As you may recall, I’ve been trying for a while to get really good chewy gluten-free bagel going, and have found that even the recipes that contained eggs resulted in more fluffy bagels, rather than that chew and density that goes along with the Montreal style bagels. As I started playing around with wild yeast starters, I found that I was starting to see some of the texture I was after in the baguettes, especially when slow-risen overnight.
So with a wild-yeast starter in hand (I use a slight variation of Dr. Jean Layton’s sourdough starter and flour blend — I use a smaller amount of white bean flour, AND I also substitute half the sorghum flour for millet flour) — at 100% hydration levels.
When feeding my starter, I use equal parts of the gluten-free flour blend and water, usually about 1/2 cup of each. I whisk it well, and then add to the wild yeast starter I’ve had in the fridge. Before you feed your starter, let it warm up to room temperature (After all, YOU don’t like eating when you’re cold and sleepy, do you?!), and let it sit at room temperature after until you see lots of bubbles developing. About every third time I feed it, I also add about 1 1/2 teaspoons of potato flour to the mix.
Before using the wild yeast starter (or “hooch”), I find it is most effective if fed the day before or first thing in the morning before you use it. With wheat starter, the purpose of feeding (up to 3 days before), is to strengthen the gluten-structure of the starter, as well as to get the wild yeast perked up. With the gluten-free starter, obviously there is no worry about whether the gluten is happy or not, so its just a matter of waking up with the wild yeast and making sure its well fed and active.
A couple of things I’ve found help make gluten-free bagels that actually look like real bagels:
Printer friendly (GF wild yeast bagels)
Gluten-free Wild yeast bagels
Makes 7-8 medium sized bagels
Combine all the dry ingredients in a medium bowl and mix well. Add the “hooch” and the water to the mixing bowl of a stand mixer. Add the dry ingredients and mix with the paddle attachment at medium speed for 4 minutes until the batter is very smooth.
Put the batter into a piping bag (or alternately, you can use a large Ziploc bag with the corner cut out). Pipe out 7-8 bagels onto parchment paper (each one 3-4” across). Cover with plastic wrap and let rise in a cool place for at least 4 hours (or overnight in the fridge). Cut the parchment in squares around each bagel.
Preheat the oven to 450 degrees.
Prepare a water bath in a large dutch oven — bring the pot of water to the boil, and add 2 Tablespoons brown rice syrup. When the water boils, add 1 Tablespoon baking soda. Drop the bagels in the water (parchment side up — it will detach on its own). Boil briefly, 30 seconds per side, removing the parchment square as you take the bagels out of the water bath and remove to a parchment lined baking sheet. Sprinkle with seeds if desired.
Bake at 450 degrees for 20-25 minutes. Let cool on a baking rack before slicing open.
As with all things yeasty over here, we’re sending this over to YeastSpotting. Go check out all the fabulous things baked with yeast
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