High-Fiber Apple Walnut Strudel
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I will be honest: gluten free pastries are the hardest category to master. Croissants, puff pastry, Danish dough, these are techniques that depend on gluten to create hundreds of flaky layers. Replacing that structure requires a completely different approach, and the results, while delicious, are not identical to their wheat based counterparts. They are their own thing. And once you accept that, the pressure lifts and you can appreciate how good gluten free pastries actually taste.
Nutella star bread is one of the most impressive looking things you will ever pull out of your oven, and it is surprisingly achievable for an intermediate baker. The dough is enriched with butter and eggs, which gives it enough flexibility to handle the shaping without cracking. The Nutella filling does most of the flavor heavy lifting, and the visual impact of the star shape makes it a showstopper at any gathering.
For simpler pastries, our scone recipes are the place to start. GF scones actually come together faster than wheat scones because there is no gluten to toughen if you overwork the dough. Cold butter, a quick mix, pat and cut, bake. Fifteen minutes of hands on time and you have fresh pastries. The strawberry sesame sourdough scones are a reader favorite that uses sourdough discard for tang and depth.
These 12 recipes include everything from beginner scones to advanced laminated doughs. Start with scones or cinnamon rolls, work your way up to star bread, and save croissants for when you are feeling ambitious and have a free afternoon.
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 …
You can achieve a flaky, layered texture, though the mechanism is different. Cold butter laminated into GF dough still creates steam pockets during baking that produce layers. The results are slightly more tender and less stretchy than wheat pastry but genuinely delicious. Keeping everything very cold during preparation is the most important factor.
Scones. They require minimal technique, come together in 15 minutes, and are very forgiving. Unlike croissants or puff pastry, scones do not need lamination or precise folding. Just combine the dry ingredients, cut in cold butter, add liquid, shape, and bake.
Use an enriched yeast dough with eggs, butter, and a GF flour blend. The dough will be stickier than wheat cinnamon roll dough, so roll it out on a well floured surface or between sheets of plastic wrap. Fill, roll, slice, let rise, and bake. Our recipe produces soft, fluffy rolls with a coconut glaze.
Yes, but they are an advanced project. The lamination process, folding butter into the dough to create layers, works with GF dough but requires patience and practice. The dough needs to stay cold, the butter needs to be pliable but not melting, and the folding must be done carefully. The result is worth it but plan for a multi hour project.
Overworking the dough or using too much flour blend are the usual culprits. Mix and handle the dough as little as possible. Use just enough flour to prevent sticking. Cold ingredients, especially butter, help create a tender crumb. If a recipe calls for cutting in butter, the pieces should remain visible in the dough before baking.
Yes, and it adds wonderful flavor and tenderness. Sourdough discard works well in scones, muffins, pancakes, and enriched doughs. The acidity relaxes the starches and produces a more tender texture. Our strawberry sesame sourdough scones are a great example of discard pastry baking.