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Multigrain Bread, Gluten-Free

November 24, 2009 by Jeanne


When I was first diagnosed as gluten intolerant, the main thing I missed was good sandwich bread. I had a new baby and it felt like I had no time to do anything–much less make a meal for myself during the day. Sandwiches would be so easy to make and eat, I thought. But, because it took a few weeks to figure out what was going on, and I felt extremely sick every time I ate, I kind of gave up on making food, even sandwiches, during the day–and I just wouldn’t eat. This freaked out my husband, who went to work and would come home to an exhausted and hungry wife. So, he started making me sandwiches before he left in the morning (so very nice!). I would try to eat them, but I kept getting sick.

Of course, we found out that it was the gluten that was making me feel so awful. And at this point in the game, there was no commercial gluten-free sandwich bread out there and no thoughts that I would make it myself. I had a new baby, for goodness sakes. I couldn’t even read my mail.

First I tried gluten-free bread mixes. Most were awful. And, again, I had a baby, and then a toddler, and I felt like I didn’t have the time to mess with making bad bread. Then I found Cooking Gluten-Free! by Karen Robertson. I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again–this book is great! Robertson has a wonderful sandwich bread recipe in the book. I started making this every week–and we loved it. Even gluten-eating people loved it (and who doesn’t love fresh bread?). Over the years, I’ve adapted the recipe to suit our tastes and needs.

This recipe is accurately called a multi-grain bread. I use a combo of flours that give it a nice flavor and texture. And I alternate between various sweeteners, depending on what taste I’m after. I mainly use a combo of honey and sugar for everyday bread. Sometimes I use molasses for a more hearty-tasting bread.

Every Thanksgiving, I make a loaf of this bread a few days before the big day and then use it for my stuffing. Yes, I do stuff our turkey. It’s safe if you put room-temp stuffing into a room-temp bird. I always have extra, which gets baked in the oven alongside the turkey. I always make another loaf the day after Thanksgiving, so we have bread for turkey sandwiches. And toast for any extra cranberry sauce we have.


Note: For info on how to do this bread in a bread machine, see my Bread Machine post.

Note: For info on why I use xanthan gum versus guar gum or seeds for a gluten-replacer, see my Let’s Talk Gluten Replacers post.  Please read this post before leaving a comment or emailing me questions about substituting for xanthan gum.

Note: For info on and answers to questions about baking problems/questions (or problems/questions you anticipate having before even trying the recipe), please read my Troubleshooting Baking Problems post before leaving a comment or emailing me with questions.

Multi-Grain Bread, Gluten-Free
-inspired by Cooking Gluten-Free!

Special Equipment Needed
-a stand mixer is very handy for this, but a hand mixer will do
-loaf pan, 9″x5″

Ingredients
3 large or extra-large eggs (if you use an egg- replacer, the bread will come out more dense and it will be somewhat gummy)
1/4 cup (60 ml) vegetable oil
1 teaspoon vinegar
1 1/4 cup (295 ml) warm but not hot water
1 tablespoon sugar
3 TBL honey (or molasses, or more sugar)
1 1/2 tablespoon active yeast (I use Red Star) or instant/quick rise/bread machine yeast (again, I like Red Star)
1 cup (120g) tapioca starch/flour (they are the same thing)
3 cups (400g) other gluten free whole grain flour–I use 1 cup (155 g) brown rice flour, 1 cup (105 g) amaranth flour or buckwheat flour, 1 cup (140 g) sorghum flour (if you use other flours, I have no idea how they will work or how much liquid they will absorb)***
2/3 cup (60 g) instant dry milk powder (or you can substitute sweet rice flour)
2 teaspoon xanthan gum
1 teaspoon salt
Optional: 2 TBL flax seeds or sunflower seeds as add-ins (not as flours)
extra oil and tapioca flour for pan

***This recipe will not work well with coconut flour because coconut flour absorbs so much moisture

Bring all the refrigerated ingredients to room temperature.

Oil and flour your pan.

In a small bowl or a glass measuring cup, whisk 1 TBL sugar into warm water until dissolved, add yeast and whisk until dissolved; set aside to proof (get foamy)

If you are using instant/quick rise/bread machine yeast, just add the yeast and sugar to the dry ingredients and the milk/water to the wet ingredients and proceed with the recipe.

In a medium bowl, mix all 4 of your flours.  Add dry milk powder (or sweet rice flour), xanthan gum, salt, and remaining sugar if using; as well as the seeds/flax if using.

In the bowl of stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, beat eggs slightly.  Add honey (or molasses) if using, vinegar, and oil, beat slightly to combine.  Add yeast mixture, beat slightly to combine.  Add flour mixture, beat on low to combine and then beat on high for about 3 minutes.

Scrape into prepared pan and smooth top with a spatula.

Preheat oven to 400 degrees F.

You may put pan with dough on top of stove so it can use the heat of the oven to help it rise.  Let rise until double in bulk, about 45 minutes.

When ready to bake, use a pastry brush to brush top of bread with a little extra oil or melted butter.

Bake at 400 degrees F for 10 minutes.  Loosely tent with aluminum foil and bake another 30 minutes (40 minutes total).

Remove bread from oven and let cool for about 5 minutes in the pan, then carefully turn out onto cooling rack to cool completely.

We usually eat this within a couple of days, so it lives on the cutting board in the kitchen, cut-side down. Store at room temperature–not in the refrigerator!

Enjoy!

Note:  If you use a different gluten-free flour mix, alter the amount of or eliminate the xanthan gum, use dairy-free or egg-free substitutes, or change any other ingredients in this recipe, your results may not match my results.

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This post contains affiliate links–which means that I get a tiny percentage of each purchase you make through the link (at no extra cost to you!).  Thank you!


Digiprove sealCopyright secured by Digiprove © 2012-2013 Jeanne Sauvage

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Filed Under: bread, recipe Tagged With: gluten-free, glutenfree, multigrain bread

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. TJ

    March 27, 2017 at 1:43 am

    Thanks so much for this recipe Jeanne. I’ve never made a GF bread that doubled in size this easily, especially with just the one rise. I’ve been craving a brown bread with grains, as my favourite bread used to be dark rye with grains. Now I have a new favourite. It’s beautiful and cut well. I used brown rice flour, teff, buckwheat, millet and arrowroot flours. Next time – and there will be a next time – I will use molasses instead of the extra sugar to try to darken the bread again. Kudos.

    • Jeanne

      March 28, 2017 at 10:35 am

      TJ: Yay! I am so glad!

  2. walter

    January 24, 2017 at 12:57 pm

    I give up.

    I have tried 3 times to use these recipes for bread, and 3 times in row the bread came out gummy and dense.

    1st try: I used flax in the multi-grain, so I figured it was my bad.

    2nd try: tried the white bread recipe, not as bad, but still gummy and dense.

    3rd try: tried the multi-grain again. This time I used:
    – one cup sorghum flour
    – one cup white rice flour
    – one cup brown rice flour
    Not terrible, but still very gummy and dense.

    In all three cases I let the bread rise much longer than suggested, it just did not want to rise. Also, I had to bake much longer than suggested, it just did not want to bake.

    The one substitution I made was EnerG eggs to replace real eggs.

    I live in Denver, CO – the mile high city.

    In all the cases, the dough wanted to clump around the paddle on the blender.

    I guess I am going back to Pamela’s for bread. Although Jeanne’s does seem to work well for cookies, and for pancakes.

    The one thing I don’t like about Pamela’s is: you need a different flour for everything.

    • Jeanne

      January 24, 2017 at 1:34 pm

      Walter: I’m sorry things haven’t been working for you. A few things to think about:

      1) not using real eggs = a denser baked item. This is a 3 egg bread. Eggs provide a lot of rise in a gluten-free bread. Using an egg-replacer means that the bread will be denser and more gummy. The same is true for the Soft Sandwich Bread.

      2) Using a blender to mix doesn’t perform the same action if you use a mixer. A blender does more of a cutting action, a mixer does the fluffing-up action that is needed for mixing gluten-free bread dough. So, if you’re using a blender, you are just combining the ingredients (and in an inefficient way)–not making the bubbles that a mixer makes that will then be the air bubbles that the yeast and the other leaveners use to raise the bread. If you don’t have a mixer, I suggest that you use a hand whisk to mix your dough–and beat it very well for 4 minutes.

      3) High altitude baking is a different bird than sea-level baking. I bake a sea level and my recipes are designed for sea level. Check out my info on high altitude baking in the Baking Troubleshooting post.

      • walter

        January 25, 2017 at 7:43 pm

        I did not use a blender, I used a mixer. Sorry, my mistake.

        I am not much of a baker, or any kind of cook.

        I used a Kitchen-Aid mixer. I has two attachments, a wisk, and a paddle. I used the paddle. The bread mix wanted to clump around the paddle – like a big ball.

        • Jeanne

          January 31, 2017 at 10:49 am

          Walter: Ah, OK. It sounds like there is not enough liquid in the dough–although the bread dough won’t be liquid like pancake batter. Given that you are not an experienced baker, I would recommend that you make it exactly as it’s made in the recipe–including real eggs and the flours I use. Do not use any flax meal. This will give you a baseline for how things should look and work. Also, if you are measuring by volume (cups) be sure that your cup measure is 240 ml and not 250 ml.

  3. Maerwhyn

    January 11, 2017 at 2:17 pm

    I love this bread! I tried the Soft Sandwich bread first and really liked it. It had great flavor and texture, After a dozen attemps (fiddling with it a bit to adjust for altitude) I just couldn’t get it to rise to a real sandwich-sized loaf, and it kept falling. Then I noticed this recipe and thought I’d try it. It’s perfect! I used 1 cup each oat, millet, and brown rice flours. It tastes wonderful, rose perfectly, and didn’t fall! I’ve now got my fourth loaf of this in the oven. Thank you Jeannie for sharing this wonderful recipe.

    • Jeanne

      January 11, 2017 at 5:28 pm

      Maerwhyn: Yay! You are welcome!

    • Cecy

      January 19, 2017 at 3:23 am

      Whar changes did.you do for high altitude? I live in high altitude place!!! Thank you

      • Jeanne

        January 23, 2017 at 1:48 pm

        Cecy: Check out my Troubleshooting Baking Problems post. It has some info on high altitude baking. Also, I have more info in my Gluten-Free Wish List book about high altitude baking–I had a separate set of testers who tested the recipes at high altitude.

  4. walter

    December 15, 2016 at 6:46 pm

    Very dense and gummy for me. Hardly worth eating.

    For the three cups of GF flour I used:
    – 1 cup flax
    – 1 cup sorghum
    – 1/2 cup buckwheat
    – 1/2 cup teff flour

    – The dough did not seem to rise very well. I cannot understand way. I used the right amount of yeast, water, and sugar. I know the yeast is good. The water with the yeast and sugar got frothy.

    I left it to rise for over 2 hours. Put inside the oven with the oven light on.

    I am in Denver, CO – mile high city.

    I had to bake for an extra 40 minutes. Toothpick kept coming out wet and clumpy.

    I used egg substitute – which usually works fine.

    • Jeanne

      December 17, 2016 at 4:01 pm

      Walter: I think the problem is the 1 cup of flax. Flax isn’t a grain (or a flour)–it’s a seed. Additionally, it is a hydrocolloid–when mixed with liquid, flax turns into a gel, which would explain why the bread didn’t rise very well and why it was gummy. Use a flour in the place of the flax and you will see a dramatic difference.

      • walter

        January 2, 2017 at 12:18 pm

        Excuse me, when I said “flax” I meant “flax meal”

        Flax is supposed to be healthy. But I have found it very difficult to bake with flax meal – even when recipes specifically call for flax meal.

        Maybe I’m using the wrong brand, or something.

        • Jeanne

          January 2, 2017 at 3:27 pm

          Walter: Yes, I understand. Flax meal is ground flax seed. It is not meant to be used as a flour. Using it in cup amounts will making whatever you make gummy and gross. Use it only as an additive–a tablespoon here or there.

  5. Bob

    September 1, 2016 at 10:51 am

    Hi Jeanne,
    I have been looking for a gf muti-grain bread and I believe this to be the one. It sounds very good after reading all the comments. I have not tried this yet but am going to very soon. I like the picture, it looks like it is a full size loaf and I think it is very cool. I do hAve a question though, can I add both oats and flax seeds? When I think of a multi grain bread I think of flax seeds and maybe a few other seeds like maybe pumpkin seeds. Please respond back.

    • Jeanne

      September 5, 2016 at 1:28 pm

      Bob: Sure! It’s your bread. You get to add whatever you want. 🙂

  6. Swarna

    February 9, 2016 at 2:01 pm

    Hi Jeanne,

    Would this bread freeze well? I am making this for my 4y son so I can store and use it as needed in a week – 2 weeks. I am GF and grain free so no breads for me and the rest of family eat Gluten breads. Can I remove it from freezer and toast it in the toaster? I wonder if you or any of your readers tried freezing this. I read the comments but did not see any.

    Appreciate your insight.

    Thanks

    • Jeanne

      February 9, 2016 at 3:11 pm

      Swarna: Yes! This bread freezes quite well. I recommend that you let it cool completely, then slice it. Then wrap the bread well and freeze. This way you can remove individual slices while the rest of the loaf remains frozen. 🙂

  7. Lisa

    October 2, 2015 at 11:26 am

    Finally – a great “sandwich” bread! I used 1/2 oat flour and 1/2 brown rice flour and sustituted cornstarch for the tapioca (it’s what I had on hand), I also used 4 large eggs to add a little extra lift (I love the flavour of oat flour, but find that it can make baked goods a little dense).

    Turned out fantastic – looks beautiful, tastes great, has a nice tender crumb. This is it – my quest for perfect sandwich bread is over. Thanks for another winning recipe.

    ps – counting the days until your new book comes out! The pantry will be stocked and I’ve circled the weekend of Oct. 25/26 on the calendar as a “baking bonanza” weekend 🙂

    • Jeanne

      October 6, 2015 at 11:00 am

      Lisa: Thanks for the info and thank you so much for your support! Yay!

  8. kathYAline

    January 13, 2015 at 5:22 pm

    Hi, I am new to GF baking.. I just tried this recipe using brown rice flour, millet flour, sorghum flour and tapioca flour, it came out awesome. I like it much better than wheat bread. Thank you, thank you for Sharing your recipe. Looking forward to trying some of your other recipes.

    • Jeanne

      January 14, 2015 at 8:51 am

      Kath: Yay! I’m so glad!

  9. Luana

    January 2, 2015 at 3:01 pm

    I’ve been baking gluten-free for a few years but yet to find a good bread recipe without potato starch — until now. Thank you! It turned out great. I used brown rice flour/amaranth/millet/flax meal & sweet rice flour instead of milk powder. I used my food processor to mix. I didn’t do the foil tent and it came out just fine anyway. This will become my standard bread recipe now. Love that it’s a full-size loaf — unusual for gluten-free.
    Thank you!

    • Jeanne

      January 2, 2015 at 3:38 pm

      Luana: Yay! I’m so glad!

  10. Julia Whelan

    March 10, 2014 at 5:10 pm

    I have made this bread several times, and I LOVE it. Thank you for this recipe and allthe others. Your flour blend makes very delicious baked goods. Julia

    • Jeanne

      March 11, 2014 at 1:51 pm

      Julia: Yay! And you’re welcome!

  11. KE

    February 25, 2014 at 6:09 am

    Your photo does not do this bread justice! I used sorghum & brown rice for my whole grains (1 1/2 cups each) and this bread came out beautifully! So delicious! Thank you for the wonderful recipe!

    • Jeanne

      February 28, 2014 at 9:21 am

      KE: yay! Thank you for letting me know!

      • Kimberly

        October 24, 2016 at 6:12 pm

        I have to rave again about the bread! The last time I made it I used half oat flour and half brown rice flour (1 1/2 cups each). The bread is holding up even better with this combination, and it still staying very soft for sandwiches after being thawed from frozen. (I am the only person in my family who is gluten-free so it takes a little while to eat up one loaf) I could not be more happy! Thank you so much for the recipe!

        • Jeanne

          November 1, 2016 at 3:20 pm

          Kimberly: Yay! I am so glad!

  12. Carie

    February 4, 2014 at 6:19 am

    Hi Jeanne,

    I tried making this bread in my bread machine but I’m not sure it turned out quite right. It was super dense and chewy…is that how it should come out? I’m wondering if I should mix it all together first before placing it in the bread maker. Any tips? 🙂 Your picture looks delicious.

    • Jeanne

      February 6, 2014 at 2:18 pm

      Carie: Check out my bread machine post. I have info about how to do it in my machine and the comments have ideas on how to do it on other machines.

  13. Carol

    January 22, 2014 at 10:18 am

    Sorry Jeanny but how do you substitute this flours by your all purpose flour? I’ve been looking at your bread recipes and none of them call for you flour-mix, so I found it hard to understand where can I use that mix? Sorry I am not only new to gluten-free, I am also new to baking…

    • Jeanne

      January 23, 2014 at 3:20 pm

      Carol: A few of my breads use a different mix of flours because I was aiming for a different taste situation. If you are looking for breads that use my flour mix, please check out the Soft Sandwich Bread, the Dinner Rolls, and the Cinnamon Buns. 🙂 Also, please check out my “Baking Tips” tab for info on various baking issues you might encounter. Happy baking!

  14. Kathy Imbriani

    December 12, 2013 at 1:16 pm

    I tried this bread and it was wonderful! I managed to get away with using just one egg with six tablespoons of water and 2teaspoons of baking powder. It was so tasty

    • Jeanne

      December 17, 2013 at 9:52 am

      Kathy: Yay!

  15. Connie

    November 30, 2013 at 7:50 pm

    My stepdaughter has celiac and it’s been a most interesting journey of learning gluten free cooking and baking. In the past few years, we’ve had a number of triumphs and a lot of flops. This bread was absolutely the best I’ve baked to date! Thanks so much for sharing your experience. I used brown rice flour, sorghum flour, and equal halves of teff and GF oat flour in place of amaranth. Truly a delightful fresh loaf of bread that came together quite easily. Our whole family loved it!

    I keep a wheat based sourdough starter that I bake with when my stepdaughter isn’t here… I’m going to try to catch some of that wild yeast in our kitchen into a GF flour for a GF sourdough next!

    • Jeanne

      November 30, 2013 at 8:52 pm

      Connie: yay! I’m so glad! And check out my Sourdough starter and Sourdough boule posts!

  16. Christina

    November 12, 2013 at 9:02 am

    Jeanne
    First thing I did when I got up this morning is your bread;it’s perfect and taste great! I was born and leaved in Germany most of my life. If you have ever been in Germany you would know that we love and I mean love our breads/ baked goods.Your Multigrain bread tastes awesome.
    Thank you so much
    Take care und machs gut

    • Jeanne

      November 16, 2013 at 4:16 pm

      Christina: Yay! I’m so glad! Thank you for letting me know!

      • Christina

        November 17, 2013 at 10:43 am

        Jeanne , I wanted to ask you if you are familiar with Locust Bean Gum? ….to replace with the Guar gum and xanthate Gum,they seem to us that a lot in Germany for Gluten free baking.

        Thank you

        • Jeanne

          November 20, 2013 at 5:59 pm

          Christina: I’m not familiar with Locust Bean gum. I will do some research into it. Thanks!

  17. Shelley

    November 5, 2013 at 7:40 am

    Jeanne,

    Thanks for this recipe! I am new to gluten free baking, but am trying it out to see if it helps with some health issues some in our family are experiencing. Your site is great!

    Here’s my question for you though. Normally when I bake (wheat) bread I make a bunch of loaves at once and then freeze them and just thaw out a loaf at time to use when we need it. I was wondering if this gf bread freezes/thaws well without affecting the taste and structure of the bread? I would imagine it would, but thought I would ask the expert! 🙂 Thanks!

    • Jeanne

      November 6, 2013 at 10:27 am

      Shelley: Yes, this bread should freeze well. Make sure it’s completely cool, and then wrap tightly so no air gets in. Also, I usually let it defrost in the refrigerator overnight before I use it. 🙂

  18. SA in Warwick

    July 27, 2013 at 10:55 am

    Thanks for answering so quickly. “If using” sounds optional, so that’s why I asked. Beside the 1 TBL of sugar used to proof the yeast, its another 3 TBLs of either sugar, honey or molasses (whichever is the baker’s choice).

  19. S A in Warwick, RI

    July 27, 2013 at 5:05 am

    Hi. Honey, molasses or additional sugar is listed in the ingredients for this recipe. The directions, however, say to add if using. Is this additional sweetener optional?

    • Jeanne

      July 27, 2013 at 10:31 am

      SA: I have directions for using the additional sweeteners in the recipe. Look for “additional sugar if using” or “honey or molasses if using.” You need to use one of the three.

  20. Ilana

    April 24, 2013 at 10:16 pm

    Hi there!
    First off, I have to thank you Jeanne, for taking the time to share your experiences & recipes. As a professional baker, I thought my life was kind of over when I was told I had to go gluten free. Over the past year your website has become my go to place to check out new recipes & slowly replace all my old wheat recipes. I just baked a loaf of your soft sandwich bread for soup & sandwich night & it was loved by everyone, even those who can consume gluten. It made an excellent turkey sandwich!
    Unfortunately I’m not just posting to heap praise on you, but to ask aquestion. 😉 When I make your soft sandwich bread I have a large amount of dough; when I put the raw dough in the pan it almost reaches to the top. I let it rise to the top then pop it in the oven. I get a slightly doughy bottom, but nothing terrible. My concern is when I make this recipe. There are 4 cups of flour in this as opposed to the 3 in the soft sandwich bread so I’m concerned about being able to fit this into my pan. The only substitution I make is egg replacer for eggs & I feel pretty good about my oven temp. And my loaf pan is metal & the size that’s called for. Any ideas as to what’s going on & if I need to be concerned about trying this recipe?
    Thank you!

    • Jeanne

      April 25, 2013 at 8:29 am

      Ilana: I’m so glad my recipes have been helpful for you! The egg replacer is the issue in terms of the doughy bottoms to your breads. Eggs provide a lot of the structure to baked items. As for the bread fitting into your pan–this should fit just fine. Are you using a 9″x5″ pan? Be sure you’re using that size instead of the smaller 8″ ones. Happy baking!

  21. Lana

    April 19, 2013 at 6:18 pm

    Hello! I have tried this recipe several times now. It tastes great, but the issue I am having as it comes out not fully cooked. I have tried it several times in the bread machine… then went to the “manual method” for improved results, but when slicing, still get a gum covered knife. I had to bake for about double the time. I have started using a oven themometre, and live at an altitude of approx 1800 feet. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated. This is often the case with most of my gf baking. My daughter is on a gluten casien free diet, and I would love to get the hang of this soon! Much appreciated!

    Lana

    • Jeanne

      April 20, 2013 at 3:54 pm

      Lana: Hm. Since you are baking at high altitude, your gluten-free baked items should come out better than they normally would at sea level. Since you already have an oven thermometer, you’ve done the first thing I would have suggested to you. Are you making the recipe exactly as written? Are you using eggs or an egg substitute? Also, what kind of pan are you using?

      • Lana

        April 20, 2013 at 5:20 pm

        Jeanne,

        Thank you for your reply. I believe that I am following the recipe as close as possible. I weigh out my dry ingredients rather than use measuring cups. I do use eggs. The one thing that I may have not measured as accurately is the water as my mixture came out very dry. So the last time I added a couple tablespoons. I use a single thickness breadpan that has a non stick coating.

        • Jeanne

          April 20, 2013 at 5:38 pm

          Lana: Ah, OK. I would go with the amount of water listed in the recipe and see how that goes. Let me know!

          • Lana

            April 20, 2013 at 8:18 pm

            Will do, it seemed incredibly dense! will have faith 🙂 Thanks for your time, I will let you know how it goes.

            L

          • Jeanne

            April 24, 2013 at 3:25 pm

            Lana: It is denser than a wheat white bread. The whole grains and the alternative sweeteners contribute to that. But, it should look it does in my photo.

  22. best breadmaker

    April 18, 2013 at 11:36 am

    I would like to thank you for the energy you’ve put in writing this web site. I am looking to see otherblog post from you in the future. please also excuse my bad english as it’s not my first language.

  23. Mischa

    March 13, 2013 at 4:23 am

    I had gestational diabetes with my last pregnancy and chances are I will have it again with this one (hereditary) and was hoping you could help me with the nutritional values (mainly carbs) for this bread. I am wanting to stick with gluten free during pregnancy, and also control the diabetes completely with my diet. Hope you can help! Thanks and can’t wait to try this recipe!!

    • Jeanne

      March 13, 2013 at 7:07 am

      Mischa: Unfortunately, I don’t have nutritional values for my recipes. I know that there are sites on the web that will do this for you–some are free and some charge a fee. I would recommend doing a search for one of those.

    • Dayna

      March 16, 2013 at 8:37 am

      I would try using sprouted grains like sprouted sorghum or millet. Sprouting turns the grains into vegetables. It reduces the amount of carbs and ramps up the vitamin and mineral content plus, because sprouting helps to break down some of the complex sugars, it makes it easier on the digestive system. I am trying this recipe for the first time today. Jeanne’s other bread recipe is fabulous so i believe this will be just as tasty. I am using 1 cup of white rice flour, 1 cup of sprouted sorghum, and 1 cup of sprouted millet. I also used sweet rice flour instead of the dry milk powder because that is what i had on hand. It is rising in the oven now. Hope this helps! I also have a question for Jeanne. The amount of dough filled my bread pan 3/4 of the way full. If i allow it to double in bulk, do you think it will it overflow during baking?

      • Dayna

        March 16, 2013 at 8:53 am

        Nevermind Jeanne, I just found out for myself. The smoking oven says it all.

        • Jeanne

          March 16, 2013 at 2:53 pm

          Dayna: Ack!

      • Jeanne

        March 16, 2013 at 2:54 pm

        Dayna: Ooo, fun idea! Let me know how it tastes!

  24. Tracy

    February 3, 2013 at 11:54 am

    After several failures with an olive bread recipe from another site, I got brave and experimented! I decreased the salt by 1/2 tsp and added 20 chopped up green olives (along with the previous add-ins of rosemary and flax seed). And, as every recipe of yours, it turned out perfect! This recipe is my go-to bread that I now make every week. Can’t wait to try some more variations. Garlic bread maybe…

    • Jeanne

      February 3, 2013 at 3:05 pm

      Tracy: Yay! I’m so glad!

  25. Ali

    February 3, 2013 at 9:27 am

    I was wondering what you’d suggest for making an oat bread. My mother’s very fond of an Oat nut bread and I’m not sure about how to go about adding oats. I don’t suppose you’ve suggestions? 🙂 By the way, I tried making the soft sandwich bread and I was quite pleased! Not like those nasty little GF loaves in the grocery store.

    • Jeanne

      February 3, 2013 at 3:06 pm

      Ali: I would recommend using oat flour as one of the cups of flour. And you can sprinkle oats on top of the loaf right before it bakes. Be sure to use oats that are labeled “gluten-free.” Happy baking!

  26. Beth

    January 28, 2013 at 10:43 am

    Can I use my Zojirushi bread machine to make this (or the “white” sandwich bread?)

    • Jeanne

      February 1, 2013 at 12:21 pm

      Beth: Yes, you can use your bread machine. That said, you will need to tinker with the setting in order to get the one that works the best. This bread works best on the “gluten-free” setting on my Breadman bread machine.

  27. Tracy

    January 28, 2013 at 8:57 am

    Love this bread! I used the flours as listed, except millet flour in place of the amaranth and added flax seeds. I also added a tbsp of fresh rosemary. Made the best ham sandwiches! Thanks for another great recipe.

    • Jeanne

      February 1, 2013 at 12:22 pm

      Tracy: Ooo, yum!

  28. Cheryl

    December 16, 2012 at 1:19 pm

    I’m curious, why does this recipe call for less xanthan gum compared to your soft sandwich bread which requires more? Thanks

    • Jeanne

      December 18, 2012 at 10:40 am

      Cheryl: Good eyes! It is because the Soft Sandwich Bread is designed to be a bit more smooth in the crumb than the Multigrain Bread. Also, I developed each of these at different points and didn’t pay compare the xanthan gum amount in either. It’s so interesting–I should go look at the amount in all of my bread/roll recipes.

  29. lisa

    November 24, 2012 at 9:52 am

    Have you found an ‘egg-free’ , gluten free, dairy free bread recipe? These allergies have slaughtered our diet, and the struggle to get a little one to eat everyday is exhausting. School lunches are the hardest.

    • Jeanne

      November 25, 2012 at 10:10 am

      Lisa: You can make any of my bread gluten-free and egg-free. For the egg, use 1 TBL of ground flax seed, mixed with 3 TBL hot water. Let sit for about 15 minutes (until it gels and cools). Then use this for each egg in your recipes. The bread won’t rise as much as bread with egg, but it will be fine and will taste great. The flax adds some nutty crunch to the the breads, too.

  30. Cheryl

    November 13, 2012 at 8:53 pm

    Hi Jeanne, I am ready to make this lovely-sounding loaf, but I am wondering what to do with the optional flax seeds, oats, or sunflower seeds you mention in the recipe. Am I supposed to put them INTO the dough, or on top of the dough? I am leaning toward mixing sunflower seeds into the dough, but I don’t want to make the recipe until I know which one you had in mind. I am so happy to see a multi-grain loaf offered here!
    Thanks!
    Cheryl

    • Jeanne

      November 14, 2012 at 10:15 am

      Cheryl: Oops, thanks for catching that. You add them with the dry ingredients. I will change that now. Thanks!

  31. suzanne

    October 11, 2012 at 4:44 pm

    Our family loved this bread recipe. I left out the xantham gum and used 1tsp cream of tarter and 2 T flax seed. I also used no sugar only honey and for the grain I used quinoa and teff. I love your flour mix and enjoy all your recipes. Thanks for sharing.

    • admin

      October 12, 2012 at 5:24 pm

      Suzanne: Yay! I’m so glad you made the recipe your own!

  32. Amanda

    August 30, 2012 at 10:31 am

    Hi there, love this recipe it made the nicest loaf of bread. My question is what can i substitute the amaranth flour with, i cant stand the smell or the taste of it. Thank you

    • admin

      August 30, 2012 at 11:29 am

      Amanda: More sorghum is nice. Maybe millet? Teff would be fun to try. I would experiment. And I’m so glad you like the bread!

  33. Christine

    July 6, 2012 at 5:14 pm

    I recently bought a Zojirushi bread maker with a customizable cycle so I can totally program the preheat, knead, rise and bake times. Why would you say to use the “regular” setting? Wouldn’t that have more rises than necessary for GF flours? I can’t wait to try this recipe, but will wait to hear from you regarding this. Thanks.

    • admin

      July 6, 2012 at 6:46 pm

      Christine: I say that because I don’t have a programmable bread machine. The “regular” cycle has the length one needs for this bread. The GF cycle does not. Hence, I say use the regular cycle.

  34. Robbie

    July 4, 2012 at 2:59 pm

    Aloha Jeanne,
    I just saw this recipe and want to try it; however in my previous comment on the AP Flour mix I stated that I’m trying to also do the Type ‘O’ diet and Sorghum is not good for me. Would I be able to use Quinoa flour instead? I just bought Instant yeast as I am planning to use a Bread Maker . . . can I use that instead of the Active Yeast?
    Look forward to hearing back from you . . . Robbie

    • admin

      July 5, 2012 at 12:48 am

      Robbie: Sure, go ahead and use quinoa and see what happens. I think the best thing to do is to experiment and see what happens. Also, instant yeast should be fine! Happy baking!

  35. Lucinda

    June 30, 2012 at 11:47 am

    Your bread recipe sounds great and the best part is I can use my bread machine to make it! Thank you for all your hard work on your recipes it is always nice to use them. Lucinda

  36. Shaundrah

    June 20, 2012 at 9:28 am

    Thank you is much! I’m going to make this now. 🙂

  37. Shaundrah

    June 19, 2012 at 8:06 pm

    Can you give me the instructions for baking this in the bread machine? I would really appreciate it. I have not been successful at baking bread in the over, but have no issues with the bread machine. Thanks!

    • admin

      June 19, 2012 at 9:41 pm

      Shaundrah: I have baked this bread many times in the bread machine. Tips: use the “regular” setting–not the gluten-free setting. Put the eggs in first and then the yeast water. Then the other liquids. Mix all of the dry ingredients in a bowl and then add to the bread machine. Using a plastic or wooden spoon (so you don’t scratch the container) pre-mix the dough until it is wet. This helps the machine mix it well. Then turn on your machine and let it go. I usually check it a few times in the beginning to make sure that it is mixing well. Happy baking!

  38. KellieKnits

    April 15, 2012 at 4:31 am

    I just had my first piece of toast with peach jam in months! I made this in my bread machine yesterday. The texture perfect and the flavour is divine AND I didn’t have to go to the local specialty bakery and pay $9 for it. I love your site and can’t wait to try more. Thank you for giving me hope!

    • admin

      April 16, 2012 at 9:38 pm

      Kellie: Yay!! I’m so happy! Thanks for letting me know!

  39. Willie

    April 9, 2012 at 5:28 pm

    I have this bread comming out of the oven in a few minutes, I would like to make cinnamon and raisin bread. Can I just add those two ingredients?
    I am also looking for pizza dough recipe, do you have one?

    • admin

      April 10, 2012 at 7:16 pm

      Willie: Yes, I’m guessing it would be fine to just add raisins and cinnamon–although you will have to play with the amounts. Also, I have a pizza crust on the site–look under Recipes!

  40. casandra

    March 6, 2012 at 12:53 pm

    Would this recipe work without the brown rice flower? My son has just been diagnosed with egg, rice, and wheat allergies.

    • admin

      March 6, 2012 at 8:42 pm

      Casandra: Yes, I would just sub more sorghum in place of the brown rice flour.

  41. Theresa Schaefer

    January 5, 2012 at 9:52 am

    I always put my bread in the frig as we use very little at times and don’t want it to spoil. Why are you saying not to refrigerate?I love your site and am sharing it with others. My neighbor liked the Multi-grain so I am giving her the recipe.ZF83

    thanks,

    Theresa

    • admin

      January 6, 2012 at 9:23 am

      Theresa: The fridge changes the consistency and caused most home-baked goods to become hard and dried out. Please note that while home-baked goods do spoil more quickly because they are not full of preservatives, they do stay good for a few days at room temperature. If you don’t eat it within a couple of days, I would wrap the remainder very well and freeze it.

  42. Angie

    October 8, 2011 at 7:06 pm

    I’m trying to find a bread recipe that’s gluten free & egg free for my daughter. I’ve used Ener-G several times but am wondering if something else would be better. Do you know if it would work in this recipe?

    • admin

      October 9, 2011 at 1:32 pm

      Angie: This recipe works fairly well with an egg replacer. I use 1 TBL ground flax seeds to 3 TBL hot water for each egg. Let sit for about 15 minutes and then whisk. The bread will be a bit more dense than it would be with eggs, but it tastes great!

  43. Regee

    July 7, 2011 at 10:32 am

    This is rising as I type:-)
    I used a .5cup millet & amaranth each (instead of 1cup amaranth).
    Also guar gum, coconut oil, 1T honey, 2T molasses, & milk powder.
    I’m excited to bake this, my last loaf was ‘hole-y’ (large holes thru-out the loaf) & after the 1st day only tasted good toasted……….
    What’s your opinion on yeasts? I accidentally got rapidrise, so it didn’t take but about 20 min. to double in bulk
    Thanks for sharing!!

    • admin

      July 8, 2011 at 12:33 pm

      Regee: I like active dry yeast because I think that it gives the bread the right amount of time to rise. But, science says that yeast is yeast, so I think it’s fine to use what you have.

  44. Kelly P

    January 27, 2011 at 5:38 am

    I have learned I have a much easier time baking by weight instead of cup for flour. Can all of these flours use the 140 grams per cup rule of thumb or do I need to look up individual flour weights?

    Also, thank you so much for your recipes and flour mix. I have tried other flour mixes and the smell of the end result was always off putting. Your blend is amazing. I have decided your GF white bread with nutella is heaven on a plate.

    • admin

      January 27, 2011 at 9:37 pm

      Kelly: Greetings! I have just updated the post to include weight measurements! Thank you for reminding me to do that! And I’m so glad you like the other bread recipe, too! Yay!

  45. Rachel

    January 7, 2011 at 12:41 pm

    I love your site and your recipes have been a complete success for everything I’ve tried so far. I’m in the middle of trying this one and wondered if you had any suggestions on how to successfully substitute yeast. I suspect one of my sons is sensitive to it and would love to avoid it if I can. I got confused about the flours though. In the ingredients list, 3 C is called for, but when mixing, it lists 4 C total. I went with the 4 C and the dough seemed really thick. I also noticed you said gf flours can often be stickier. How “sticky” should the dough look?

    • admin

      January 7, 2011 at 1:02 pm

      Rachel: I know where your confusion is: the 1 C of tapioca flour is one of the flours I mean when I say 4 C total of flours. This bread does have a pretty sticky dough–but a stand mixer should be able to handle it. I also make it in my bread maker–and it works fine.

      About yeast: unfortunately, there really is no substitute for yeast in a yeasted bread. If your son is sensitive to it, I would make a quick bread (i.e., one that uses baking powder or baking soda) that is more on the plain side (i.e., not sugary). As I think through my recipes, I don’t have one that would fit the bill for a sandwich bread. I will put that on my list of recipes to try to develop when I get a chance. In her book, The Gluten-Free Almond Flour Cookbook, Elana Amsterdam has a couple of recipes for non-yeasted quick breads that might fit the bill for what you’re looking for. They are nut-based–her base flour, as you can tell, is almond flour. I haven’t baked from her book yet, but I know it gets good reviews, so you might want to check it out.

      I hope this helps!!

      • Rachel

        January 7, 2011 at 2:08 pm

        Thanks for all the info. I’ll have to look into that. Learning to bake gluten free is turning out to be quite the struggle so I’m very grateful for all the recipes you’ve worked out and share with us all. Keep up the great work.

        • admin

          January 9, 2011 at 1:40 pm

          Rachel: Yes, it is a steep learning curve. But keep at it!! And I’m always happy to help and answer questions!

  46. Tehara

    October 6, 2010 at 4:08 am

    Had a question for you…why do you oil and flour your pan, I have always just oiled mine, does the flour help it rise up the sides? I’m still struggling with getting my bread to stay risen, but it tastes good 🙂
    Thanks,
    Tehara

    • admin

      October 6, 2010 at 4:20 pm

      Tehara:

      Thanks for the question! I oil and flour my pans because gluten-free dough tends to be more sticky than wheat-based doughs. So, the flour provides some extra de-stickification (that’s the technical word for it…:) ). Actually, flouring the sides wouldn’t help it climb up the sides. Also, you’re right–gf baked goods are notorious for having troubles rising. If you are having problems getting the bread to rise, I would find a warmer place to let it rise and let it rise longer.

      Thanks!
      –Jeanne

      • Lisa

        November 26, 2012 at 7:47 am

        Thanks for the tip. I did try a simular method with chia seeds. I let them soak and gel for 15 mins as well. The bread came out tasty, but very dense and had a sticky texture to it.

        Ill try your flax seed idea today. 🙂

        • Jeanne

          November 29, 2012 at 3:56 pm

          Lisa: Yeah, the seeds/water replacement for the eggs is going to create a denser bread that you get with actual eggs because eggs provide a lot of the structure that makes bread fluffy. You could also try cutting back on the amount of water that you mix with the seeds in order to come up with a ratio that is to your liking. Happy baking!

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All Recipes In Alphabetical Order

My recipes, alphabetical order

Angel Sugar Cookies

Animal Crackers

2 Apple Pie Fillings

Baguettes

Banana Bread

Banana Oatmeal Muffins

Bear’s Ginger Oat Muffins

Berry Cake

Best Blueberry Muffins

Bittersweet Mocha Coffee Cake

Blackberry Cobbler

Blueberry Crumb Bars

Blueberry Honey Muffins

Blueberry-Lime Coffee Cake

Blueberry Snack Cake

Bread, Sandwich, Multi-Grain

Bread, Sandwich, Soft

Bread, Sourdough (boule–round loaf)
–Sourdough Starter

Brown Butter Pound Cake

Brownies

Brownies, Bittersweet

Brownie Bark

Butter Cookies (Spritz, Pressed)

Buttermilk Biscuits

Chantilly Meringuée (or Elegant Ice Cream)

Cheese Crackers and Straws

Cheese Straws (made with gluten-free Puff Pastry)

Cherry Pie

Chocolate Almond Cake

Chocolate Bouchons

(Decadent) Chocolate Cake

Chocolate Chip Meringue Cookies (dairy-free)

Chocolate Chip Cookies and Chocolate Chunk Cookies, 2 Recipes

Chocolate Chip Cookies, Shortbread-type (egg-free)

Chocolate Chip Meringue Cookies

Chocolate Chip Scones

Chocolate Chocolate Chip Biscotti

Chocolate Clementine (orange) Cake

Chocolate Dump (It) Cake

Chocolate Pecan (Tar Heel) Pie

Chocolate Pound Cake

Chocolate Sheet Cake (w/Chocolate Pecan Frosting)

Cinnamon Rolls, with or w/o Cream Cheese Frosting

Cinnamon Swirl Sour Cream Coffee Cake

Coffee Chocolate Almond Crunch Bars (egg-free)

Cornbread

Cranberry Cake

Cranberry Sauce

Crazy Cake (dairy-free and egg free)–w/instructions for cupcakes, too

Cream Cheese Pound Cake

Cream Cheese Truffle Brownie Cookies

Cream Scones

Crullers (donuts) (with a selection of glazes)

Cupcakes (chocolate), use the Fast, Easy, and Elegant Fudge Cake recipe and bake for 30 mins. or the Crazy Cake recipe for a vegan alternative

Decadent Chocolate Cake

Dilly Cottage Cheese Bread

Dinner Rolls (yeasted)–like Parker House Rolls

Doughnuts (cake-style), 2 Recipes (Plain + Pumpkin)

Fast, Easy, and Elegant Fudge Cake

Flour Mix (Jeanne’s Gluten-Free All-Purpose Flour Mix)

Flour, Self Rising

French Breakfast Muffins

Fruit Drop Cookies

Fruitcake–aka, Country Christmas Cake (the best fruicake you will ever eat!)

Fudge

Garlic Truffle Oil Popcorn

Ginger Molasses Cookies

Gingerbread Cake with Persimmon

Graham Crackers

Hamburger Buns

Honey Vanilla Pound Cake

Ho Hos

Hot Cross Buns, Traditional

Hot Cross Buns, Apple Cinnamon

Irish Soda Bread

Italian Chocolate Kiss Cookies (Baci di Cioccolato)–chocolate-almond cookies w/chocolate filling

Jam-Filled Butter Cookies–Thumbprint cookies

Jam-Filled Shortbread Cookies (nut-free Linzer cookies)

Kentucky Bourbon Cake

King Cake

Krumkake (Scandinavian Crisp Cookies)

Lemon Sour Cream Pound Cake

Lemon Buttermilk Snack Cake

Lentil-Tomato Pasta Sauce

Linzer Cookie, Giant (nut-free)

Little Tiered Chocolate Cakes

Madeleines (Classic)

Maple Bundt Cake

Marbled Coffee Cake (Viennese-style)–chocolate swirl in a lemon cake

Matzo

Mocha Bundt Cake

Nanaimo Bars

Nut and Jam Snack Bars

Orange and Poppy Seed Quick Bread

Oatmeal Cookies, Salty (like the Teaism cookies)

Oreos

Pan Gravy, Classic

Pancakes

Pancakes and Waffles, Sourdough

Pasta (Homemade)

Pasta with Brussels Sprouts, Chili, and Bacon

Peach Cake

Pepparkakkor (Swedish Gingersnaps)

Pie Crust, Flaky

Pie Crust Crackers

Pistachio Cookies with White Chocolate Ganache

Pizza Crust (NYC thin-style)

Pizza, Grilled

Pound Cake

Puff Pastry

Puff Pastry Cheese Straws

Puff Pastry Shells (Vols au Vent)

Puff Pastry Turnovers

Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Cake

Pumpkin Spice Bundt Cake

Pumpkin Pie (with directions on how to adapt to dairy-free)

Ranch Dressing

Ricotta Pound Cake

Risotto (Easy, cooked in Pressure Cooker)

Rosettes (light and delicate Scandinavian fried cookies)

Salmon (or Halibut) Croquettes w/ Spicy Remoulade Sauce

Salty Oat Cookies–like the Teaism cookies

Shortbread Cookies (w/Oat Flour and Ginger)

Shortcake Biscuits (including recipe for Strawberry Shortcake)

Skordalia (Greek potato-garlic-lemon dip)

S’more Whoopie Pies

Soup with Beans, Turkey, Potatoes, Basil and Cumin

Sour Cream Bundt Cake

Sour Cream Orange Coffee Cake

Sourdough Bread (boule–round loaf)
–Sourdough Starter

Strawberry Cake

Strawberry (or Raspberry) Mascarpone Tart with Pecan Shortbread Crust

Streuselkuchen (yeasted German Crumb Cake)

Tar Heel (Chocolate Pecan) Pie

Texas Sheet Cake

Thin Mint Cookies (like the Girl Scout cookies of the same name)

Toaster (or Portable) Tarts–like Pop Tarts

Tortillas (Flour)

Tres Leches Cake

Tunnel of Fudge CAke

Turkey Meatloaf

Victoria Sponge Cake (Jam-Filled)

Vols au Vent (Puff Pastry Shells)

Waffles (Buttermilk)

Waffles (Sourdough)

Whipped Cream Cake

Zucchini Bread (with or w/o chocolate chips)

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