I made dinner rolls for the 1st time and they were a little denser than I wanted... was wondering if the xanthem gum was the culprit... so I
looked up adjusting xanthem gum for dense bread and it brought me here... your article says if bread is rubbery it might have too much xanthem... I have perfected my cupcakes they are light fluffy and moist... and good enough that I was able to sell them at a local cafe for 3.00 a piece and could not keep up... anyway the xanthem gum measurements for cakes is supposed to be 1/2 tsp per cup and I only use 1/4 tsp per cup... so I am thinking if I reduce the xanthem in the rolls it would produce an airier roll... as everyone knows gluten free
flours can be
expensive... and I wanted to avoid making a failed batch as bread and cake are a bit different... the 1st batch tased great... just won't leave much room for food due to density... as is the problem with lots of gluten free stuff... am I on the right track?
the pancake wouldn't flip nicely and lets just say it didn't even end up
looking like a pancake i think working with coconut
flour is a bit tricky because its so dense and absorbs liquids more than regular wheat
flour i hope there are some great recipes in your cook book using coconut
flour - too bad its fairly
expensive
The checkout lady was gruff and impatient, already turning to Eric's stuff, which probably
looked perverse compared with the girl's, and had come from the new «gourmet» section of the market: organic jalapenos, organic Asian eggplants, organic red bell peppers, a bunch of organic kale for braising, two huge organic onions, a tiny bottle of fine Tuscan olive oil, five pounds good
flour, French yeast in cakes, a huge chunk of very, very
expensive raw - milk Parmesan (Reggiano, of course), two bottles Cotes du Rhone — and not just any old Cotes du Rhone but Alison's favorite, thirty - four bucks a pop.