GF Flour mixes are intended to replicate wheat's properties. Most gluten-free mixes available on the market now are mostly starches with little or no nutritional value. Some of us with CD have lived for years without nutrition and now we need food! We need good, wholegrain, healthy food.
No gluten-free grain can substitute alone for the properties of wheat flour (it's had years of biogenetics to make it the perfect baking flour--that will kill us, but that's another topic), but a combination of alternate whole grains can substitute beautifully.
Mix up some flours and use them as your flour in your pre-gf days, your favorite cookies, brownies, spice cake, muffins, banana bread. This mix will substitute beautifully.
I like mixes that use up what I have on hand. If I'm out of one flour, I substitute with a different kind. I try to end up with at least eight flours total. Most recipes are fairly forgiving, as are my husband's and children's tastebuds.
I've modified this mix since 2008 and now it's as follows:
One cup sorghum flour
One cup millet flour
2 and 1/2 cups brown rice flour
2 cups tapioca starch/flour
1 cup potato starch
1 cup corn starch
1 cup buckwheat
Now, in 2012 I use this mix in many, if not most of my recipes. It's very versatile and delicious.
1 cup corn starch
1 cup buckwheat
Now, in 2012 I use this mix in many, if not most of my recipes. It's very versatile and delicious.
Sometimes I add one cup of whichever other flours are on hand: coconut flour, almond flour (or almond meal--made from raw almonds in the food processor,) soy flour, wild rice flour (Montina), gar-fava flour. The following alternate supergrains have most of eight essential enzymes and can help to form a complete protein. Try them as alternatives in your flour mixes: quinoa amaranth, teff, buckwheat or flax.
I mix this up when I want a universal substitute for typical wheat flour and I substitute it one for one in muffins and quick breads, fruit breads (banana, applesauce, pumpkin) cookies, brownies, etc.
Be warned that flours that have bean flour aren't as delicious eaten raw as mixes with just sorghum.
I'm just saying if you intend to sit and eat the cookie dough and don't care about freezing capability, use straight sorghum. It makes dough yummy raw.
4 comments:
I was in Chugiak when your son was a brand-new missionary there.... we got "the word" before he transferred in, I went to the store and bought a box of gf choc chip cookies. He helped us move, and after one session I brought out the cookies. He immediately put up his hand regretfully saying "Thank you, I can't eat them." I said "Yes, you can". We went back and forth again and the third time, he said, "I can?? You mean they're gluten-free??" He was SO, SO happy! He held them up to the heavens like they were some special gift to bless before he took a bite. It was so much fun! I loved it. So here's my question--where do you get all those special flours like sorghum, potato, etc? (the hidden question being "at a decent price?") Shipping up here KILLS us but now I need to know. My daughter at BYU has just informed us that she is now gf too.....thanks so much, Zoanne Anderson (we moved to Kenai in December)
I was in Chugiak when your son was a brand-new missionary there.... we got "the word" before he transferred in, I went to the store and bought a box of gf choc chip cookies. He helped us move, and after one session I brought out the cookies. He immediately put up his hand regretfully saying "Thank you, I can't eat them." I said "Yes, you can". We went back and forth again and the third time, he said, "I can?? You mean they're gluten-free??" He was SO, SO happy! He held them up to the heavens like they were some special gift to bless before he took a bite. It was so much fun! I loved it. So here's my question--where do you get all those special flours like sorghum, potato, etc? (the hidden question being "at a decent price?") Shipping up here KILLS us but now I need to know. My daughter at BYU has just informed us that she is now gf too.....thanks so much, Zoanne Anderson (we moved to Kenai in December)
Hi, I can't even tell you how I blessed the people who feed Elder Darcey. You are the cream and the Lord blessed him with food daily.
This week in Utah is the gluten-free in the southtown mall in Sandy near Provo. Hope your daughter can get there? I don't know how good the celiac support club is there now, but the cafeteria really helped my son.
I purchase many of my grains online and from Asian/Indian stores less expensively.
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