Gluten-Free Peasant Bread Recipe
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This gluten-free peasant bread has such a nice texture — soft and spongy, light and moist — and moreover, when sliced, the pieces hold their shape. Bread lovers, even those not adhering to a gluten-free diet, rave about the texture and flavor of this bread. This recipe comes from my cookbook, Bread Toast Crumbs!
For the past year, the most frequent question asked on this blog is this: Can the peasant bread be made gluten-free?
Everyone knows someone — a friend, an uncle, a cousin — recently diagnosed with Celiac disease who has had to forget bread as he/she once knew it.
You might have this friend, this uncle, this cousin. I do. And you might want to treat him/her to a loaf of freshly baked bread but you don’t know where to begin.
This is the position my mother found herself in a month ago while preparing for the arrival of her brother-in-law, who had recently adopted a gluten-free diet. Panicked by the thought of serving dinner without warm, fresh bread on the table, she called asking if I had ever successfully made the peasant bread gluten free. I answered as I have to everyone who has asked thus far: no, not yet.
It seemed like a good time to take an earnest stab at making a gluten-free peasant bread. Unfortunately, a respectable loaf did not materialize before my uncle’s arrival, but one has since.
Gluten-Free Bread Baking Tips
- For every cup of flour (128g), use about a teaspoon of xanthum gum.
- For every 2 cups of flour (128g), use 1 egg.
- Use a little more yeast proportionally to help lighten the bread’s texture.
- Use a high-quality gluten-free mix, such as C4C or King Arthur Flour. If your gluten-free flour mix contains xanthum gum, no need to add additional.
Gluten-Free Peasant Bread Recipe
- Total Time: 2 hours
- Yield: 2 loaves
Description
From my cookbook, Bread Toast Crumbs.
For best results, use a digital scale. It makes all the difference with bread baking.
Note: If you are using a different brand of gluten-free flour, you may not need all of the liquid. Because all gluten-free flours and mixes absorb water at a different rate, you may find your dough to be much more liquidy than mine — this is due to the flour. This is what I suggest: add the liquid a little bit at the time, mixing with a spatula to combine. Reference the video to see what the dough should look like as far as texture goes.
Loaf Pan: I have not tried this yet, but someone emailed me recently letting me know she bakes the entire batter in a 9×5-inch loaf pan, so if you don’t have the 1-quart Pyrex bowls, know that a 9×5-inch loaf pan is an option.
Ingredients
- 4 cups (500 g) gluten-free flour—my favorite is Cup4Cup, see notes above if using a different type of gluten-free flour
- 2 teaspoons (10 g) kosher salt
- 2 1/4 teaspoons (8 g) instant yeast
- 2 cups (455 g) lukewarm water
- 2 tablespoons (42 g) honey
- 2 eggs lightly beaten
- 2 tablespoons (28 g) olive oil or grapeseed or other neutral oil
- 1 teaspoon (4 g) white wine or cider vinegar
- softened unsalted butter for greasing
Instructions
- In a large bowl, whisk together the flour, salt, and instant yeast. In a medium bowl, pour the water over the honey and stir to dissolve. Add the eggs, oil, and vinegar. Add the wet ingredients to the dry and mix with a spatula to form a batter. (See notes above if you are using a different brand of gf flour.)
- Grease two 1-quart oven-safe bowls (or a 9×5-inch loaf pan, see notes above) with the softened butter—be generous. Divide the dough evenly between the prepared bowls. With wet hands, smooth the surface of the dough. Let the dough rise in a warm or draft-free spot for 30 to 45 minutes, until the top of the dough just crowns the rims of the bowls — this may take longer… just be patient and wait till the dough crowns the rim: it might take as long as 2 hours if your kitchen is cool. Halfway through the rising, set a rack in the middle of the oven and preheat it to 425 degrees F.
- Transfer the bowls to the oven, and bake for 15 minutes. Reduce the heat to 375 degrees F and bake for 17 to 20 minutes more, until golden all around. Remove the bowls from the oven and turn the loaves out onto the cooling racks. Let the loaves cool for at least 20 minutes before cutting.
- Prep Time: 15 minutes
- Cook Time: 40 minutes
- Category: Bread
- Method: Bake
- Cuisine: Gluten-Free
This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure policy.
547 Comments on “Gluten-Free Peasant Bread Recipe”
I made this bread yesterday for a friend with Crohn’s disease. She loved it! Her husband, who has followed her diet with her liked it too and said it doesn’t have the ‘grittiness’ of other gluten free breads.
Sharing your recipe and giving you all the credit! Thank you!
Awww great to hear this, Michelle! Thanks for writing and sharing this 🙂
Hi Ali,
Great recipe! My niece who has celiac disease loves it.
Do you think I could use this recipe for GF pizza dough?
Thanks
I feel like you could use it for a pan pizza… do yo have a cast iron skillet or a 9-inch cake pan? Something like that to contain it, I think would help. I would divide the batter between at least 2 pans of that size. Try dividing it in half first and using 2 pans. If it’s too thick, next time around, divide it between 3 pans.
Thank you so much for your advice. Will definitely try it as a pan pizza🍕
Made this GF bread for my brother who actually called it ‘life-changing!’ He went through three loaves during his visit. Since going home, he has struggled with making it because he lives in a high-altitude area (3600ft above seal level). Do you have any suggestions for baking this in high altitude? PS: Bought your cookbook and also gifted one to a friend for Christmas last year!
Hi Deanne! Great to read all of this. Bummer about the difficulties at altitude. Generally what helps bread baking efforts at altitude are two things: high hydration dough (which this is), and adding another rise or doing a long slow rise. So, my thoughts are that your friend could let the dough rise once, deflate it, then transfer it to the baking vessels and let it rise again before baking. He could also mix the dough, cover the bowl with a lid or plastic wrap and stick it in the fridge for a day or two (checking on it to make sure it’s not spilling out of the bowl or forcing the lid off). My only final thought: is he using the same gluten-free flour you used to make it?
Highly recommend! Perfect and SO real! I couldn’t believe it….the crunchy crust is just what is missing with other GF bread recipes. We can’t use Cup4Cup flour because of the dairy ingredient, but found a flour that was a similar mix and it worked just fine. Thank you for working this out and SHARING it. Definitely on the list to make again, and again….Peace.
Great to hear, Mary! Thanks so much for writing. If you see this, I’d love to know what the other brand of GF flour was that you used — so many people ask for recommendations for nondairy gf flours.
Thank you so much. i tried this recipe this spring and it has made me so happy. After eating gluten free the last 5 years this is the first bread I’ve eaten that is like regular bread. its delicious. so easy to make . works great toasted or not.
i am anxiously awaiting your gluten free pizza dough recipe. that is the other thing i
really miss. if you ever need a tester for gluten free recipes let me know 🙂
I totally agree with the Life Changing comment. I look forward to a slice or sandwich every day.
So nice to hear this, Judy! And I may hit you up to test a few gf recipes. Question: have you used gluten free flour that calls for deglutinized wheat starch? King Arthur Flour’s new gf pizza flour as well as Antimo Caputo’s gf pizza flour both use that ingredient, and I’m curious as to how you feel about it? It’s definitely gluten free. But if people have a wheat allergy, it’s not safe for them to eat.
This is the easiest and BEST gluten free bread I have made. Surprisingly, the bake time does not need to be adjusted when you bake it all in one loaf pan. I use a stoneware loaf pan and it PERFECT every time. Thank you!
Also, I use whichever flour blend I have on hand with no troubles.
Great to hear, Kelly! Thanks so much for writing and sharing your notes 🙂
Just made another batch of bread- this time I added sharp cheddar in the dough and in one of the loaves I added chopped jalapeños. After the dough was done rising, I topped it with sharp cheddar and some Mexican blend shredded cheese. Delicious! 🤤
Yum! Sounds amazing!
LOVE this recipe! I tried the loaf pan but my lid constrained the rise but it still came out great!!! I will perfect it.
Great to hear!
This was my first ever try at making bread and it was perfect! The recipe was super easy to follow and tastes delicious. Only downside was I left it too late to make and didn’t realise my bread would take almost two hours to rise. So worth it though!
Great to hear! Thanks for writing 🙂
I have made your original recipe for years and loved it. Now, I will try the updated one. But, I was wondering, can this work with a 2 qt cast iron Dutch oven?
Should work out great!
I did the entire recipe in my 2qt Dutch oven and it turn out good! This is my first time using cup4cup gluten-free multipurpose flour. It works wonderfully. No grit tasting even after a week. I was wondering, can I take this same recipe and make hamburgers using a hamburger pan?
I meant hamburger buns.🤣🤣🤣🤣
🤣🤣🤣🤣 I gotcha!
I worry a little bit about how shaping will go. Question for you: do you have a wheat allergy? Or a gluten allergy? I ask because I recently discovered Antimo Caputo’s fioreglut flour, and it works beautifully, and I think you might have better luck with it.
I have a gluten allergy. I get inflammation really quick when I eat anything with gluten. So I choose to stay away from wheat as well. I have never heard of that flour before. I will look for it in the local fresh market.
Can you make this in a bread machine – wet ingredients first topped with dry ingredients?
I would imagine! I don’t own one, so I can’t say for sure.
Good morning. I made this bread and the flavor is wonderful but the bread is very doughy and soggy. I cooked in the same bowls and for time recommended and when mixed the dough looked like the dough in the video. Any suggestions? Thanks.
Hi! Are you using a scale to measure? What brand of gf flour are you using?
My first thought is that the dough didn’t rise long enough… was it crowning the rim of the bowls before you placed it in the oven?
I have yet to make this recipe work 😭😭
I just can’t get it right no matter what.
So much expensive flour wasted.
Can’t seem to get my dough the right consistency ever .. and it either rises super fast and overflows or hardley rises at all ..
I just waited 3 1/2 hours for it to barley
Rise to even with the pan (it’s at least 75-80 in my kitchen)
I gave up on waiting after so long and put it in the oven only to have it deflate and fall right after I set it in 😑😑
I give up
Hi and sorry to read all of this:
Are you using a scale to measure?
What type of yeast are you using?
What type of gluten-free flour are you using?
Wanted to update this and say trhat the bread tasted AMAZING even tho it didn’t rise well and fell in the oven ..
I think I really just need to practice a lot but i it’s hard when the flour is soooo expensive!!
I always use a scale for the flour but it’s the egg/water mix I guess that I can’t get right for the consistency..
I’m using Namaste flour as i have found it to be the best with all other gluten free cooking . Yeast is fleishmanns instant dry the same I use for all the other bread- I will keep trying
I know, gluten-free flour is so expensive. If your dough isn’t rising well and if it’s falling, I’m thinking maybe you need to use less water or it needs to bake longer. I’d try holding back 50 grams of water and see if that helps.
I am trying again today with less water !!!
Question – do I follow the normal bake times or bake at 350 for the entire 45 mins ??
I’m likely too late here! I would follow the suggested bake time.
So good, especially with everything bagel seasoning!
I made this today – it tastes wonderful and is so easy and quick
I’m in the UK so I used Doves Freee Plain Gluten Free Flour. The dough was a bit wet so I took a chance and added a couple of teaspoons of psyllium husk.
I will be making this regularly from now on just because it’s so easy.
Thank you!
Ann
Great to hear, Ann! Thanks for writing and sharing your notes — so helpful for others.
Can I replace the gluten free flour with all purpose flour? Thank you!
Yes, but use this recipe: My Mother’s Peasant Bread: The Best Easiest Bread You Will Ever Make
I’m gluten intolerant and this has been my go-to gluten free bread recipe for years now! Love it so much! I was curious what the best way to store it is? Thanks!
Great to hear, Sarah! I store it at room temp in a ziptop bag for 3 days; otherwise freeze for up to 3 months.
Hi! Do you need to cover the 1Q Pyrex bowl while the dough is rising?
You should, yes! It will keep the dough cozy and prevent the top layer from drying out.
I’ve tried so many recipes and this one is the first one that’s actually worked! It tastes great and is the perfect density, I’m beyond greatful! I did it in a loaf pan and it worked perfectly.
Great to hear Christie! Thanks for writing 🙂 🙂 🙂
I made this bread in a loaf pan at 4000 feet altitude in Utah. I took 1 hour 20 minutes to rise. The second bake time at 375 degrees I stopped at 15 minutes because it was golden brown on top. It is perfect! My daughter has Celiac and loved it! Definitely a keeper!
Great to hear, MJ! Thanks so much for writing and sharing your high altitude notes. So helpful for others 🙂 🙂 🙂
Excellent and easy. I cut the recipe in half and make just one loaf at a time since there are just two of us. And since it’s so easy it’s no problem to just make another loaf when we run out.
Great to hear, Peggy! Thanks for writing 🙂
One of my fave recipes. I actually have followed the regular recipe with Pamela’s gluten free flour and it turned out fabulous. I used a pie pan to bake it in as one loaf. So good.
Great to hear, Mel! Thanks for writing 🙂
Hi!
I can’t wait to make it!
I was just wondering can you freeze the bread and how long does it last for?
Thank you!
Yes, you can definitely freeze the bread! I’d say for at least 3 months.
Hi! I’ve heard amazing things about this recipe. One question, does the bread get crumbly the next day? Thank you!
Nope! It holds up very well 🙂
Awesome! I’m so excited to try this now! 😊
This bread!! Amazing! I am cooking more foods from scratch for my family and this was a hit. My spouse said this bread is incredible. My daughter who is not GF, absolutely loved it. She couldn’t get enough of it. I used the all purpose GF King Arthur flour (not 1:1) and added xantham gum. It’s fluffy, perfect moisture level, not crumbling, perfect for toast in the morning, my daughters PB&Js for lunch, and dinner with butter and garlic. I will be making more for family and friends so they can enjoy. We appreciate you sharing this recipe.
Great to hear, Sobeyda! Thanks for writing and sharing your notes 🙂
I made this using a buckwheat flour blend that i made and it turned out amazing!!! I used a glass bread dish made one big loaf it didn’t take long to rise then i put it into the oven. So crunchy on the outside soft bread on the inside. Will be making this more often,, im sure i can cut it up and freeze it also. Great easy recipe!!
Great to hear, Staci! THanks so much for writing 🙂
I tried this recipe for the first time. The dough sunrise quite nicely but overflowed the 9×12 loaf pan. It looks and feels very moist and my daughter likes it. We’ll see how it keeps in the days to come. Thanks for this easy white loaf recipe.
About to make this and was wondering if you think I could use it for a gf thanksgiving stuffing?
I’ve made the non gf version and love it! Actually I love all your recipes!!!
I think it should work, Susan!
Have you ever tried this recipe with gluten free oat flour replacing all or part of the gf flour blend? Any adaptations to make with this?
I have not… I don’t think it will work, however — I think the finished bread will be very dense. I’m sorry!
Thank you for this recipe! I make this multiple times a month. I usually use a loaf type pan with king arthur gf blend and it comes out perfect. I modified two things. I bloom my yeast instead of adding it to the flour (too many issues with bad yeast and gf flours are so expensive), and I add melted butter to the top after it rises/before baking. Even my gluten loving husband and son love it.
Great to hear, Samantha! Thanks so much for writing 🙂 🙂 🙂