The Fresh Loaf

A Community of Amateur Bakers and Artisan Bread Enthusiasts.

Low Carb / Wheat Gluten / Yeast

BreadFace12's picture
BreadFace12

Low Carb / Wheat Gluten / Yeast

I've been experimenting with LC flours (Coconut and Water Chestnut) in bread baking.  I want to use yeast to give the bread lift, so I'm figuring that I need to add some Wheat Gluten...  Has anyone found or designed a recipe like this?  THANKS!!!

Richard C's picture
Richard C

I experimented a bit with buckwheat a while back (again LC, no gluten), and found roughly 1 egg per cup of buckwheat flour to be about right.  Any more than that and it turns into cake.

clazar123's picture
clazar123

Some tech. difficulties,again. My post disappeared (except the link) when I hit the enter button. Weird. I will try again.

Is wheat gluten low carb? 1 ounce=28g=4g total carbs. Well,well. Lower than I thought.

LC baking (and esp. bread) is a very focused specialty and there is not a lot of it here on this forum. Use the search box to find what is here.You may get more response at a LC diet site, a bodybuilding forum (for keto recipes),a paleo site or other specialty baking/recipe forum.

Here is a link to a recent post about using coconut flour for LC buns. Some of the discussion may be beneficial-esp. about how to obtain lift and structure when there is no structure-providing ingredient like gluten. On the other hand, gluten may work but you have to get the ratios right or you will have a rubber ball of a loaf.

http://www.thefreshloaf.com/node/52510/what-did-i-do-wrong

Have fun baking!

 

Lazy Loafer's picture
Lazy Loafer

I don't worry about low carb baking, but I do a certain amount of gluten free baking for customers. Obviously I can't use wheat gluten in these, so to provide the structure to hold the gases produced by the yeast I use a variety of things - eggs, soaked flax seeds (ground or whole) and/or the mucilaginous water from soaking flax seeds, xanthan gum and powdered psyllium husk. Sometimes I use these alone, sometimes in combination (though not the xanthan gum and psyllium husk together). It makes for a reasonably light and well-risen bread.

BreadFace12's picture
BreadFace12

that's interesting!  have you used soaked chia  seeds?  (and I don't suppose that you'd share a recipe!...  I'm just baking for myself)