls, using the GFP bread mix that I normally use. That mix dosen't have any ingredients that I'm sensitive to. I like the idea of making a form out of foil--I'll bet the dough would work fine that way. And onion rings--have *got* to try those!

Anyway, thanks again for all the good ideas :D

Guhlia Rising Star

Patti, if you don't have a candy thermometer, just do the donuts on medium heat (about setting 6) and they should turn out fine. Add the donuts to the oil once water "pops" when it hits the oil, just flick a drop off of your finger.

jerseyangel Proficient
Patti, if you don't have a candy thermometer, just do the donuts on medium heat (about setting 6) and they should turn out fine. Add the donuts to the oil once water "pops" when it hits the oil, just flick a drop off of your finger.

So the temp. dosen't need to be exact?

Guhlia Rising Star

I can't imagine why they wouldn't turn out unless the temperature was WAY off...

mamaw Community Regular

Thanks so much for the recipes!!!!! Everything looks so yummy!!!!!

mamaw

kolka Explorer

Can you post the pancake recipe? Is it rice based or bean based?

  • 2 weeks later...
mroper Rookie

You have inspired me to try onion rings again!! I used some pancake mix and some club soda to make the batter....OMG they were so yummy!

Guhlia Rising Star

Melissa, so glad you were able to enjoy onion rings again.. Well worth the work, huh? :)

Kolka, I'm not sure which pancake recipe I used. Use a regular recipe and sub a white rice flour blend for the all-purpose flour: 3 parts white rice, 2 parts potato starch, 1 part tapioca starch... I add 1 tsp xantham gum per 1 to 1-1/2 cups flour. This always works out wonderfully for me. I use Kinnikinnick flours, they seem to be the least grainy in texture.

mroper Rookie

I just used the mix form GFP!

Archived

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

  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Celiac.com:
    Donate

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):
    Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):





    Celiac.com Sponsors (A17-M):




  • Recent Activity

    1. - ShariW commented on Scott Adams's article in Frequently Asked Questions About Celiac Disease
      4

      What are Celiac Disease Symptoms?

    2. - klmgarland replied to klmgarland's topic in Dermatitis Herpetiformis
      2

      Help I’m cross contaminating myself,

    3. - Scott Adams replied to klmgarland's topic in Dermatitis Herpetiformis
      2

      Help I’m cross contaminating myself,

    4. - Scott Adams replied to Jmartes71's topic in Coping with Celiac Disease
      1

      My only proof

    5. - Scott Adams replied to Colleen H's topic in Related Issues & Disorders
      1

      Methylprednisone treatment for inflammation?


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      131,908
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    ebrown
    Newest Member
    ebrown
    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

    • klmgarland
      Thank you so very much Scott.  Just having someone understand my situation is so very helpful.  If I have one more family member ask me how my little itchy skin thing is going and can't you just take a pill and it will go away and just a little bit of gluten can't hurt you!!!! I think I will scream!!
    • Scott Adams
      It is difficult to do the detective work of tracking down hidden sources of cross-contamination. The scenarios you described—the kiss, the dish towel, the toaster, the grandbaby's fingers—are all classic ways those with dermatitis herpetiformis might get glutened, and it's a brutal learning curve that the medical world rarely prepares you for. It is difficult to have to deal with such hyper-vigilance. The fact that you have made your entire home environment, from makeup to cleaners, gluten-free is a big achievement, but it's clear the external world and shared spaces remain a minefield. Considering Dapsone is a logical and often necessary step for many with DH to break the cycle of itching and allow the skin to heal while you continue your detective work; it is a powerful tool to give you back your quality of life and sleep. You are not failing; you are fighting an incredibly steep battle. For a more specific direction, connecting with a dedicated celiac support group (online or locally) can be invaluable, as members exchange the most current, real-world tips for avoiding cross-contamination that you simply won't find in a pamphlet. You have already done the hardest part by getting a correct diagnosis. Now, the community can help you navigate the rest. If you have DH you will likely also want to avoid iodine, which is common in seafoods and dairy products, as it can exacerbate symptoms in some people. This article may also be helpful as it offers various ways to relieve the itch:  
    • Scott Adams
      It's very frustrating to be dismissed by medical professionals, especially when you are the one living with the reality of your condition every day. Having to be your own advocate and "fight" for a doctor who will listen is an exhausting burden that no one should have to carry. While that 1998 brochure is a crucial piece of your personal history, it's infuriating that the medical system often requires more contemporary, formal documentation to take a condition seriously. It's a common and deeply unfair situation for those who were diagnosed decades ago, before current record-keeping and testing were standard. You are not alone in this struggle.
    • Scott Adams
      Methylprednisolone is sometimes prescribed for significant inflammation of the stomach and intestines, particularly for conditions like Crohn's disease, certain types of severe colitis, or autoimmune-related gastrointestinal inflammation. As a corticosteroid, it works by powerfully and quickly suppressing the immune system's inflammatory response. For many people, it can be very effective at reducing inflammation and providing rapid relief from symptoms like pain, diarrhea, and bleeding, often serving as a short-term "rescue" treatment to bring a severe flare under control. However, experiences can vary, and its effectiveness depends heavily on the specific cause of the inflammation. It's also important to be aware that while it can work well, it comes with potential side effects, especially with longer-term use, so it's typically used for the shortest duration possible under close medical supervision. It's always best to discuss the potential benefits and risks specific to your situation with your gastroenterologist.
    • Scott Adams
      Based on what you've described, it is absolutely possible you are dealing with non-celiac gluten sensitivity (NCGS).  Approximately 10x more people have non-celiac gluten sensitivity than have celiac disease, but there isn’t yet a test for NCGS. If your symptoms go away on a gluten-free diet it would likely signal NCGS.   Your situation is a classic presentation: a negative celiac panel but a clear, recurring pattern of symptoms triggered by gluten. The symptoms you listed—particularly the extreme fatigue, bloating, neurological-psychiatric symptoms like depression and anxiety, and even the skin manifestations like facial flushing—are all well-documented in research on NCGS. It's important to know that you are not alone in experiencing this specific combination of physical and emotional reactions. The only way to know for sure is to commit to a strict, 100% gluten-free diet under the guidance of a doctor or dietitian for a period of several weeks to see if your symptoms significantly improve. It is also crucial to rule out other potential causes, so discussing these symptoms with a gastroenterologist is a very important next step.
×
×
  • 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.