About daniellekrupa

Health-Supportive Chef and Nutritional Consultant in NYC

The Top 10 Basics Of Gluten-Free Baking

Whether you have celiac disease, a gluten intolerance or are just curious to experiment with gluten-free baking, here are some of the basic rules and guidelines I follow to create delicious, moist, and tender baked goods.  And if you’ve ever tried a dried out, rock hard gluten-free baked good, you can appreciate what I’m talking about.  Use this as your cheat sheet and I guarantee you will not be disappointed with the results.

When it comes to converting your favorite baking recipes from traditional flour to gluten-free, a simple one-to-one flour substitution will not yield the same results.  Gluten is a giving, stretchy ingredient that supports rise, structure, texture and kneadablity. It takes more than a single gluten-free flour replacement to make a cake, bread, muffin or cookie recipe work. A combination of gluten-free flours, starches and xanthan gum are necessary for optimum results.  A combination of techniques and little tricks don’t hurt either…  

My Top 10 List of Tips and Tricks: 

  1. Adding applesauce, pureed fruit or yogurt to recipes helps gluten-free cakes, muffins and quick breads stay moist.
  2. Use more vanilla than you’d think.  Gluten-Free flours can taste strong and unfamiliar, and a little extra vanilla helps soften their flavor. Don’t be afraid to use more than a tablespoon.  And buy the good stuff. Bourbon vanilla is fantastic. Cheaper brands with fillers (like corn syrup) are a pale imitation of true vanilla flavor.  Also, add warming spices like cinnamon and nutmeg to deepen flavor complexity.
  3. If it’s very humid out, many gluten-free flours grab moisture and become damp – this can affect your outcome. Start with 1 to 2 tablespoons less liquid if you suspect your flour is damp from humidity.
  4. Gluten-free batters can be strange.  Cake batter will be thicker than you think. Bread batter will be looser. Cookie dough is almost the same, but sometimes spreads faster during baking
  5. Gluten-free baked goods and breads get soggy if they stay too long in their pans. Remove loaves and cakes and muffins from the pan as soon as possible. The longer a gluten-free baked good remains in a hot pan, the soggier it gets.
  6. When baking, you need gum.  Gluten creates a certain sticky texture that is most, this can be easily replicated using xanthan gum or guar gum, which improve viscosity.
  7. Gluten-Free baking needs binding: xantham gum and flax meal help with this.
  8. If replacing regular flour in a recipe, a good rule of thumb is to use 2 grains & 1 starch for best results. For example if  converting a recipe that calls for 1 cup of “regular” flour you might use: 1/3 cup brown rice flour, 1/3 cup sorghum flour, and 1/3 cup arrowroot starch.
  9. Arrowroot starch provides a lightness to gluten-free baked good, so it’s not a bad idea to incorporate it into most GF baked goods.
  10. Store gluten-free flour in the refrigerator or freezer, especially if you buy your flours in bulk.  Let the flour come to room temperature before you use it.  I find baking with room temperature ingredients works best when baking gluten-free.

* Grains, flours, starches and thickeners that are gluten-free include:

  • Corn, grits, polenta and cornmeal
  • Buckwheat, buckwheat cereal, kasha and buckwheat flour
  • Rice flour – white rice, sweet rice and brown rice flour
  • Quinoa, quinoa cereal flakes, and quinoa flour
  • Millet and millet flour
  • Sorghum flour
  • Amaranth and amaranth flour
  • Certified gluten-free oats and oatmeal
  • Coconut flour
  • Teff flour
  • Nut meals and flours – almond, chestnut, pecan, cashew
  • Chickpea, garbanzo, soy and bean flour
  • Tapioca starch
  • Potato starch
  • Potato flour
  • Sweet potato and yam flour
  • Arrowroot starch
  • Cornstarch

DK

Friday Roundup: Week of 5.12.12 – 5.18.12

Welcome to the Friday Roundup – A weekly update highlighting the news links that were hot, and not so hot, in the world of food, health, and nutrition.

This week superweeds threaten the US food supply, McDonald’s says soda is a fruit, coffee may lower your risk of dying, and a new drug may prevent the onset of Alzheimer’s to those genetically predisposed.  I may be biased, but this is way more interesting than who got booted from Dancing With The Stars 3 nights ago…. Continue reading

Recipe: Strawberry-Lemon Muffins (Gluten and Dairy-Free)

At 8 o’clock the other night when I was desperately craving cupcakes, I showed great restraint and made a batch of healthy muffins instead.  No, I don’t deserve a medal… I had my fair share of Hagan Daaz over the weekend.  That being said, I do try and keep my indulgent sugary treats to a minimum during the week, pregnant or not.  Lucky for me I had enough ingredients on hand to throw together what I found to be an incredibly delicious, light, moist, and just the right amount of sweet, muffin.   Whether for breakfast or an after-dinner snack, you won’t feel bad biting into this cake-y treat.  And filled with the finest of this season’s strawberries and citrusy lemon, you’ll feel like the warm weather is finally here to stay.

Strawberry-Lemon Muffins (Gluten and Dairy-Free) Continue reading

Cooking Tip Thursdays: The Grass-Fed Steak

Cooking Tip Thursdays is dedicated to making time in the kitchen quicker, easier, and just plain better…

If you choose to eat meat, eat it wisely.  I stayed away from it for many years as the quality and health of it started to frighten me.  That being said, 6 ½ months pregnant and I crave red meat as if I were a caveman living in the prehistoric ages.  So I’m listening to my body and making educated and healthy decisions as to what red meat I will consume.  As luck would have it there is a small farm in upstate New York that raises high quality, humanely treated animals, delivering their product right to the city.  My current obsession: the grass-fed steaks and ground beef (I mean, who doesn’t love a good cheeseburger every now and then?).

Grass-fed beef comes from cows that have pastured on grass only.  Pure 100 percent grass-fed beef is better for animals, more sustainable, and often more humane.  Grass-fed beef is extremely lean, high in minerals, and considerably lower in saturated fat than industrialized, conventional, corn and grain-fed beef.  And given it’s Continue reading

Recipe: Spicy Chicken and Mango Lettuce Wraps

The springtime produce popping up on the shelves of grocery stores and farmer’s markets is enough to make me happy for days.  Yes, this kind of stuff really does make me happy.  But I digress.  Back to the fresh arugula, ripe strawberries, gorgeous red radishes, and deliciously sweet mangoes…

When I spotted a massive pile of perfectly ripe mangoes at my nearest market this week I knew instantly it was time for a warm weather favorite of mine – chicken and mango lettuce wraps.  Continue reading

Cooking Tip Thursdays: The All-Natural Nut Butter

Cooking Tip Thursdays is dedicated to making time in the kitchen quicker, easier, and just plain better…

Today’s cooking tip is less for cooking and more for efficiency and ease in the kitchen.

Ever buy a jar of all-natural nut butter (insert your favorite here: peanut, almond, cashew, etc.) just to find a puddle of oil sitting on the top?  All-natural nut butters will separate if made with only the nut, creating the oil to rise to the top and require continual stirring with each use – all too often creating sore biceps and a mess of oil spilling over the sides.  While indeed a nuisance, this is actually a good thing, because unlike those no-stir varieties, all-natural nut butters do not have added sugars, preservatives, hydrogenated oils, and goodness knows what else mixed in there to stabilize them.  More good news, for you and your arm, you don’t have to sacrifice that creamy spreadable no-stir texture by Continue reading

Food Labeling Misconception #4: Healthy Claims

Although food labels are meant to accurately tell us what’s in the package we’re buying, marketers have devised a clever little system to make foods sound more healthful than they really are.  More specifically, a food item can claim any number of vague health statements that may or may not be scientifically valid.  There’s been a recent trend in products suggesting that they can boost immunity or defend against illness – but there’s typically little or no evidence backing up such claims.  This rather large white lie is permitted because of the lack of regulation regarding labeling rules. Continue reading

Friday Roundup: Week of 3.31.12 – 4.6.12

Welcome to the Friday Roundup – a little something new I’d like to present every Friday highlighting the links that were hot, and not so hot, in the world of food, health, and nutrition news.

This week we saw even more reasons to increase red wine consumption, avoid added sugars, question poultry, and perhaps steer clear of the next centurion bike race.  And that’s just the beginning.  Here’s to a fascinating and thought-provoking week in the media that (thankfully) doesn’t involve a Kardashian.

Can Bicycling Affect A Woman’s Sexual Health - We’ve all heard about what cycling can do to men, but check out this new study on the affects for women.  Sorry all you spinners out there.  (NY Times) Continue reading

Recipe: Asparagus and Goat Cheese Frittata

Looking for a quick and simple way to whip up a delicious breakfast or brunch this weekend?  Serve these adorable frittatas for 1.  Here I’ve paired it with asparagus and goat cheese, but you can easily substitute with any combination of cheese and vegetables.  Some of my favorites include smoked mozzarella with spinach and roasted red peppers, mushrooms with gruyere, cheddar with tomato and fresh herbs or smoked salmon with crème fraiche.  Serve with a green salad and rustic multigrain toast and you’ll have the perfect, healthy meal with less than 500 calories and over 20 grams of protein per serving.

Recipe: Asparagus and Goat Cheese Frittata Continue reading

Cooking Tip Thursdays: The Flavor Profile

Cooking Tip Thursdays is dedicated to making time in the kitchen quicker, easier, and just plain better…

Understanding how the flavors of a dish work together is a key component to cooking intuitively and without recipes.  This understanding wouldn’t be possible without first identifying how flavor profiles work.  A flavor profile is a sensory evaluation performed to determine the overall taste and odor characteristics of a food.  The primary flavors are: Sweet, Sour, Bitter, Salty, and the recently added, Savory or “Umami”.  These five flavors are the only ones we can taste with our mouth.  All other flavors are actually scents. The balance of these five basic flavors and how they relate to each other is the “flavor profile” of the item.  As you cook and taste, think about each of these components and how they work with each other.  Continue reading