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Bread Without Yeast


whattodo

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whattodo Enthusiast

You will probably be laughing at this moment. I am looking to make bread (i love bread) but the silly question is does it have to have yeast in it. I want to cut out yeast for candida sake and see if it helps.

Any thoughts?


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nikki-uk Enthusiast

I must admit all the the bread I've ever made has has yeast in it.

I'm not sure how your average gluten-free bread mix would fair minus the yeast ingredient :unsure: ...but there are some specifically yeast free ones out there (I've never seen these makes in any shops though - only online) Open Original Shared Link and Open Original Shared Link.

Happy baking :)

EDIT: Also found these recipes for Open Original Shared Linkwhich seem to be yeast free.

CarlaB Enthusiast

I buy Kinnikinnick yeast free bread. I don't know if you have it in the UK though.

jnclelland Contributor
You will probably be laughing at this moment. I am looking to make bread (i love bread) but the silly question is does it have to have yeast in it. I want to cut out yeast for candida sake and see if it helps.

Any thoughts?

Breads by Anna has a yeast-free (and most other things-free) bread mix that's really good. You can order it at Open Original Shared Link.

Jeanne

Nathan's mom Apprentice
You will probably be laughing at this moment. I am looking to make bread (i love bread) but the silly question is does it have to have yeast in it. I want to cut out yeast for candida sake and see if it helps.

Any thoughts?

Soda bread sounds like a good suggestion - baking soda and an acid like buttermilk will be good to give it lightness. Try using flours like Teff, millet, or buckwheat. They aren't as grainy as rice and aren't as dense which is the way gluten-free bread tends to be without yeast.

For bread other than sandwich/toast bread you can try a carrot cake recipe using millet flour and a bit of teff. Or zucchini bread recipe. Those are basically sweet breads that you are going to use baking powder to help it rise. If you beat the egg whites a bit it will help as well.

Good luck - it takes a lot of experimenting, but making your own bread will taste a whole lot better than what you buy from somewhere else.

Karen B. Explorer

Chebe bread is yeast free (www.chebe.com) and quite tasty. Search this website for recent discussions and recipe variations for chebe. You can obtain a variety of results by changing the type of cheese you use -- parmesan makes a good deli cheese roll, cream cheese makes a mild flavor roll somewhat like white bread.

One note -- Chebe is tapioca flour based and unlike rice flour, it can go gummy if you don't let it breathe after baking. I wrap mine in a tea towel or flour sack towel and let it sit for at least 12 hours before putting it in a ziploc.

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