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 A Stand Mixer - Pizza Crust


Big Hair

Recommended Posts

Big Hair Newbie

Hi, I registered to ask this question LOL.

I want to make pizza crust using Pamela's bread mix but I don't have the "heavy duty stand mixer" that it calls for in the recipe on the bag. Has anyone made this without a stand mixer? Also, how do you manage your gluten free baking without the use of a stand mixer? So many Pamela's recipes call for it. I hope I can get some help, I just bought a large amount of Pamela's.

Thanks :)


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



sa1937 Community Regular

Hi, I registered to ask this question LOL.

I want to make pizza crust using Pamela's bread mix but I don't have the "heavy duty stand mixer" that it calls for in the recipe on the bag. Has anyone made this without a stand mixer? Also, how do you manage your gluten free baking without the use of a stand mixer? So many Pamela's recipes call for it. I hope I can get some help, I just bought a large amount of Pamela's.

Thanks :)

Personally I wouldn't be able to make it without a stand mixer but that doesn't mean you wouldn't. I made exactly one loaf of yeast bread with a hand mixer shortly after going gluten-free and it was just about impossible to get it mixed properly. And then I baked a brick.

It didn't take long for me to realize that I needed to either buy a KitchenAid stand mixer or a bread machine. The KitchenAid won as I felt it would be more versatile and I didn't have room for both. It was the right decision for me.

Welcome to the forum!

Takala Enthusiast

Here is the directions, in case anyone is wondering:

Pamela's Chewy Pizza Crust, using their Gluten Free Bread Mix (not the same as their all- purpose gluten-free )

Open Original Shared Link

I mix my gluten free flours into blends, and the other dry ingredients into that, mix the wet ingredients in another bowl, and then add the dry to the wet, but I'm mostly using baking soda and vinegar for leavening, sometimes egg, not yeast. I don't use much gums, just either flours that are naturally stickier, (like almond,amaranth,buckwheat) and soaked chia and/or psyllium, or just egg.

If I'm trying a yeast recipe, I will put the yeast in some warm water with a little agave syrup and maybe a bit of the flour first, to dissolve it and get it going first, then mix it into the rest of the mixture. Yeast does not like being assaulted with cold water, oil, salt, or vinegar directly, so I'm trying to avoid that.

Some of the flours work better if they are wet for awhile (like several minutes to an hour) before baking. But if you use baking soda and vinegar, you have to then time the addition of the vinegar so the whole recipe doesn't go kafffuuuuuuut from too early soda/vin reaction.

You might try splitting the water and putting the yeast into part of it with just a little bit of what yeast likes to eat, then after waiting until it starts to bubble, mix it into the other ingredients, but you'd better be prepared to muscle it a little with either a spoon or your hands (oiled) as the dough will be different with the gums. Maybe test by mixing up a very small batch first, like a quarter recipe of the above - can measure out the yeast packet and then split it that way.

ciamarie Rookie

Do you have a hand mixer? I have a kitchen aid hand mixer that I used for my first gluten-free (rice blend) yeast bread, and it worked fine. Though that dough was pretty wet, the next time I reduced the water and actually mixed it all by hand and that was fine too. I've mixed pretty stiff cookie dough with the hand mixer, it has enough power to work through it.

I didn't look at the link, but if it's similar to the King Arthur pizza dough (on another thread) it's probably pretty thick. I think that one suggests a stand mixer but said a hand mixer would work too, but that it's too stiff to do it by hand. If you don't use a stand mixer, I'd say just make sure it's all mixed thoroughly and perhaps let it rise a little longer than it calls for. Probably the stand mixer would incorporate more air for the dough to rise quicker... I haven't used Pamela's mixes, so ymmv and someone who has will hopefully drop by.

Jenny (AZ via TX) Enthusiast

ciamarie,

Did you use the regular beaters or the whisk attachment. I want to use my old hand mixer to make the Pamela's bread. This mixer is so strong, I hated to use it for simple things like mashed potatoes because it would spew out everywhere. I just bought a new mixer so if I burn out the old one, I won't cry about it!

I just wasn't sure which tool to use to make the bread. Thanks.

ciamarie Rookie

ciamarie,

Did you use the regular beaters or the whisk attachment. I want to use my old hand mixer to make the Pamela's bread. This mixer is so strong, I hated to use it for simple things like mashed potatoes because it would spew out everywhere. I just bought a new mixer so if I burn out the old one, I won't cry about it!

I just wasn't sure which tool to use to make the bread. Thanks.

My hand mixer came with regular beaters or dough hook type beaters. For the rice flour bread I just used the regular beaters, since I think the dough hook ones may be good to help with gluten-y dough but not gluten-free dough.

If you have a choice of regular beaters vs a whisk attachment, I'd go with the regular ones.

Marilyn R Community Regular

If you can get Chebe's pizza crust mix (if not locally, you can get it at the gluten-free Mall), you don't need a mixer. You mix it with a spoon or a fork and then knead it. You can roll it out or pat it out. Helps to have one of those holy pizza pans (from any big box store). I find it best when I bake it 1/2 of the time directed on the package instructions on the lowest oven shelf, then rotate and turn and stick it up on the next to the top oven shelf for the remainder of the baking time. I really like this pizza crust, so does my non gluten-free DP. I haven't tried Pamela's yet. I was going to one of the Pamela's mixes today to make bagels but it was $8.95! and had xanthum gum in it, which currently isn't agreeing with me. Chebe's mix costs about $2.75.

You have to use eggs (2) and cheese (they say it is optional, but I've always used it, although I cut back on the amount in the directions). If you buy Chebes, you'll feel like you need to add more liquid before you knead because it's so dry and crumbly and isn't mixed up properly. Don't do it until after you knead it several times...it comes together when you knead it.

If you're new to kneading, it's just folding the dough over with your hands, flattening it out with you fingertips or knuckles, folding it again, flatten it again and fold it over, repeat several times until it all comes together in a coagulated dough ball.

This sounds like a long, drawn out process but it isn't. I can start a pizza (making my own sauce and dough) with 1/2 hour prep and 15-18 min bake time.

If you're using a holy pizza pan, press the ball of dough out on a piece of parchment paper, flipping it a few times. Or if you have a rolling pin, roll it out between two pieces of or parchment paper. I actually prefer pressing it out because you can make the built up crust (like a real pizza) out of it. The dough is very forgiving. If you get a hole or a tear, just grab a piece off the thick edge and pat it in.

Anyway, I love Chebe's, for a thin crust pizza with no special equipment needed. The bottom crust will have moisture to it, but it will have flexion (important to me, not sure about you, I couldn't stand the gritty texture from other gluten-free pizza crust mixes. Hope this helps, and sorry I went on a pizzalog.


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



RiceGuy Collaborator

I mix all my doughs by hand, using a wooden spoon. They get uniformly mixed easily enough, even the thick/stiff ones. You can always do like people have for centuries, and mix with your bare hands, when the dough is considerably stiff (such as with some pizza crust recipes).

I actually find the thinner doughs and batters to be trickier to get blended without any clumps/lumps, when there's enough xanthan and/or guar gum in it. But a wire whisk makes a big difference for thinner consistencies.

This doesn't mean I don't have any use for an electric mixer. It can be quite helpful. But for dough, my experience suggests it's not really necessary.

Skylark Collaborator

I use a wooden spoon with a comfortable handle and stir hard. Gluten-free doughs usually aren't stiff enough to knead but as RiceGuy mentions you can always stick your hand in the bowl and mash/squish until it's mixed.

Big Hair Newbie

Thank you, all :) These are all helpful replies. I am learning how to be a gluten-free baker, and I wasn't a fabulous regular baker, so these tips help. The instructions on the Pamela's bag for the pizza dough recipe look very ominous in all capital letters demanding you use a stand mixer, but I will be brave and use my wooden spoon/ hands. I want to try Chebe's too. Haven't heard of it but I'll look it up.

Archived

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


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      131,957
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Dogdad21
    Newest Member
    Dogdad21
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.5k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • Scott Adams
      If black seed oil is working for his Afib, stick to it, but if not, I can say that ablation therapy is no big deal--my mother was out of the procedure in about 1 hour and went home that evening, and had zero negative effects from the treatment. PS - I would recommend that your husband get an Apple watch to monitor his Afib--there is an app and it will take readings 24/7 and give reports on how much of the time he's in it. Actual data like this should be what should guide his treatment.
    • Jacki Espo
      This happened to me as well. What’s weirder is that within a couple hours of taking paxlovid it subsided. I thought maybe I got glutened but after reading your post not so sure. 
    • Mari
      Hi Tiffany. Thank you for writing your dituation and  circumstancesin such detail and so well writte, too. I particularly noticed what you wrote about brain for and feeling like your brain is swelling and I know from my own experiences that's how it feel and your brain really does swell and you get migraines.    Way back when I was in my 20s I read a book by 2 MD allergist and they described their patient who came in complaining that her brain, inside her cranium, was swelling  and it happened when she smelled a certain chemical she used in her home. She kept coming back and insisting her brain actually swelled in her head. The Drs couldn't explain this problem so they, with her permission, performed an operation where they made a small opening through her cranium, exposed her to the chemical then watched as she brain did swell into the opening. The DRs were amazed but then were able to advise her to avoid chemicals that made her brain swell. I remember that because I occasionally had brain fog then but it was not a serious problem. I also realized that I was becoming more sensitive to chemicals I used in my work in medical laboratories. By my mid forties the brain fog and chemicals forced me to leave my  profession and move to a rural area with little pollution. I did not have migraines. I was told a little later that I had a more porous blood brain barrier than other people. Chemicals in the air would go up into my sinused and leak through the blood brain barrier into my brain. We have 2 arteries  in our neck that carry blood with the nutrients and oxygen into the brain. To remove the fluids and used blood from the brain there are only capillaries and no large veins to carry it away so all those fluids ooze out much more slowly than they came in and since the small capillaries can't take care of extra fluid it results in swelling in the face, especially around the eyes. My blood flow into my brain is different from most other people as I have an arterial ischema, adefectiveartery on one side.   I have to go forward about 20 or more years when I learned that I had glaucoma, an eye problem that causes blindness and more years until I learned I had celiac disease.  The eye Dr described my glaucoma as a very slow loss of vision that I wouldn't  notice until had noticeable loss of sight.  I could have my eye pressure checked regularly or it would be best to have the cataracts removed from both eyes. I kept putting off the surgery then just overnight lost most of the vision in my left eye. I thought at the I had been exposed to some chemical and found out a little later the person who livedbehind me was using some chemicals to build kayaks in a shed behind my house. I did not realize the signifance  of this until I started having appointments with a Dr. in a new building. New buildings give me brain fog, loss of balance and other problems I know about this time I experienced visual disturbances very similar to those experienced by people with migraines. I looked further online and read that people with glaucoma can suffer rapid loss of sight if they have silent migraines (no headache). The remedy for migraines is to identify and avoid the triggers. I already know most of my triggers - aromatic chemicals, some cleaning materials, gasoline and exhaust and mold toxins. I am very careful about using cleaning agents using mostly borax and baking powder. Anything that has any fragrance or smell I avoid. There is one brand of dishwashing detergent that I can use and several brands of  scouring powder. I hope you find some of this helpful and useful. I have not seen any evidence that Celiac Disease is involved with migraines or glaucoma. Please come back if you have questions or if what I wrote doesn't make senseto you. We sometimes haveto learn by experience and finding out why we have some problems. Take care.       The report did not mention migraines. 
    • Mari
      Hi Jmartes71 That is so much like my story! You probably know where Laytonville is and that's where I was living just before my 60th birthday when the new Dr. suggested I could have Celiacs. I didn't go on a gluten challange diet before having the Celiac panel blood test drawn. The results came back as equivical as one antibody level was very high but another, tissue transaminasewas normal. Itdid show I was  allergic to cows milk and I think hot peppers. I immediately went gluten free but did not go in for an endoscopy. I found an online lab online that would do the test to show if I had a main celiac gene (enterolab.com). The report came back that I had inherited a main celiac gene, DQ8, from one parent and a D!6 from the other parent. That combination is knows to sym[tons of celiac worse than just inheriting one main celiac gene. With my version of celiac disease I was mostly constipated but after going gluten-free I would have diarrhea the few times I was glutened either by cross contamination or eating some food containing gluten. I have stayed gluten-free for almost 20 years now and knew within a few days that it was right for me although my recovery has been slow.   When I go to see a  medical provide and tell them I have celiacs they don't believe me. The same when I tell them that I carry a main celiac gene, the DQ8. It is only when I tell them that I get diarrhea after eating gluten that they realize that I might have celiac disease. Then they will order th Vitamin B12 and D3 that I need to monitor as my B12 levels can go down very fast if I'm not taking enough of it. Medical providers haven't been much help in my recovery. They are not well trained in this problem. I really hope this helps ypu. Take care.      
    • knitty kitty
×
×
  • 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.