Aran Goyoaga Gluten Free Bread Recipe on Food52 (2024)

Bake

by: Aran Goyoaga

December10,2019

4.7

34 Ratings

  • Prep time 2 hours
  • Cook time 1 hour 45 minutes
  • Makes 1 loaf

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Author Notes

The words yeast and honey immediately evoke a sense of comfort in me. They remind me of the honey buns of my youth that I would eat straight out of the oven with a slice of Idiazábal cheese. Sweet and tender bread with something briny and salty. A loaf of this bread with black olives is a staple in my house these days. It makes the perfect sandwich bread with a thin crust and tender crumb. You can easily omit the olives and caraway to have a plain but equally satisfying loaf.

*(c)2019 By Aran Goyoaga. All rights reserved. Excerpted from Cannelle et Vanille by permission of Sasquatch Books.

Aran Goyoaga

What You'll Need

Watch This Recipe

Aran Goyoaga Gluten FreeBread

Ingredients
  • 1 teaspoonextra-virgin olive oil, for greasing
  • 3/4 cup(105 g) superfine brown rice flour, plus more for dusting
  • 1 tablespoon(25 g) honey
  • 2 teaspoons(8 g) active dry yeast
  • 1 2/3 cups(400 g) filtered water, heated to 110°F
  • 4 teaspoons(15 g) psyllium husk powder
  • 3/4 cup(105 g) sorghum flour
  • 3/4 cup(90 g) tapioca starch
  • 1 tablespooncaraway seeds
  • 1 1/2 teaspoonskosher salt
  • 3/4 cup(90 g) pitted black olives, roughly chopped
  • 1 tablespoonapple cider vinegar
Directions
  1. Brush the bottom and sides of a 9-by-4-inch loaf pan with the olive oil. Dust the inside with brown rice flour.
  2. In a medium bowl, whisk together the honey, yeast, and water. Set aside to proof for 10 minutes. Whisk in the psyllium powder, and let it gel for 5 to 10 minutes.
  3. In the bowl of a stand mixer, whisk together the brown rice flour, sorghum flour, tapioca starch, caraway seeds, and salt. Add the black olives, apple cider vinegar, and yeast mixture to the bowl. Mix with the dough hook on medium speed until it comes together into a moist and loose dough, about 2 minutes.
  4. Dust a work surface with brown rice flour, and turn the dough out onto it. Knead the dough a couple of times, shaping it into a loose log about 9 inches long. Gently transfer the dough to the loaf pan. Cover with a clean linen towel or plastic wrap and set aside to proof at room temperature for 1 hour, or until doubled.
  5. Preheat the oven to 425°F. Dust the top of the dough with brown rice flour. Bake the bread for 1 hour. Carefully turn the bread out of the pan, and place it directly on the oven rack. Bake for an additional 45 minutes.
  6. Transfer the bread to a cooling rack and cool completely before cutting. The bread needs to set in the center as the steam evaporates otherwise it will have a gummy crumb. I often bake it at night and wait until the morning to eat it. This bread keeps best wrapped in a clean kitchen towel or parchment paper for up to 3 days.

Tags:

  • Bread
  • American
  • Caraway
  • Olive
  • Bake
  • Gluten-Free
  • Breakfast
  • Snack

See what other Food52ers are saying.

  • Anna

  • Patrizia

  • Elizabeth Detrich

  • Aran Goyoaga

Recipe by: Aran Goyoaga

3-time James Beard finalist cookbook author, food stylist and photographer. Author of Cannelle et Vanille named best of by NY Times, Food 52, Food & Wine, Bon Appetit, and more.

Popular on Food52

157 Reviews

Naomi L. February 12, 2024

Great recipe. It took some tweaking with the oven temperature. I’ve been baking on a convection setting at 400 degrees and it turns out just perfect. I do have a question about the yeast. A friend who is allergic mentioned substituting with lemon juice and baking soda. Have you tried it? Thanks!

[emailprotected] March 17, 2023

DO NOT PREHEAT AND COOK AT 425! My first loaf turned out hard as a brick on the outside!!!! After watching video I noticed she said bake at 325! So I remade a whole new loaf at 325 and my husband and children loved it!

kilfeather March 17, 2023

I guess it all depends on your oven because mine turned out perfect at 425, but it may be helpful for others.

lillywendel March 3, 2023

Hi! Has anyone tried baking this recipe into buns? How would I adjust the bake time etc? I'm a first time GF baker, trying to make it work for my 4 year old daughter to make buns in school...
Thanks!

[emailprotected] March 17, 2023

Don't bake loaf at 425! Bake at 325 according to video! The written instructions are wrong.

Shoo September 20, 2022

Made this today - really loved it - 2 questions about the psyllium husk - I used psyllium husk because I couldn’t find psyllium husk powder - can I just grind psyllium husk into powder? Also 15 grams vs 4 tsps - very big difference between the 2 - 15 grams is closer to 3 TBSP (9 tsps) which measure should I use? I ended up going in the middle with 7 tsps but my loaf was a. It gummy - any recommendations?

AndreaCK September 20, 2022

Gummy is a perennial with GF. I guess that's the reason for the long bake time. I tried adding oat bran to give more structure. Not too bad, but I never get a good rise.

[emailprotected] March 17, 2023

She says to weigh and use grams so I bought a scale and weigh and use grams. I figure her measurements for cups and tablespoons are just a guide, but not exact! I also used the powder because anytime you substitute it always changes things. I grinned grinded psyllium husk and it didn't turn out the way her recipe looked. So the next time I followed everything exactly and it turned out great. But the written instructions are wrong in the bake time! It's 325 according to her video tutorial,

Anna August 10, 2022

Well, I figured I'd answer my own question. I now have a copy of Aran's book and she does use Morton kosher. So I guess it really is 1 1/2 teaspoons and that the bread is supposed to be a little salty tasting. I've been making it (over and over again!) without the olives and caraway and have been happy with 1 teaspoon.

Anna July 24, 2022

The recipe calls for kosher salt. Is it Diamond Crystals or Morton kosher? I use Morton kosher, so I cut the salt down to 1 teaspoon and it was good, but a little salty. I'm guessing you are using Diamond? Thanks for giving the weights for everything else. My loaf was good, though the dough was wetter than in the video. Next time I will use the special mail order fine rice flour (rather than Bob's) and see if that helps. The bread was crusty for sure. The inside was a little moister than I'm used to, but good. The flavor was awesome!

dominique J. April 2, 2022

I wrote before and I was asking if xanthan gum should be used. Was it omitted purposely or by error? I've been baking gf for 15 years and always add xanthan gum to my bread recipe. Anyways, I followed the recipe but added 2 tsp of xg. The bread is tasty but came out wetter inside and gummier. I'd be interested in getting feedback on this. Otherwise it's a great recipe.

[emailprotected] April 5, 2022

There is no Xanthan gum in this recipe, and is likely why your bread turned out with that texture. The psyllium husk powder serves a similar role in the recipe

cristinam March 25, 2022

Can I substitute rice flour with quinoa flour? Has anyone tried?

HeleniB February 19, 2022

I gave this recipie a go yesterday. I watched the video, read through the recipie and got my ingredients ready. I only had half the portion of olives in my fridge and no caraway seeds so used rosemary and dried onion flakes instead. Fundamentally, I changed nothing else, followed the instructions and....well....I was in tears of relief and gasps of admiration for it delivered exactly what you promise. I am the coeliac in the house. I got to have 1 slice!!! It was devoured in a matter of minutes. Like the video, the bread had cooled for a couple of hours and was still warm to touch, so buttering each slice was HEAVEN!

Only difference I experienced was that my loaf had prooved to the top of the pan in 20 minutes-it's warm and summer here. So I ignored the time instruction and went with your guidance on the physical appearance and started baking it.

The crust has dark, firm and crunchy to cut but not hard to chew, the crumb was open nicely and the texture was moist to touch and bouncy to chew. Zero gumminess, mildly sweet balanced by the savoury olives. Thank you Aran, an amazing recipie. Would you do a gf recipie book only?

Next I will try with caraway plus other variations...just need to buy more loaf pans!! Can't recommend this recipie highly enough. With gratitude.

Karen February 20, 2022

another really great recipe is this one. This gluten free bread is also amazing!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dlMXSdqQCHQ by Let Them Eat Gluten Free Cake. I have made a number of her breads and they are amazing!

HeleniB February 20, 2022

Thank you Karen, I agree. I follow this page and have tried this one. Quite good and my go to for white bread in fact! This was the first time I'd come across Aran's recipies and am blown away to a new level.

Karen February 13, 2022

I made this recipe today and it was amazing! Five stars all the way! It tasted exactly like the sour dough bread I used to make. What a perfect recipe. Any thoughts on doubling the recipe and making it in my cast iron casserole dish like a boule bread. I wonder if that would make the crust a little more softer and also provide for a larger loaf?

Madalinamitache February 3, 2022

Hi!
Can I replace the sorghum flour with rice flour?
Thanks a lot!

AndreaCK February 3, 2022

I have used quinoa flour or oatmeal flour in stead of sorghum. Sorghum feels a little "softer" to me than brown rice

Madalinamitache February 3, 2022

Ok. I will try one of these. Easier to find than sorghum. Thanks.

Dina January 20, 2022

Wonderfully tasty gluten free bread that you WON’T know it’s GF!
I made adjustments & it was successful!
My flour mix was rice flour / oat flour / arrowroot / potato starch (of this I measured out 2 cups + 1/4 cup for the total flour mix). The psyllium I have is not finely ground, it’s husks, & it seemed not to be an issue.
I started with 1 cup of water bc I knew my flour mix was going to act differently & then only added about a half of 1/3 cup. So all in all ~290 ml of water.
I didn’t add the olives & the caraway seeds but I know they’ll be delicious, I love olive bread!
Baked for 1h at 425F & then 35 min at 375F.
It has a thick crunchy crust, which I don’t mind, but I am wondering if that double bake doesn’t thicken the crust? Maybe bake it less long that second time?
Will def make again! 😋
Thank you 🙏

Melanie January 21, 2022

I found that if I put a small glass bowl of water below the bake that it massively reduces the thickness of the crust.

Dina January 21, 2022

Directly below it ? During the second bake of 45 min or during the entire baking time? Thanks

Patrizia January 20, 2022

Hi Aran for me it is perfect, I have done by replacing the olives with walnuts and the sorghum with millet, I find this bread very tasty and I love it, I will do it several times, I am not celiac but I find that sometimes eating gluten free helps my rebellious intestine

Elly January 20, 2022

Fantastic recipe! Been gf for 4+ years when my body's digestive system decided to NOT allow gluten in my body anymore! I was on the virge of becoming a personal bread maker...

I haven't found a gf recipe able to capture the crunch, the bite of a good chewy loaf until I tried this recipe! Have only made it twice. Fantastic flavor, but wish I can get a better rise.

The first time I made it, I baked for 1 hour at 425 degrees, then lowered temp to 375 degrees for another 20 min. I also reduced the water to nearly 300 ml.

The second time, I used close to the called for amount of water, less 25-50ml. Still too wet. Sadly, I baked it for a full 120 min at 425. I am certain that the temp should be lowered to 375 for last 20 min. I also proofed it for 100 min. , which didn't make a difference.

Thanks for fantastic recipe, that reminds me of the baking magic I used to have when baking bread!

Kathleen January 14, 2022

I would like to verify the size of the pan. The recipe says 8 x 4, which I assume is length x width. Is it 4” deep (like a Pullman pan) or shallower (like the loaf pans used in the US)? The depth is used to indicate proper proofing, so it is essential to know all three measurements.

Aran G. January 14, 2022

As long is 1# capacity it will work. Some are 9x4 some are 8.5x4.5 but they all work the same

Kathleen January 20, 2022

Thank you.

Maj January 7, 2022

I am adept at making gluten free bread and have been very successful at 2 other sites. This recipe looked interesting, so I followed it recipe exactly. The initial dough was too thin. Very difficult to shape into a 9 in. log even with the dusting of flour. The actual loaf turned out very dark, very thick crust, and gummy inside. So disappointed in this recipe and I see others have had similar results.

Aran G. January 7, 2022

Hi, sorry the recipe didn’t work for you. I have a feeling it’s because you are using psyllium husk powder that is not finely milled therefore not hydrating the dough properly. Too much unabsorbed water that is why the dough was too soft and crust too hard. We made a video with recipe. Make sure to watch that so you can see the proper texture of ingredients. Not all psylliums are equal. Make sure it’s not flaky or whole husks but fine like flour

LeonaF January 7, 2022

I made this recipe thrice and substituted the sorghum flour with buckwheat four and it came out perfect every time. I just love it! Thank you, Aran!

Elizabeth D. December 31, 2021

Can this bread be made in a bread machine? It doesn't seem like it'd be a good idea but I thought I'd ask.

Aylin December 25, 2021

Amazing! Would not be able to tell it is GF. Great crumb, perfect crust, chewy and great with a little pat of butter. I used Arrowroot as a sub for Tapioca one to one due to availability.

hethyrh December 6, 2021

I have been gluten-free for over 10 years and this recipe has given me a reason to live again! Haha! ;) But seriously, this is the BEST GF bread recipe that I've come across in all that time. I had gotten to the point that I was frustrated with trying to bake GF bread at home and had been spending way too much money on a store-bought artisan brand, but this recipe has changed all of that. I skipped the honey in the recipe, since I usually try to avoid added sugars, and halved the yeast for high altitude (6000 ft), but otherwise followed the recipe to a "T" and WOW! I did have to let it rise for almost 2 hours, so I'll probably use a bit more yeast next time and just watch it closely. The crust is crispy and crackly, the crumb is light and tender, and the taste is to-die-for! It was just the tiniest bit gummy inside, so I think I'll follow the advice in the other comments and try to reduce the water by 10% next time, but this is definitely my new go-to recipe! I usually wait until mid-morning before I eat breakfast but I just had to try it upon waking this morning before 7am. I drizzled my two slices with a tiny bit of olive oil and topped with a couple of thin slices of vegan "parmesan" (since I'm also unluckily dairy-free ;)), and for a few moments, I was in heaven! Thank you, Aran, for bringing me such joy with this fantastic recipe! I can't wait to try it again, next time with rosemary. YUM!

Aran Goyoaga Gluten Free Bread Recipe on Food52 (2024)

FAQs

Why do you put vinegar in gluten free bread? ›

Apple cider vinegar or another acid lightens up the dough. You can add up to 4 Tbsp of acid for 500 g gluten-free flour. Don't worry, you won't be able to taste it afterwards. To lighten up a yeast dough even more, you can add a packet of baking powder or cream of tartar baking powder to 500 g flour.

Why is my homemade gluten free bread gummy? ›

The simple reason is that gluten free bread takes much longer than a regular loaf to bake and therefore a sticky crumb is generally the result of under baking (there could be other reasons but this is the first place to start troubleshooting).

How do you make gluten free bread more elastic? ›

Made from modified tapioca starch, Expandex adds wheat-like texture to gluten-free bread and also improves the crumb, elasticity, texture, taste, and shelf-life. It can be added directly to your dry ingredients or you can use a mix like in gluten-free honey buckwheat English muffins.

Does gluten free bread rise in the oven? ›

Expectations: No question about it, gluten-free breads are denser than wheat breads, and they don't rise as high. Plus, they get most of their loft in the hot oven (that's called oven spring). Don't expect to see a lot of visible change while the loaf is resting (after its shaped).

Is vinegar bad for celiac? ›

Most vinegars are gluten-free. Most varieties are distilled and made from inherently gluten-free ingredients such as grapes. The only vinegar that needs to be avoided is malt vinegar. Malt vinegar is not distilled, and malt is derived from barley, a grain that is not gluten-free.

What is the best gluten free flour for yeast? ›

If you want to buy just one gluten-free flour, we highly recommend the Pillsbury all-purpose gluten-free flour. Not only is it our favorite gluten-free flour, and easy to use in gluten-free recipes, but it's also one of the few gluten-free flours currently on the market that is recommended for baking with yeast.

What is the trick to making good gluten free bread? ›

The common mistake when making GF bread is trying to get it to the kneading consistency. Do not add more flour than the recipe calls for. GF products need to be moist so that they do not turn out gritty. To knead GF bread simply set your heavy-duty mixer on high and mix well.

What is the biggest challenge of making gluten free bread? ›

Running into problems. Gluten is protein that elasticizes dough, providing structure and enabling it to trap the carbon dioxide generated by yeast. (This is why many gluten-free formulations don't use yeast.) Eliminating it often leaves dough that is runnier than conventional bread dough.

What does cream of tartar do in gluten-free bread? ›

A: Yes, cream of tartar can be used in gluten-free bread recipes to improve dough stability and rise.

What happens if you don't add xanthan gum to gluten-free flour? ›

We suggest testing the recipe out and adjusting as needed. If not enough xanthan gum is used, your baked goods will be crumbly and lack moisture.

What is the trick to baking with gluten-free flour? ›

Gluten-free flours often contain fine starches, so they absorb more liquid than conventional flour. To address this, gluten-free recipes usually call for more liquid and produce looser batters. They may also call for a larger quantity of leavening, like baking powder, to help add volume and lighten the texture.

What happens if you add yeast to gluten free flour? ›

In fact, baker's yeast reacts well with gluten-free all-purpose flour and other gluten-free flours like rice flour for baking gluten-free bread recipes and pastries. It's not so much the yeast you have to worry about when sticking to a gluten-free diet.

Should I add baking powder to gluten free bread? ›

2 teaspoons of baking powder per cup of gluten-free flour is necessary to ensure proper leavening. Baking soda and buttermilk can be used to leaven instead of baking powder, but 1-1/8 teaspoon of cream of tartar should be added for each 1/2 teaspoon baking soda used.

Why does my gluten free bread sink in the middle after baking? ›

Loaf sinks in the middle while baking- dough was proofed for too long, it does not get better the more you let it rise in the tin. Your bread is ready when the dough has risen just to the top of your baking tin and not over the top in a dome (assuming you use the correct sized tin in the first place, see below).

What does vinegar in bread do? ›

And It's not just cakes that benefit from a touch of vinegar, but also biscuits, muffins, and even bread. So when it comes to bread, it's the same concept – vinegar inhibits gluten formation which leads to a more relaxed and extensible dough, resulting in a less dense and chewy bread.

What makes gluten-free bread better? ›

The sources used for making gluten-free bread are packed with fibre. Rice Flour, Soy Flour, Starch (Tapioca, Potato, Corn) used in the gluten-free bread by The Baker's Dozen ensure that your gut is never low on dietary fibre. Dietary fibre has many benefits right from reducing obesity to helping in easing digestion.

Does vinegar prevent gluten formation? ›

Vinegar can affect the gluten development in dough. Gluten gives dough structure, but too much gluten development can make dough tough. Acid can hinder gluten development; so, a bit of vinegar (or lemon juice) can make pie dough slightly more tender.

Why is my homemade gluten-free bread dry? ›

Dry, crumbly loaf- you may need more liquid (see above), fat or binder. Gluten free bread dough needs more fat than wheat bread dough whether it's oil, butter or something else. So if your bread is dry, simply add more fat to get a better crumb.

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