![]() | |
| Cooking Articles • Cookbook Reviews • Cooking Forums • Recipes • Cooking Glossary |
| |||||||
| Professional Pastry Chefs Forum A forum for professional pastry chefs and bakers. |
![]() |
| | Thread Tools |
|
#1
| |||
| |||
![]() Hai Everybody.... Now I am in my project to develop gluten free bread but it's not using any of "Gluten Free Bread MiX" that common we get in healthy store. So, it's from scratch. mmm, I try so many recipe from book or browsing in Internet, but 1 problem is all of the Gluten Free bread I've try was good when fresh bake but it really become very very dry in the next day and so on.... my target is, that bread can hold the moist and nice to be eaten after 3 days.... Please, help meeeee....... the dough it self is like pound cake consistency... but still dry the next day... I really appriciate any input and suggestion, oor any recipe... Thank you very much ...... |
|
#2
| ||||
| ||||
| Maybe try replacing some of the liquid in the dough with a fruit puree. And then maybe an egg to help hold it together?
__________________ The two most common things in the universe are hydrogen and stupidity ! |
|
#3
| ||||
| ||||
| what is your formula?
__________________ bake first, ask questions later. Oooh food, my favorite! ![]() http://www.myspace.com/chefmbrown Professor Culinary and Pastry Arts www.CCCCD.edu |
|
#4
| |||
| |||
| It's one of my composition 250 gr Rice Flour 30 gr Potato Starch 140 gr Tapioca Flour 8 gr Xantan gum 2 gr Guar Gum 75 gr Milk Powder 8 gr Salt 40 gr Sugar 50 gr Butter 45 gr Fresh Yeast 200 gr Water 15 ml Apple Vinegar 1 pcs Eggs 1 pcs egg yolk olny can eat fresh baked after that it will very dry and cakery, really need a help thank's a lot before and after. |
|
#5
| |||
| |||
| I have no experience with gluten free, but a great deal of experience with bread. a few recommendations... your recipe is in the ballpark of 50% hydration. That is a really dry bread to begin with, and probably one of the main sources of your problem. Try more hydration as a first priority. You could also try more hygroscopic ingredients, different flour types, other moisture holding ingredients. I make a seeded "alpine baguette" where the seeds are soaked overnight, and the soaked seeds keep the baguette fresh for much longer keeping moisture supplied to the crumb. Soak the flour well, try an autolyse, I've even heard of people heating the water for rice flour to saturate it. There are probably techniques from conventional breadbaking that would help you get a more moist, slower staling gluten free bread. I think from your formula you are baking an underhydrated bread, and the rice is not fully hydrated up front, so it is staling quickly as the rice continues to saturate itself drawing water from the crumb after baking. apparently there is a gluten free bread person named Hagman, see this thread as somewhere to start. gluten free Hamelman | The Fresh Loaf most gluten free breads I see use a wider variety of flours. I would suggest you find some on the market in health food stores or wherever, and see what the ingredient list is, and try to go from there also. Now when you get a good one, I'd like the recipe! Last edited by stir it up; 03-13-2008 at 08:00 PM. |
|
#6
| |||
| |||
| thank for post
__________________ Cooking thaifood click here |
|
#7
| |||
| |||
| Hai... Thank you very much for the advise.... I will chek the web and I have to lern about basic ingredient's. Thank's a lot |
![]() |
| Bookmarks |
| Thread Tools | |
| |
Similar Threads | ||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Gluten-free bread | BombayBen | Pastries and Baking General | 6 | 09-09-2007 03:19 PM |
| Gluten Free Bread | isaac | Pastries and Baking General | 5 | 07-18-2007 06:34 AM |
| Gluten-free? | brie | Pastries and Baking General | 7 | 07-16-2007 11:25 AM |
| help - wheat free, gluten free diet | katbalou | Food & Cooking Questions and Discussion | 36 | 12-13-2006 03:28 AM |
| Gluten free and dairy free desserts | AngeliaB | Recipes | 4 | 08-10-2006 07:16 AM |