My favorite gluten free flour blends are made by Pillsbury and Bob's Red Mill
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Gluten Free Flour Blends

There are countless gluten free flour blends out there.  I have tried a ton of them and I have liked a lot of them for different recipes.  I can’t keep tons of them stocked in my pantry all of the time though.  So if I had to pick just two, it would be Pillsbury’s gluten free flour blend &  Bob’s Red Mill gluten free 1 to 1 Baking Flour.  They are my favorites for easily substituting one for one with recipes calling for regular wheat flour.  They both produce really tasty and good looking results.  Both include xanthan gum, which is essential for gluten free baking. You can use this to replace wheat flour in any recipe and it will hold up really well.

A note about Bob’s Red Mill products. They also sell a Gluten Free All Purpose Baking Flour that is made with garbanzo bean flour.  That is NOT the one I use in my recipes.  It has a very distinctive flavor and I wouldn’t suggest using it for baking sweet items especially.

What they are good for:

These two brands of gf flour are great for cookies, brownies, cupcakes, quick breads, thickening sauces, coating fried food and anything else you can think of.  However, if you want to bake gluten free bread, I would suggest only using the ingredients listed in the recipe you are using.  Gluten free bread is tricky to say the least. I haven’t found a “one for one” gluten free flour exchange for any type of wheat bread recipe.

Things to keep in mind:

The rule with gluten free baking is to under bake by a few minutes.  If you think it is “almost done” take it out right then. Leave it for a few more moments and it will be dry and crumbly. Always let your gluten free baked goods cool for about 10 minutes before eating or removing them from their baking pan or baking sheet.  Remove them right away and you will have a crumbly mess on your hands!

 

 

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Shay

My 9 to 5… I am a meteorologist for the ABC station in Tampa. When I am at home, I spend a lot of time cooking and baking... always gluten free. Most of my recipes are allergy friendly and many are AIP, Vegan, Paleo and Keto friendly. From my kitchen to yours... cheers to eating great no matter what we must go without!

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2 Comments

  1. Deb May 17, 2020

    I have not had any luck with King Arthur GF blend. Very unsuccessful in all recipes tried. Bakes up to a really hard thick crust. Pie crust you cannot eat, bread you can barely slice only eat middle.

    Reply
    1. Shay May 17, 2020

      Hi Deb! I am so sorry to hear that you haven’t had any success with King Arthur GF flour blend. Out of curiosity- were you adding xantham gum to your recipes when you used their flour blend? I have found that is the essential ingredient in GF flour blends and when you use a blend that doesn’t have xantham in it (as with the King Arthur GF blend) you must add xantham gum to the recipe yourself for a good result. I use King Arthur’s GF flour when I need to have control over the amount of xantham gum in my recipe and have had good results. Have you found another GF flour blend that you do like?

      Reply

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