Recipe: Crescent rolls revisisted
Author: Raevyn Tsornin, December 2018
I am still on the lookout for great gluten free baked goods that can rival the regular wheat goods. Mostly - crescent rolls and fluffy biscuits.
For those of you who remember my last fore into gluten free crescent rolls, you remember they were a disaster. So bad I wouldn't let Ivanor even try one.
This recipe is better!
Ingredients:
2c gluten free flour. They recommended a specific brand that has to be mail ordered, I used Bob's Red Mill 1:1 baking blend
1T instant yeast (which is one package) at room temperature
2 tsp xanthan gum (ONLY IF your flour blend doesn't have it- the Bob's Red Mill does)
3T sugar or honey ( I used sugar)
1/4tsp baking powder
1/4 tsp salt (increase to 3/4 if using oil or unsalted butter)
1/2c plus 2T warm water
1 egg
1/2 c butter or oil
potato starch for dusting and rolling dough
also needed: a baking sheet lined with parchment paper
- In mixing bowl add all dry ingredients - flour, sugar, yeast, baking powder, salt, and xanthan gum if needed. If you are using honey add it to wet ingredients.
- Add warm water, egg, butter or oil, and mix 3-5 minutes.
- The dough will be thick and sticky and soft. A little harder to work with than regular dough.
- lightly dust your surface with starch or flour (I had tapioca starch)
- Scrape dough in to a ball on surface and sprinkle starch or flour on top of dough.
- Roll out with a rolling pin or gently press with your fingers till it is 14" round.
- Cut circle in to 8 even pie shaped pieces. use a generously floured pizza cutter or knife.
- Roll each slice from outside to center and place on baking sheet. If your dough sticks to the surface, slide a floured butter knife or metal spatula under the dough to release it
- preheat oven to 350 and set pan with rolls on stove top to let them rise for the next 15-20 minutes.
- Bake for 9-12 min.
- Brush lightly with butter before serving.
left overs can be stored in an airtight container or bread bag for up to two days.
The Results:
Overall the flavor of these rolls was much better. I used a touch too much flour to roll them. The recipe made 8 large rolls and cutting them into 8 even parts was not possible for me so my rolls were obviously different sizes. I had to bake them 4 minutes longer than her recipe said and they were still a little doughy in the center but I didn't want to leave them in longer for fear the edges would be dry.
Every "fix" I know for a doughy consistency is longer cooking time or slightly lower oven temp and longer cooking time. We could have lowered the oven temp by 10*-15*.
When I make them again (because the recipe was tasty enough to use again), I plan to separate the dough into two balls and rolling them out to probably 10-12" circles. I felt the rolls were too large which lent to their not cooking thoroughly- plus each roll is a whopping 234 calories!