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Xanthan Gum


Tim-n-VA

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Tim-n-VA Contributor

I was going to try to convert a quick bread recipe. It has chunks of apple and nuts.

Would additional xanthan gum (versus a "normal" gluten-free flour blend), help a heavy bread hold its structure? Is there an taste issue to consider?

Thanks!


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JNBunnie1 Community Regular
I was going to try to convert a quick bread recipe. It has chunks of apple and nuts.

Would additional xanthan gum (versus a "normal" gluten-free flour blend), help a heavy bread hold its structure? Is there an taste issue to consider?

Thanks!

My understanding is that you can sub gluten-free flour blends for any wheat flour recipe, just add 1 tsp xanthan gum to every 1 to 1 1/2 cups of flour (did I get that right guys?) However, if you're trying for more hold-together because of a heavy bread, I would use a little more egg and a little less liquid than it calls for. And remember, with heavy breads like that, the gluteny stuff falls apart too. But more xanthan gum couldnt hurt I don't think, I don't think it has a taste. I'm not as good a baker as a lot of people on here, my success rate is still kinda sad, so I'd check with everyone else.

Guest j_mommy

Yes that is what I do! And I don't taste the xanthan gum in my recipes...they taste like they should!

MNBeth Explorer

Actually, according to Annalise Roberts' "Gluten-Free Baking Classics," too much xanthan gum can be a problem. Here's what she says about it:

"If you use too little xanthan or guar gum, your baked goods will fall apart and turn out brittle and hard. If you use too much, your baked goods will condense and shrink after you bake them, growing ever tighter and smaller as the gum works its magic for days after."

She doesn't give a per-cup-of-flour recommendation, but most of her recipes seem to average about a teaspoon for each 1 1/2 cups of flour for breads and about half that for cookies and cakes.

I'm a longtime gluten baker, bread being my specialty, and having to learn a whole new set of rules has been frustrating. I appreciate Roberts' clear, detailed explanations.

My understanding is that you can sub gluten-free flour blends for any wheat flour recipe, just add 1 tsp xanthan gum to every 1 to 1 1/2 cups of flour (did I get that right guys?) However, if you're trying for more hold-together because of a heavy bread, I would use a little more egg and a little less liquid than it calls for. And remember, with heavy breads like that, the gluteny stuff falls apart too. But more xanthan gum couldnt hurt I don't think, I don't think it has a taste. I'm not as good a baker as a lot of people on here, my success rate is still kinda sad, so I'd check with everyone else.
JNBunnie1 Community Regular

That is very good to know. Explains a few things....... :)

kbtoyssni Contributor

This is what I did with all my old recipes, too, and they taste just as good as the wheat-flour versions.

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