In my search for a good gluten-free bread recipe, I recently got my hands on Bread & Butter, the latest book by Erin McKenna, founder and chef of BabyCakes NYC. Recipes from a pioneer in vegan gluten-free baking with a foreword by David Lebovitz should be a good choice
hong kong company registration, I thought, especially when the pages are this bright and cheerful with simple, friendly instructions that make the task ahead seem like a fun slumber party with your girlfriends.
I followed the Sandwich Bread recipe in the book faithfully and carefully weighed the ingredients as recommended. Just like a normal bread recipe, there are the usual suspects: yeast, warm water, sweetener, oil, salt and flour. Except, in this case, the flour is a well-considered combination of gluten-free flours and starches
Serviced apartment Sheung Wan, with the addition of xanthan gum to make up for the gluten. Where the method is concerned, unlike wheat bread, there is no kneading required, and the dough is more like a batter that you have to pour into the loaf pan. And there's only one rising session.
The bread came out tasting great and I could imagine how delicious it would be as a sandwich. I had to use my imagination because the loaf's resemblance to bread ended there
reenex cps. There was a hole in my bread (pictured above), between a crusty roof and a dense gummy bottom. I was gutted. What went wrong? Did I make a mistake with the ingredients? Did I miss an important step? I had to find out, so I made it again. And... There was a hole in my second loaf.
I had to mend the hole in my broken heart, and promptly sought help from the Internet. Lo and behold, I found a recipe on Fork and Beans that would restore my confidence in gluten-free bread baking. The bread in the photos you see here is made from this recipe. It's soft and moist, as promised, and absolutely slice-worthy. The recipe and method from Fork and Beans is not that dissimilar from the one in the book - which is why I picked it - but with key differences that filled the holes in the plot for me.