Enjoy Healthy Eating With Gluten Free Recipes

June 26, 2010   Filed under Diet

Getting away from wheat products can seem like a chore, considering how many foods contain wheat. They range from bread and wraps to cereals and anything with a thickener or a coating. While many companies continue to emerge offering gluten free foods, finding your own gluten free recipes can be a very freeing option, allowing parents to involve gluten sensitive kids in the kitchen.

They will not feature barley, spelt or kamut either. All of these contain gluten, but they would be safe for people avoiding just wheat. When baking or cooking for sensitive individuals, check all ingredients. Stock cupboards with gluten free baking powder, and watch out for baking mixes.

Bread and muffin recipes will want something to take the place of gluten, the main role of which is to keep the finished product from crumbling. Suggested ingredients include xanthum gum, guar gum and pre-gel starch. All of these can be found at health food and specialty stores, although as supermarkets become increasingly aware of the demand for gluten-free baking products, they will sometimes carry such things or will order them in.

Your choice of safe flours is actually quite long. Amaranth, tapioca and potato are just some. Compare them with all-purpose flour and see the difference. Regular wheat flour has a lighter, less grainy texture than rice flour for example.

Though experimentation will lead consumers to new ways of lightening recipes, many will still come out heavier than their traditional counterparts. Texture will differ also because in some cases the flour has a grainier quality. Mix flours together and see what works for you.

Certain tricks help give rise to bread products. One of these is especially popular with kids. Make sure you use a large bowl when combining yogurt with baking powder. The acid in yogurt reacts with baking powder, causing the mixture to bubble and rise. After a few minutes, transfer this brew to your muffins and fold in gently to see a tall, light result. In place of yogurt consumers can try using sour cream, buttermilk or soured milk in the same way.

For thickening a gravy or sauce, stock regular items such as cornstarch or tapioca starch. Use these safely as before. When creating a custard or thick filling in baking, make sure products such as custard or pudding powder do not contain thickeners with gluten in them. If you can get rid of all wheat from the kitchen, all the better. If not, at least dedicate a cupboard and label it up for safety.

Many gluten free recipes can end up tasting awful as I’m sure you’ll be aware if you have a gluten or yeast intolerance. Allergydiet.co.uk provide a variety of gluten free recipes, including gluten free bread recipes that have become extremely popular, purely on the strength of the recipes themselves.


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