jesse_the_k: text: Be kinder than need be: everyone is fighting some kind of battle (Default)
[personal profile] jesse_the_k posting in [community profile] gluten_free

Adam Ragusea [youtube.com profile] aragusea was a public radio reporter, is now a journalism professor, and has recently become a YouTuber talking about home cooking with a healthy dose of science. I was thrilled by last year’s Alternative Starches: How to thicken sauces without flour. He demonstrates making gravy with

  • flours: rice, potato, and corn (US: corn starch)
  • starches: tapioca, arrowroot
  • gums: xanthan and agar agar.

He also explores how some gums maintain their staying power at all temperatures, which finally explained why wheat flours sometimes show up in ice creams.

I’ve been using cornstarch and arrowroot to make slurry gravies for decades. Adam blew my mind by making a traditional browned roux with both potato and rice flours, and they look great! Adam summarizes:

If you need to make a gluten-free gravy, you can try making your roux with rice flour or potato starch — I'd do the rice flour because it's more opaque. That makes a really delicious gravy. Nobody is gonna miss the wheat.

Content notes: although he has sponsors, YouTube is running US campaign ads to start and randomly in the middle.

Have you made fat-and-flour based sauces with gluten-free ingredients? Which flour did you use? Please share any hard-won lessons or handy tips.

Date: 2020-10-26 09:18 pm (UTC)
topaz_eyes: (tomatoes)
From: [personal profile] topaz_eyes
They say to use 3/4 cup of rice flour for every 1 cup of wheat flour (so 3 Tbs rice flour instead of 4 Tbs wheat flour). Though the last time I made a roux I used 4 Tbs butter with 4 Tbs cup rice flour and it turned out okay. You might need to experiment; the ideal amount of rice flour may be in between.

Cool resource, thank you!
OSZAR »