logo
Wrong email address or username
Wrong email address or username
Incorrect verification code
Baking Gluten-Free: Only Natural Products - Lisa Brown
Add cover
Baking Gluten-Free: Only Natural Products
by: (author)
THE BEST GLUTEN FREE COOKBOOK YOU MUST HAVE IN YOUR KITCHEN EASY STEPS TO A GLUTEN FREE DIET You found out recently that you can never eat gluten again. After getting over the shock, mourning it a bit, starting to feel better, and realizing just how many foods are naturally gluten-free, you might... show more
THE BEST GLUTEN FREE COOKBOOK YOU MUST HAVE IN YOUR KITCHEN EASY STEPS TO A GLUTEN FREE DIET You found out recently that you can never eat gluten again. After getting over the shock, mourning it a bit, starting to feel better, and realizing just how many foods are naturally gluten-free, you might be feeling pretty good. WHAT IS GLUTEN? Gluten is a protein compound found in wheat, rye, barley, triticale, and a number of other processed foods. A binding agent that creates elasticity and helps give certain food products their shape and texture, gluten is the component responsible for making breads light and fluffy, croissants rich and flaky, and cookies chewy-gooey. Gluten is also a thickener for soups and sauces, and in some cases, is added to foods for enhanced flavor and supplemental protein. FOODS CONTAINING GLUTEN Gluten is everywhere on the grocery store shelves. In addition to the more obvious gluten-laden food sources such as breads, cookies, cakes, cereals, soups, pasta, and beer, gluten can also be commonly found in vinegar, soy sauce and salad dressings, broths, sauces, and food colorings. The list of food products containing gluten goes on and on. For those with celiac disease, a severe gastrointestinal (GI) reaction to gluten, a gluten-free diet is vital. But physicians are also starting to recognize that many have some level of gluten intolerance or sensitivity, and fare better on a gluten-free diet even if they don’t have celiac disease. YOU USUALLY HAVE TO COMBINE FLOURS Here’s where people also get stuck. Because AP gluten flour works for a multitude of baked goods — and it’s the only flour most people in this culture know — it’s easy to long for that one magic flour when baking gluten-free. However, for the most part, you have to combine 2 or 3 flours together to make a flour mix that will work for gluten-free baking. If you need a guide to the gluten-free flours most easily available on the market, check out this guide Im wrote for you. Discover a new beginning here! 25 Delicious Recipes!
show less
Format: Kindle Edition
ASIN: B071CW14TV
Pages no: 59
Edition language: English
Bookstores:
Books by Lisa Brown
Share this Book
Need help?