My hunt for the best gluten-free cookbooks began when my doctor diagnosed me with severe gluten intolerance in March of 2020 (yes, I’m aware of the unfortunate timing). I went into overdrive, searching for gluten-free pastas, snacks, and other alternatives to the gluten-filled foods I loved. The biggest takeaway from all my research: Stop comparing gluten-free products to the “real” thing because you’ll only be disappointed.
- How to get rid of ants with Borax Powder or Boric Acid (pictures)
- Kate Middleton’s Favorite Hydrating Watermelon Salad Is the Perfect Gut-Friendly Dish for a Heatwave
- How To Use Essential Oils As A Natural Flea Remedy (3 DIY Recipes)
- 10 Essential Oils Mosquito and Bug Repellent Recipes
- How do you prepare a saline soak and how does it promote the healing process of a piercing?
I grew up in a half Italian American, half Jewish household with fresh homemade pizza and bagels nearly every week, so I refused to accept a future life of subpar options thanks to a condition I can’t change. I turned to cookbooks. As a preteen, I baked my way through Martha Stewart’s catalog, which I, a suburban kid, thought was the epitome of gourmet. I later graduated to reading vintage Le Cordon Bleu textbooks that taught me techniques like tempering chocolate and how to properly fill an éclair. All those skills felt suddenly useless because, while lots of recipes can easily be adapted with one-to-one gluten-free flour blends (I prefer King Arthur), you can’t use it for breads or pastries. And it definitely won’t work as a substitution when making anything fried, like calamari or chicken; most of the time the breading congeals into an oil-soaked mess regardless how good your technique is. At a certain point, you need to use specifically gluten-free recipes.
You are watching: The Best Gluten-Free Cookbooks for Bread, Pastries, and More
Read more : How to make rat poison with baking soda [step by step]
Over the next two years, I bought nearly every highly rated, interesting-sounding gluten-free cookbook recommended by gluten-intolerant friends, passionate Amazon reviewers, magazine roundups, mommy bloggers with celiac kids, and anyone willing to offer advice. I cooked my way through them all, baking everything from gluten-free cannolis and four-layer cakes to sourdough bread and bagels. Some of the books I tested, as with most online recipes, abide by the “beggars can’t be choosers” proverb, yielding bread that won’t rise and far-too-dense cakes. But others innovate on classic recipes using unique flours and techniques that get you gluten-free foods indistinguishable from the originals. Below are the seven best gluten-free cookbooks I’ve tried, and, truthfully, I’ve never made a bad recipe from any of them.
Best gluten-free cookbook for bread
A lot of gluten-free books claim to have cracked the code to baking moist, fluffy, gluten-free bread with a delectable crumb, and some do come close (most do not). But Baked to Perfection, written by a food blogger with multiple degrees in chemistry and food sensitivities, actually nailed it. I stared at the first loaf I made in awe after it came out of the oven because it looked—not to brag too much—absolutely perfect. Each loaf since has had the same texture, taste, rise, and crust as its wheat-filled counterpart.
Read more : Classic Beef and Barley Soup
Before each chapter, you can read the best practices for baking, like how high to fill cupcake tins to get the right rise and how to properly shape dough. It expounds on the importance of weighing your ingredients instead of using volumetric cups and even tells you the science behind how each of the ingredients, like psyllium husk and tapioca starch, work. The book offers other dessert recipes, too, so it also has some versatility, but the bread recipes alone are worth the buy.
What to make: Artisan white crusty loaf bread, burger buns, pita, chocolate babka
Best gluten-free cookbook for desserts
Gluten-Free Flavor Flours was the first book I bought because lots of sources recommend it as the best gluten-free cookbook, period. It won a James Beard Award after all. Instead of separating the book by dessert genre, it breaks the recipes down by flour used—like buckwheat, teff, corn, chestnut, and more—and gives a thorough explanation of the benefits of using said flour. Nothing in here is meant to replicate a wheat-based version; all the recipes highlight the specialty flour used. One note for anyone who is lactose-intolerant or keeps a plant-based diet: Many recipes require dairy, and while some can easily be adapted using Lactaid products, that doesn’t always work as hoped (trust me, I’ve tried). However, there’s more than enough in here to make it a worthy purchase, even for gluten-free vegans.
Source: https://gardencourte.com
Categories: Recipe