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

Baking Without Wheat, Corn, Or Soy?


SoMuchPaint

Recommended Posts

SoMuchPaint Newbie

My 5 year old daughter and I were recently diagnosed (via Enterolab) as having an autoimmune reaction related to ingesting gluten (if I am understanding the results correctly). My 3 year old daughter has not been tested yet, but we suspect the same will be true for her, once we have saved up enough to run another test. This will be our first Thanksgiving and Christmas season without my baking. Typically, I make homemade dinner rolls for both meals, wreath-shaped cinnamon-raisin tea rings and butterfly-shaped orange rolls for holiday breakfasts, several varieties of cookies (especially butter-sugar and gingerbread people), and at least 5 types of pie -- all made from scratch, often with wheat flour I would grind myself.

Now, all of these traditions may be over...

Unless someone has some fantastic recipes. I cannot eat soy (as I have hypothyroidism, and soy inhibits thyroid function), and I have arthritis reactions to corn (including, apparently, xanthan gum, as my hands have become stiffer since switching from with-gluten Ezekiel bread to without-gluten rice bread).

All of the gluten-free flour mixes I have seen in stores and online have soy flour, cornmeal, corn starch, and/or xanthan gum in them. I would prefer to make something from scratch, but is it even possible?

(Just to complicate things, I am pregnant, and even though I am hardly nut-free, I am concerned that eating too many nuts could cause allergies in the baby)

Does anyone have any recipes worthy of becoming our new family traditions? We seem to tolerate dairy and eggs just fine. Maybe a rice pudding recipe or a crust-less cheesecake or custard pie that will make me forget all about my artful lattice crust tops? Or a vegetable-based dinner roll?


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



seashele2 Newbie

Hi!

Our house is also gluten, soy and corn free, in addition to some others. I know of two flour mix subs that are free of all those things. I am currently using Namaste Perfect Flour Blend. (Ingredients: sweet brown rice flour, tapioca flour, arrowroot flour, sorghum flour and xanthan gum) It does have xanthan in it, but I called them a few years ago about their corn-free labeled mixes containing xanthan and was told that the xanthan they use is not corn-derived. My daughter, who is corn allergic, has never reacted to Namaste mixes or the flour blend. It is a cup-for-cup replacement.

Another brand of cup-for-cup replacement flour blend that a friend uses is Tom Sawyer. From their website: "Tom Sawyer All Purpose Gluten Free Flour is a blended flour of rice and tapioca flours, xanthan gum, and unflavored gelatin." My daughter has eaten many things made with that blend from our friend and has not reacted to the xanthan gum in that either. They do have a trial pack size bag that you could give it a try to see if you react to it. My daughter is highly reactive to corn and corn derivatives (citric acid, ascorbic acid, polysorbate 80, sodium citrate, etc.), so I feel good about both flours here since she doesn't react to them, but each person is different.

You also can make up your own flour blends and include guar gum instead of xanthan. There are many, many flour blend recipes online. Just Google "gluten free flour blend" and lots of entries will come up. To replace wheat flour in recipes, it will take a blend of at least 3 or 4 flours plus a bunding agent like xanthan or guar gum. I bake a lot so have experimented with many blends, both prepared and self-blended. Quinoa flour, millet flour, light buckwheat flour, sweet rice flour and tapioca flour are some of my favorites to mix. We don't care for regular or dark buckwheat flour because the flavor is very "earthy" but many like it. (Buckwheat flour is gluten-free as it is not a wheat at all.)

Don't give up on your holiday baking traditions!! Use this first year as an experimental year and note your failures and successes so you can adjust recipes and try various flour blends. I couldn't seem to master baking yeast breads with regular flour before my celiac diagnosis so haven't ventured there with gluten-free flours, but know others who have so I know it can be done too.

Michelle

Western Washington State

purple Community Regular

Hi, I do very little bread and roll baking. I am not gluten-free, my 2 dd's are but they live an hour away. I don't get to "experiment on them" very often. And my oven is broken so I bake in a toaster oven...not good for large things. Recently I tried 2 roll recipes. You could use guar gum for the xanthan gum, though I have never used it. And sub potato starch for the cornstarch, I do all the time.

pumpkin dinner rolls

Open Original Shared Link

Mrs. P's yeast rolls

Open Original Shared Link

I plan to make Mrs. P's rolls for Thanksgiving. Karina has lots of allergy friendly and easy to sub recipes...you just might find something:

Open Original Shared Link

(I just checked, she has a simple sounding almond meal pie crust recipe)

I think this pie crust will work great for your pies:

Open Original Shared Link

I have never used it for a full size pie but I have used it many, many times for individual pot pies. There is a member on here that uses it all the time and loves it. You would have to sub guar gum. Some things I have tried: I use just a little sorghum sometimes but it makes the dough sticky and I tried it with 2 eggs instead of 1+2 yolks and it bubbles and splatters. I have used garlic/onion salt for meat pies and added ground flax too, brushing the top with one of the leftover egg whites. The fruit pies are great, sometimes I sprinkle sugar on top. I use Spectrum shortening. Its a great recipe as is! I will see if I can find the older posts on it.

Yay! I found the post I was looking for:

Open Original Shared Link

Read the replies from cruelshoes, one has a link and one has "how to freeze" tips.

"Cooking Free", by Carol Fenster has recipes for gingersnaps and vanilla wafers. I use them for cookie crumb pie crusts. She has several flour blend recipes. I use this one:

1 1/2 cups sorghum flour

1 1/2 potato starch or cornstarch

1 cup tapioca flour

Hope this helps! I love to bake from scratch so I know how you feel!

Crayons574 Contributor

I actually just posted this website on another blog too.... Open Original Shared Link

I've become obsessed with Elana's Pantry lately...All the desserts are so easy to make and are gluten free, grain free, corn free, soy free, and most all dairy free.....and yummy!! :P She makes a lot of her dessert recipes with almond flour.

Archived

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

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

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





    Celiac.com Sponsors (A17-M):




  • Recent Activity

    1. - trents replied to pothosqueen's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      14

      Positive biopsy

    2. - pothosqueen posted a topic in Post Diagnosis, Recovery & Treatment of Celiac Disease
      0

      Celiac for dummies

    3. - trents replied to pothosqueen's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      14

      Positive biopsy

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      133,010
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    tldormer
    Newest Member
    tldormer
    Joined
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.5k
    • Total Posts
      1m
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):
  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • trents
      Wow! You're pretty young to have a diagnosis of SMA syndrome. But youth also has its advantages when it comes to healing, without a doubt. You might be surprised to find out how your health improves and how much better you feel once you eliminate gluten from your diet. Celiac disease is an autoimmune disorder that, when gluten is consumed, triggers an attack on the villous lining of the small bowel. This is the section of the intestines where all our nutrition is absorbed. It is made up of billions of tiny finger-like projections that create a tremendous surface area for absorbing nutrients. For the person with celiac disease, unchecked gluten consumption generates inflammation that wears down these fingers and, over time, greatly reduces the nutrient absorbing efficiency of the small bowel lining. This can generate a whole host of other nutrient deficiency related medical problems. We also now know that the autoimmune reaction to gluten is not necessarily limited to the lining of the small bowel such that celiac disease can damage other body systems and organs such as the liver and the joints and cause neurological problems.  It can take around two years for the villous lining to completely heal but most people start feeling better well before then. It's also important to realize that celiac disease can cause intolerance to some other foods whose protein structures are similar to gluten. Chief among them are dairy and oats but also eggs, corn and soy. Just keep that in mind.
    • pothosqueen
    • pothosqueen
      I was just diagnosed at 26 after accidental finding. Any simple tips for newbies? Things a non celiac would never think of? I already went through my prescriptions and identified some medications that have gluten. Is there a beginners guide? Celiac for dummies?
    • trents
      Would it be rude to ask your age?
    • pothosqueen
      Wow! Thank you @trents I  really appreciate the responses. This line of diagnosis has me questioning a lot of symptoms over the course of my life. Very validating and very much a bummer at the same time. 
×
×
  • 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.