King Arthur Gluten Free Flour French Bread Recipe

These classic loaves of gluten free French bread are just as crusty outside, soft and tender inside, as you remember. They're even quick and easy enough to make on a weeknight!

This recipe for gluten free French bread rises fast and bakes even faster. It makes the perfect baguette for sandwiches, garlic bread, and bruschetta.

Easy

These baguettes have a thin, crisp outside crust and a soft, almost squishy inside. They're as quick and easy to make as they are versatile.

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The dough should be chilled for at least 30 minutes in a sealed container in the refrigerator before shaping, but it doesn't need a long first rise or rest. The recipe makes 2 10-inch rolls, but you can also make one roll that's double the length. You can even double the recipe, since it makes a small batch as it is.

The recipe calls for using a stand mixer, since the dough really does need to be beaten vigorously until it takes on a “whipped” appearance, almost like thick mashed potatoes. That is what helps create that tender crumb. If you don't have a stand mixer, try using a food processor fitted with the steel blade.

When I use my gluten free bread flour blend to make baguettes, I shape them a bit differently, much like I do our Olive Garden style soft breadsticks. That involved patting and rolling the dough into a rectangle, folding both of the long sides toward the center, then doubling the rectangle on itself. That's a classic way to create a baguette shape.

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This recipe is made using one of my preferred all purpose gluten free flour blends (preferably, Better Batter), rather than bread flour. It isn't as similar to conventional gluten-containing bread dough, like our gluten free bread recipe for sandwiches, and it doesn't rise quite as readily. I find that when I use that other shaping method, there are more likely to be gaps in the bread after baking.

Here, I like to shape the dough by creating a cohesive piece of raw bread dough by pinching together any and all gaps in the dough, so they don't separate during rising and baking. Then, roll out the dough with the palms of your hands, so the dough is thicker in the center, and tapered toward the ends.

The best way to explain the shaping method is to watch the how-to video that is included in this post. But in case you aren't able to see that, I'd explain it in the following way:

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Position the palms of both hands right next to one another on the top of the cylinder of dough. Roll the dough first away from your body and then back toward it as you move your hands in a half moon motion away from one another, toward the edges of the dough.

For general tips on how to bake gluten free yeast bread, please click through to that post. But be sure to come back here for this gf French bread recipe!

Have you ever seen those baguette pans, which look like side-by-side slings made of metal, with a million little perforations? You don't need one of those.

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I actually used to have a baguette pan, but I can't find it. That means that I must have given it away because it always drove me crazy when I tried to store it in a cabinet in my non-industrial-sized kitchen. I'm not sorry it's gone.

Those pans are, indeed, useful because they allow circulation of air all around the bread as it bakes. That's part of what creates a thin but extra-crispy crust even on the bottom of the bread—and helps shape the bread properly. I've found that it's just not necessary with this recipe, though.

For the crispiest crust, it does help to create some steam in the oven at the very start of the baking process. It's easy to do by adding some ice cubes to the oven floor at the very start of baking, then quickly closing the door.

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If you don't feel comfortable adding ice cubes to the floor of your oven, try spraying the baguettes liberally with cool water in a clean spray bottle. Do the spritz either the moment right before or right after you place the pan in the oven.

Gluten

When I originally started developing this recipe, I thought I'd have to use a very wet dough. That's typical of gluten free bread made with anything other than my gluten free bread flour blend.

But when I made it with a very high hydration ratio (that's something we talked about in detail in our recipe for NY-style gluten free pizza crust), the dough barely browned, wouldn't crisp well on the outside, and was super squishy almost no matter how much I baked it.

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That's good news, though, since a less-wet dough is much easier to shape. It does take a little bit longer to rise, and requires a bit more yeast. But neither of those is much of a problem.

. It's not stiff, but it's not fragile. You can and should shape it without adding much additional flour, and be sure to shape it with additional tapioca starch, not all purpose flour.

As with all yeasted dough, rising is variable with the ambient environment in your kitchen (not outside, unless you're setting the dough to rise outside). In warmth and humidity, rising time is shorter. If the air is cool and dry, it will take longer.

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Be sure the dough is covered with oiled plastic wrap securely, but not tightly. You want it to have space to rise, but not be fully exposed at all.

And don't expect a doubling of the dough with this old-school gluten free bread dough. Instead, it will rise to about 150% of its original size. It's considered overproofed when the rise begins to break through the surface of the dough.

Crusty

It will begin to look pockmarked, like it has craters on the outside, and it will become quite fragile. Stop before it gets to that stage, or at least the minute you observe it. This is a relatively quick-rising dough, so be watchful.

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The only dairy in this recipe is the single tablespoon of butter. It can easily be replaced with Earth Balance buttery sticks, or (my favorite) vegan butters from either Melt or Miyoko’s Kitchen brand.

There is only one egg white in this recipe, and it helps provide structure. If you can’t have egg whites, you can try replacing the egg whites with an equal amount, by weight, of aquafaba, which is the brine from a can of chickpeas. Try beating the aquafaba until foamy with a whisk before adding it to the dough.

No. You must use yeast in this recipe. There is no replacement, so if you can't have yeast, use the search function on the blog to search for “yeast free” bread recipes. They're completely different.

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Instant yeast is also called bread maker or rapid-rise yeast. If you only have active dry yeast, multiply the amount of instant yeast called for in the recipe (here, 6 grams) by 125%, and proof the yeast in about 1/4 cup of the water called for in the recipe before adding it to the dough.

Here, that would mean using about 7 1/2 grams grams of active dry yeast. Since most scales (mine included) aren't sensitive enough to measure 1/2 gram, just keep adding more yeast slowly after it reads 7 grams and stop approximately halfway to 8. Just do the best you can!Spoiler alert: gluten-free French baguettes are not hard to make! In fact, they have only three ingredients and don't require much hands-on time at all (this recipe is no-knead). Here I've been searching the internet for a good gluten-free baguette, and it was in my kitchen the entire time.

If you haven't made these yet, I am so happy you stumbled across this page.They are soft on the inside and crusty on the outside. Plus, I share a trick for getting that golden crust you've grown to love. And I linked the best super-affordable baguette mold to make up for the fact that gluten-free flour rises horizontally (rather than vertically).

Classic

King Arthur Baking Company King Arthur Gluten Free Flour, 24 Oz.

Don't trust the non-gluten-free recipes that claim gluten-free flours “will work too”. This is what you really need to get the perfect gluten-free baguette!

The best pre-made gluten-free flours for bread are Pamela's All-Purpose Gluten-free Flour and Bob's Red Mill gluten-free flour. These two blends are tried and true for many baking recipes, and especially bread.

I used Pamela's All Purpose Gluten-free flour blend and found that the taste and texture of the gluten-free French baguette was just like the traditional!

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You cannot get a true baguette flavor without yeast! I promise that with this no-knead recipe, it will also be no fuss. However, if you prefer bread with baking soda, check out our Gluten-Free Irish Soda Bread recipe.

Dry yeast is naturally gluten-free. However, some brands add starch to the final product to prevent clumping. Always check the ingredients list for additives or stick to a known gluten-free yeast brand, like Red Star.

Without salt, bread is simply flour and yeast. Perhaps salt’s most important role is

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