The potato and pectin are all the binder you need. No gums!
Flour
blend, 2014:
1 c rice flour
1/2 c toasted bean flour
1/2 c cornstarch
1/4 c GF potato flakes
1 tsp pectin
The blend is mild and the toasted bean flour provides protein that
helps structure without raw bean flavor. Can't be tasted in the finished
product.
The potato flakes make the bread bend, add moisture and make the
bread stick together. Unlike the tapioca flour in so many recipes, it's a nice
local ingredient, easy to find and inexpensive. I suspect it could be replaced
with tapioca flour, butternut squash or sweet potato, but I haven't tested
those. The last time I peeled and cubed a butternut, my hands were coated with
a very sticky, hard to remove film that probably could be an excellent binder.
Pectin is a binder. You can find it with canning supplies in your
local store. It's also good for you, but you can do without it in this recipe.
The bread:
2 1/4 c GF flour
1 tbsp sugar
1 tsp yeast
1 1/2 tsp salt
1 tsp baking powder
2 tbsp oil
2 eggs
1 2/3 c water
2 tbsp rice flour*
1. Mix dry stuff (except for rice flour). Add eggs and oil.
2. Cook rice flour in 1/3 c water until a paste forms. Add the
rest of the water to the pan and stir, adjusting temp until the water is bath
water temp. Add the paste to the dry stuff, eggs and oil. Stir well, by hand or
with a mixer. If you don't have a mixer, it will still turn out okay. The
batter will look thin, like cake batter. Don't panic! This is what it should
look like. Don't add more
flour.
*The paste is a binder and keeps the bread soft and moist. Don't
skip this step.
3. Grease and flour a bread pan (I use parchment instead of
flour).
4. You can let this rise and double in size in the mixing bowl for
more flavor, or bake right away if you're in a hurry. I was in a hurry, so
poured the batter in the prepared pan and popped it into a preheated 350 F oven
and baked for 40-45 minutes until the bread was set and didn't jiggle when
tapped with my finger. I then took it out and brushed it with a beaten egg (egg
wash) and sprinkled sesame seeds over it, because I like pretty food. I baked
it 5 to 10 min more, or until a knife stuck into came out pretty clean.
4. You can slice it right away or let it cool a bit. My crew
didn't give me a chance to let it cool, falling on it like piranhas on a
drowning nudist. The word spread that the pesto rocked, and soon I was left
with mere crumbs on the cutting board and rocking bowl devoid of pesto. I had
to bake another batch.
This is a soft bread on day one, only slightly dry on day two, at
which point it makes excellent toast, lovely with pesto, bruchetta, thin ham
slices, egg salad, etc.
My brother in law was here when the first batch came out and said,
"This is good bread." John asked me to consider not to changing a
thing, or at least recording it so I don't lose the recipe, because this is good.
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