hi! when i first went gluten free and started making my own bread, I used a standard bread machine. I cannot tell you how many not-so-great loaves of bread I ended up making! Quite a lot!
Then I stated making it by hand (and using my kitchen aid mixer) and and it was so much better! You do not have to punch dough gluten free yeast bread or knead it! It's super easy! A great starter recipe is Elizabeth Barbone's Sandwich bread:
Elizabeth Barbone's EASY GLUTEN-FREE SANDWICH BREAD RECIPE
Dry Ingredients
2 1/2 cups Brown Rice Flour
2/3 cup cornstarch
2/3 cup dry milk powder (you can soy milk powder in place of this for a casein free loaf!)
1 Tablespoon xanthan gum
1 teaspoon salt
Wet Ingredients
1 3/4 cups warm water
1 packet active dry yeast
2 Tablespoons vegetable oil
2 large eggs
- In a small bowl, combine water and yeast. Stir to combine.
- In a medium mixing bowl, whisk together dry ingredients.
- Add yeast mixture, vegetable oil and eggs.
- Using an electric mixer, mix dough for five minutes on medium-high speed.
- Lightly grease a 9x5-inch loaf pan with vegetable spay.
- Spread batter evenly into the pan.
- Lightly grease a piece of plastic wrap and cover the pan.
- Allow dough to rise for 1 hour.
- Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.
- Bake dough for 55 minutes or until internal temperature reaches 208°-211°F.
- Remove bread from oven and allow it to cool in the pan for five minutes.
- After five minutes, turn bread out onto a wire rack to cool completely.
Makes one 9x5 loaf
.
BUT If you really want to use a bread machine (as I know it's hard to find time to really make a loaf, I would recommend using a "Breadman" brand machine that has a gluten free cycle. Like this one:
http://www.amazon.com/Breadman-TR875-2-Pound-Breadmaker-Stainless/dp/B000FZZ0VE
If you make gluten free bread in a regular bread machine it will work, but the bread probably won't rise as much as would on a gluten free cycle (which does NOT punch down the dough for a second or third punch down and rise -- since the dough does not have gluten proteins to support additional rises, you don't need them!)
I hope this helps! Elizabeth's bread is really good and it's very easy to make without a machine!
Sincerely,
Carrie @ www.gingerlemongirl.com
PS... Here is my post on her loaf:
http://gingerlemongirl.blogspot.com/2008/01/elizabeth-barbones-easy-gluten-free.html