High-Protein Quinoa Sourdough Bread
This Recipe is for Members Only Get access to this recipe and our entire cookbook & recipe collection for just $1 Get Instant Access Here …

This is where the serious bread baking lives. The 84 recipes in this collection go well beyond basic sandwich loaves into territory that most people assume is off limits for gluten free bakers: baguettes, ciabatta, challah, brioche, pretzels, focaccia, bagels, naan, and more. Every one of these has been developed and tested specifically for gluten free flour, not adapted from a wheat recipe with a simple flour swap.
The difference between artisanal bread and everyday bread is technique. More time, more attention to hydration and fermentation, more careful shaping. But the results justify the effort. A properly made gluten free baguette has a crackling crust that shatters when you tear it, an open crumb with irregular holes, and a wheaty, complex flavor that comes from long fermentation. That is not marketing language. That is what these recipes actually produce.
The French baguette recipe is one of the most transformative on this site. People bake it and message us saying they cried because they had not had real bread in years. I understand that reaction completely. Good bread is emotional when you have been without it. The recipe uses a simple overnight cold ferment that develops flavor while you sleep, and the baking technique with steam in the oven produces a crust that rivals anything from a bakery.
For enriched breads like challah and brioche, the eggs and butter in the dough provide natural structure and tenderness. These are actually easier to make gluten free than lean breads because the fat inhibits staleness and the eggs provide lift and binding. If you are intimidated by bread baking, enriched doughs are a surprisingly forgiving place to start.
Sourdough recipes appear throughout this collection because many artisanal breads benefit from the flavor depth and structural improvements that natural fermentation provides. You do not need a sourdough starter for every recipe here, but if you have one, it opens up a whole other dimension of baking.

This Recipe is for Members Only Get access to this recipe and our entire cookbook & recipe collection for just $1 Get Instant Access Here …

This Recipe is for Members Only Get access to this recipe and our entire cookbook & recipe collection for just $1 Get Instant Access Here …

This Recipe is for Members Only Get access to this recipe and our entire cookbook & recipe collection for just $1 Get Instant Access Here …
This Recipe is for Members Only Get access to this recipe and our entire cookbook & recipe collection for just $1 Get Instant Access Here …
This Recipe is for Members Only Get access to this recipe and our entire cookbook & recipe collection for just $1 Get Instant Access Here …
This Recipe is for Members Only Get access to this recipe and our entire cookbook & recipe collection for just $1 Get Instant Access Here …
This Recipe is for Members Only Get access to this recipe and our entire cookbook & recipe collection for just $1 Get Instant Access Here …
This Recipe is for Members Only Get access to this recipe and our entire cookbook & recipe collection for just $1 Get Instant Access Here …
This Recipe is for Members Only Get access to this recipe and our entire cookbook & recipe collection for just $1 Get Instant Access Here …
This Recipe is for Members Only Get access to this recipe and our entire cookbook & recipe collection for just $1 Get Instant Access Here …
This Recipe is for Members Only Get access to this recipe and our entire cookbook & recipe collection for just $1 Get Instant Access Here …
This Recipe is for Members Only Get access to this recipe and our entire cookbook & recipe collection for just $1 Get Instant Access Here …
This Recipe is for Members Only Get access to this recipe and our entire cookbook & recipe collection for just $1 Get Instant Access Here …
This Recipe is for Members Only Get access to this recipe and our entire cookbook & recipe collection for just $1 Get Instant Access Here …
Yes. The techniques are different from wheat bread, but the results are genuinely excellent. Baguettes with crackling crust, ciabatta with open crumb, focaccia with olive oil richness, these are all achievable with the right flour blends, hydration levels, and baking methods. The recipes in this section have been tested extensively.
Psyllium husk. It forms a gel that gives the dough stretch and structure, allowing it to hold shape and trap gas bubbles during fermentation. Without psyllium, most artisanal GF breads are flat and dense. Whole psyllium husk powder, finely ground, at about 2 tablespoons per cup of flour blend.
Steam in the oven is the key. Place a cast iron pan on the bottom rack and pour boiling water into it when you put the bread in. This creates steam that keeps the surface moist during the first few minutes of baking, allowing the crust to expand before setting. High heat, 450 to 475 degrees, also helps develop a crackling crust.
That is normal and expected. Gluten free artisanal bread dough runs at 80 to 100 percent hydration, which means it is wet and sticky by design. Do not add more flour. Use wet hands or oiled hands when shaping. The high hydration is what creates the open crumb and tender texture you are after.
Artisanal bread emphasizes flavor development through longer fermentation, higher hydration for open crumb structure, and baking techniques like steam injection for a better crust. Regular GF bread, like sandwich loaves, prioritizes convenience and consistent shape. Both have their place, but artisanal bread rewards extra time and attention with superior taste and texture.
A Dutch oven is helpful but not required. It traps steam and creates an environment similar to a professional bread oven. If you do not have one, a baking stone or sheet with a pan of water on the bottom rack works well. Some of our recipes are specifically designed for standard baking sheets.
Lean artisanal bread like baguettes is best eaten the day it is baked. Enriched breads like challah and brioche stay soft for 2 to 3 days. All gluten free bread freezes well. Slice before freezing and toast individual slices as needed. This is the most practical way to always have fresh tasting bread.
Not in the same way because GF dough lacks the elasticity of wheat dough. Simple shapes work best: rounds, ovals, and pan loaves. For baguettes and rolls, use wet hands and gentle handling. Braiding, like for challah, is possible with enriched doughs that have more structure from eggs and butter. Practice makes a significant difference.