“Wheaty” tasting, this gluten free brown bread recipe is sure to be a family favorite. With added whole grains and lots of depth of flavor, this versatile, wheatless loaf of gf whole grain bread keeps you full and satisfied!
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Why this is the best gluten free brown bread recipe
This good, hearty gluten free whole grain bread has a thick but tender, bakery-style crust that will satisfy that craving for the wheat bread you're missing. If you've ever wondered if you can “add some gluten free whole grains” to our other gluten free bread recipes, this is your moment! It's as if you could make gluten free wheat bread.
Hearty and wheaty-tasting, with just the right amount whole grain teff and oats and a touch of molasses, this gf bread recipe was developed to incorporate those whole grains. Just like good gluten free baking requires good gluten free recipes, a whole grain gluten free bread comes only from a recipe designed for it. This is that recipe.
This recipe will satisfy that craving for a thick slice of whole wheat bread. Like way back when the waitress used to ask what sort of bread you'd like (white? wheat? sourdough?) and you'd order wheat.
It isn't designed to satisfy your nutritional needs for the day, though! I really prefer to do some things very well (a great-tasting, beautiful loaf of bread) rather than try to do everything and do most of it poorly.
Batter-Style Gluten Free Breads
When my son first started eating gluten free in 2004, we mail-ordered gluten free bread from Canada. That wasn't because it was so good we couldn't help ourselves. It was just all there was. I didn't know how to make gluten free bread.
Five years later, in 2009, I stumbled upon a recipe that was known as “Tom's Bread” on the Internet. I think I first found it in an online chat room, although I simply can't recall where that would have been. That was back in the days when the “gluten free listserv” was the best (and nearly only) source of gluten free product information out there.
Tom's Bread is a batter-style bread that I believe Tom himself maintains was the product of divine intervention. It relies heavily on garbanzo bean flour. But it also was prescient in its use of equal amounts of cornstarch and tapioca flour.
And Tom's bread was a batter-style gluten free bread. A couple of years later, I would go on to develop the recipe for Gluten Free White Sandwich Bread that was published in my first cookbook.
It relies on a rice flour blend, but it's also a batter-style gluten free bread. That recipe, from the second edition of my very first cookbook is still a family favorite.
These bread doughs are made in a mixer and resemble cookie dough. The dough is very, very wet, and can't be shaped in the way conventional bread doughs are shaped. Until I wrote my third cookbook, Gluten Free on a Shoestring Bakes Bread, batter-style yeast bread was the only sort of gluten free bread recipe I had ever heard of.
Preparing gluten free brown bread in a bread machine?
Even though I am still asked about my favorite bread machine from time to time, I continue to insist that bread machines are a waste of money. They vary a ton from brand to brand, and one recipe will work well in one machine and not in another. Plus, the machines are crazy expensive and make an odd-shaped loaf.
A great place to begin making gluten free bread
If you're new to making gluten free bread, or to making bread in general, it's best to begin with a batter-style bread like this wheat free but wheaty-tasting brown bread.
Batter-style gluten free bread recipes have only one rise, and they tend to rise quickly because the dough is super wet. High hydration means that yeast grows readily.
In fact, most recipes for gluten free bread that you'll find elsewhere on the Internet (and in cookbooks that aren't, well, mine), are in this style. I hadn't made one of these recipes in years—and then I started working on the second edition of my very first cookbook.
They don't have the yeasty taste that you get from a slow refrigerator rise, and they don't have the same chew. But they make a lovely sandwich. And they're a great starting place if you're hesitant to make yeast bread (gluten free or otherwise).
Tips for baking this gluten free brown bread
This multigrain gluten free bread recipe even has some real depth of flavor because of the addition of oat flour, whole grain teff and molasses. If you're looking for some tips and tricks on baking gluten free bread, have a look at my Ten Rules For Making Gluten Free Bread.
Here are some more things to keep in mind as you read through this recipe that's as close to gluten free wheat bread we're going to get, and then begin baking:
Mixing the ingredients for gf brown bread
This recipe, like all of our batter-style gf bread recipes, calls for mixing in a stand mixer with the paddle attachment. If you don't have a stand mixer, I don't recommend a handheld mixer, which just doesn't offer the right style of attachment. Instead, try a food processor fitted with the steel blade.
Choosing the right loaf pan for baking gluten free brown bread
My favorite loaf pans for baking bread, lately, are 1.5 pound Pullman-style loaf pans. You begin baking the bread with the Pullman cover in place to prevent the loaf from rising into a dome, then remove the cover for the remainder of the baking time so the loaf can cook through and brown properly.
Proofing your gluten free whole grain bread dough
Yeast bread will rise at a large temperature range, including anything that might be considered room temperature (from warm to cool room temperature), just more slowly at lower temperatures. In warmer temperatures, this loaf may rise fully in 45 minutes; in cooler, drier temperatures it may take much longer. Please be patient!
Shaping your gluten free brown bread
Since this is a batter-style yeast bread, you'll transfer the shaggy, wet dough to your prepared loaf pan, and shape and smooth the top with a wet spatula and your moistened fingers much as you would a cake.
Baking your gluten free “whole wheat” bread
This bread bakes at 375°F, a slightly higher temperature than you would bake a cake, to encourage “oven spring,” which is the initial rise of yeast bread in the oven, and to help the loaf bake through and brown fully.
Gluten free brown bread — ingredients and substitutions
Except where I've specifically indicated that I've tried the substitution, these pearls are just my best-educated guesses about how to satisfy other dietary needs beyond just being gluten free. My recipes are only reliably gluten free, by design, and not free of everything. So take this information in the spirit in which it's offered—and do your own experimentation!
Dairy-free gluten free brown bread
It's easy to make this recipe dairy free. Just replace the butter in the recipe with either butter-flavored Spectrum nonhydrogenated vegetable shortening or Earth Balance buttery sticks. And use any unflavored, unsweetened nondairy milk (as long as it isn't nonfat). Done!
Egg free, gluten free brown bread
There are two egg whites in this recipe, but I've also successfully made it with one whole egg. That leads me to believe that you could make it with one “chia egg” instead. A chia egg is 1 tablespoon chia flour mixed with 1 tablespoon lukewarm water and allowed to sit until it gels.
Oat free, gluten free brown bread
You can replace the oat flour in this recipe with quinoa flakes or cream of buckwheat. And I now have a full discussion of replacing oats in gluten free baking. Oat-free bakers rejoice!
The best gluten free flours for this gf bread
I always prefer a base of Better Batter classic blend gluten free flour as a base for my gluten free yeast bread. In this recipe, we're adding gluten free whole grains with teff (or teff flour) and oat flour. You can try replacing the oat flour with a variety of other whole grain, gluten free flours. Here are a few suggestions:
Buckwheat flour in place of oat flour? Sweet white sorghum?
I think that buckwheat flour would work well in place of oat flour, as would sweet white sorghum flour. Make sure your sorghum flour is fresh, though, as it spoils more quickly than other flours.
Quinoa flour? Brown rice flour?
I wouldn't suggest using quinoa flour in place of oat flour here, as quinoa flour tends to be bitter. Brown rice flour doesn't have the same “chew” as oat flour, so I don't recommend it, either.
Using whole grain teff vs teff flour
This recipe calls for whole grain teff, not teff flour. I have wondered whether it would work with teff flour, though. And whether whole grain teff could be replaced with, say, chia seeds. I bet it could!
Storing gluten free brown bread
Never store gluten free bread in the refrigerator, as it tends to be drying. This bread will stay fresh covered tightly on the kitchen counter at room temperature for a day, but I wouldn't risk more than that. You know what they say about day old bread!
Freezing gluten free brown bread
For longer storage, I recommend slicing this loaf of gf brown bread when fresh, and fully cooled. Then wrap it tightly in freezer-safe wrap and freeze it for up to 2 months—longer if your storage wrap removes all air from contacting the bread.
FAQs
No! Anything with the word “wheat” in the title will contain gluten, one of the 3 main sources of gluten.
Only this recipe for brown bread is gluten free. Other brown breads that aren't specifically developed to be gluten free will contain gluten.
This bread has whole grains added to our regular all purpose gluten free flour blend that lend a wheaty chew and a beautiful brown color.
Your bread is done baking when it sounds hollow if you thump it on the side somewhat forcefully with your fingertips, and the internal temperature reads about 190°F on an instant read thermometer.
It's underbaked! Many ovens run hot or cold, so you should always gauge oven temperature by virtue of a simple, inexpensive, freestanding oven thermometer that you replace often. If your oven runs cold, it may take an exceedingly long time to bake, and won't bread as well.
If your oven runs hot, as many do, it will bake the outside too quickly and give the loaf the appearance of being baked through even though the inside doesn't have the structure to support the outside as the bread cools. Always test your bread for doneness as described above before removing it from the oven entirely.
How to make gluten free, whole grain brown bread, step by step
Gluten Free Brown Bread Recipe
Equipment
Ingredients
- 2 ½ cups (350 g) all purpose gluten free flour blend (I used Better Batter; click thru for full info on appropriate blends)
- 2 ½ teaspoons xanthan gum omit if your blend already contains it
- 3 tablespoons (38 g) whole grain teff whole or ground into a flour
- 9 tablespoons (68 g) certified gluten free oat flour (I just grind old fashioned gluten free rolled oats into a powder)
- ¼ teaspoon cream of tartar
- ¼ teaspoon baking soda
- 2 tablespoons (25 g) granulated sugar
- 1 tablespoon (9 g) instant yeast (See Recipe Notes)
- 1 ½ teaspoons (9 g) kosher salt
- 5 tablespoons (70 g) unsalted butter at room temperature
- 1 teaspoon apple cider vinegar
- 1 tablespoon (21 g) unsulphured molasses
- 2 (50 g) egg whites at room temperature
- 1 ½ cups (12 fluid ounces) warm milk (about 95°F)
Instructions
- Grease and line a standard 9-inch x 5-inch loaf pan or a 1 1/2-pound Pullman loaf pan and set it aside.
- In the bowl of your stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, place the flour, xanthan gum, teff, oat flour, cream of tartar, baking soda, sugar and yeast.
- Whisk with a separate handheld whisk to combine well. Add the salt and whisk again to combine.
- Add the butter, vinegar, molasses, egg whites and milk, and mix on low speed with the paddle attachment until the dough starts to come together, then mix on high for about 5 minutes.
- Transfer the dough to the prepared loaf pan and smooth the top with a wet spatula. Cover the dough with oiled with plastic wrap or the top of the Pullman pan.
- Place the covered pan in a warm, draft-free area to rise until the dough is about 150% of its original volume.
- When the dough is nearly finished rising, preheat your oven to 375°F.
- Remove the plastic wrap and place the loaf pan in the center of the preheated oven. Remove the plastic wrap. If using a Pullman pan, keep the cover in place.
- If using a standard loaf pan, bake for about 30 minutes or until the loaf is firm enough to take out of the pan.
- If using a Pullman pan, bake for 40 minutes before removing the pan cover.
- In both cases, remove the bread from the loaf pan and place it on a rimmed baking sheet. Return the bread on the pan to the oven, and bake for another 15 to 20 minutes, or until the top is nicely browned, and the loaf sounds hollow when tapped.
- Remove from the oven, allow to cool on the baking sheet for 10 minutes. Transfer to a wire rack to cool completely before slicing and serving.
Notes
If you'd prefer to use active dry yeast in place of instant yeast, you'll need 25% more, by weight, and to hydrate it before mixing the yeast into the bread mixture. Here, that would mean 125% of 9 grams of instant yeast, or just over 11 grams active dry yeast. Mix the active dry yeast with a couple tablespoons of the warm milk, and let it activate, then add it with the rest of the milk when the recipe calls for it. Nutrition information is per slice assuming a whole loaf sliced into 10 pieces and is approximate and not to be relied upon.
Nutrition
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Hi, I’m Nicole. I create gluten free recipes that really work and taste as good as you remember. No more making separate meals when someone is GF, or buying packaged foods that aren’t good enough to justify the price. At Gluten Free on a Shoestring, “good, for gluten free” just isn’t good enough! Come visit my bio!
Deborah Tracy says
I am anxious to try this recipe. Could I bake it in a baking bowl like your artisan bread recipe? Which by the way is a great recipe, as most of your recipes.
Nicole Hunn says
I honestly don’t know, Deborah, but I suspect that this bread would not work well in a bowl.
Marguerite Keil says
Could I substitute quinoa flour for the teff flour?
Nicole Hunn says
I’m afraid I don’t recommend that, no, Marguerite, for either taste or performance. For other ideas about the flours, please see that section of the post.
Loz says
What can I use instead of oats please?
Nicole Hunn says
Please see the text of the post under the heading “Oat free, gluten free brown bread”
Jude Phillips says
What is Teff?
Nicole Hunn says
Teff is a nutty cereal grain originating in Africa. You can find it at most larger grocery stores. It adds an important wheat-y flavor to this wheat free bread.
Debra says
Just baked this loaf tonight. It turned out beautifully! I used Mock BB flour blend that I prepared from Nicole’s instructions. The flavor is definitely like the whole-wheat loaves I used to be able to eat. Best of all is the soft, springy texture. This is nothing like the dry, crumbly bricks I produced with other GF bread recipes. I’ve learned so much about careful measuring and using the correct ingredients. This didn’t rise very high in my full-size loaf pan, so I may try using a slightly narrower one next time. This recipe is a winner, and I’ll be using it often. Thanks, Nicole!
Nicole Hunn says
So glad you enjoyed this bread, Debra, and that you’re committed to careful ingredient selection and measurements. That’s the secret to success! If it didn’t rise as much as you’d like, you most likely just needed to let it rise longer, and make sure it’s covered as it rises so it doesn’t dry out, which will inhibit rise. My bread recipes don’t need the “extra support” to rise that some gf bread recipes seem to (or at least that used to be conventional wisdom). Just enough time. :)
Liesje says
Hi Nicole!
I just heard about you and I’m typing to try some bread recipes! I live in Canada and wondered if you would someday be able to let us know a good brand of gluten free flours we should use for your recipes!
I did use Bob’s Red Mill 1 to 1 flour for your sugar cookies and they turned out amazingly! But I’d love to know what flour I can get here in Canada for your white sandwich bread loaf!! Thank you for all of your amazing recipes for us!!
Nicole Hunn says
Hi, Liesje, I don’t use or recommend Bob’s Red Mill flour blends at all, I’m afraid. They’re very inconsistent, so even if you had a good experience once, you very well might be very disappointed the next time. I have a whole page of “all purpose gluten free flour blends“ that is linked in every recipe that calls for one (which is most of my recipes, including this bread recipe). That’s where you’ll find all my advice on how to select, and build a blend if you can’t find one to buy that I recommend. Welcome!
Kate says
I tried this recipe the other day and loved the flavor. It came out dry and crumbly. Any suggestions?
Nicole Hunn says
If your yeast bread rose, it’s hard to imagine how it would be dry and crumbly. Did you have trouble with rising? That’s due to a too-low hydration ratio, which can be caused by a number of things, among them not using the proper flour blend (one that’s unbalanced and absorbs too much moisture), overmeasuring your flour blend by not measuring by weight, undermeasuring the water or other liquid. Getting yeast bread to rise takes a lot of patience, and a temperate, but not too hot environment which will evaporate the moisture and potentially kill the yeast. For more information, please see the Bread FAQs section of the blog!
George G says
I haven’t been able to find a Pullman Style pan in a 1.5 lb size. Where did you find yours?
Nicole Hunn says
Hi, George, I bought it in a local kitchenwares store, but here’s a link to one on amazon: https://www.amazon.com/JB-Prince-1-5-Pullman-Loaf/dp/B009VNVU92. Just try googling “1.5 pound pullman pan.” That’s all I did!
Lee Garber says
Delicious, easy to follow recipe for a first timer. Makes great toast w wheat taste. I feel I’ve found a better tasting alternative to my wife’s store bought GF bread.
Nicole Hunn says
That’s wonderful, Lee!!
Hilary says
I made this bread yesterday – it’s delicious! Was so easy to make. I didn’t have cream of tartar so I used baking powder instead. It came out exactly as the pictures show it. Will definitely make this again! It is 100 ties better than any store-bought GF bread! Thanks Nicole!
Nicole Hunn says
That’s great to hear, Hilary! I’m very glad that store bought gluten free bread is an option, but nothing beats homemade. :)
Linus65 says
Just made this for the first time. It’s delicious and tastes and feels like REAL bread! Nicole’s white sandwich bread recipe has been my weekly staple. So nice to have another delicious bread recipe for variety.
Thank you!
Nicole Hunn says
I’m so happy to hear that, Linus. Thank you for letting me know how well this turned out for you!
Susan says
Made this bread tonight with quinoa flakes instead of oat flour and it is by far the best gf bread I have ever made. It actually is the size of a sandwich bread, not like simple mills mix bread. I will probably let it rise a little more next time but it is fantastic!
Nicole Hunn says
So glad you enjoyed it, Susan. And yes, patience is a virtue! Let it rise until it’s done. Sometimes it will take more time, sometimes less. That’s the nature of yeast bread and its environmental dependence.
patty says
The Taste is wonderful! I didn’t realize how much I missed the “wheaty” taste in bread. Just wish I could figure out why none of my breads get the same height yours do. I always let it rise per the directions, yeah I always seem to wind up with a stocky loaf any ideas?
Nicole Hunn says
There are so many factors in yeast bread baking, Patty, that it’s impossible for me to know why your bread isn’t rising fully, I’m afraid, without being there with you. Here are the basic questions I always recommend asking yourself: 1. Did you measure by weight, not volume (if you undermeasure water or overmeasure flour, your hydration ratio will be off and your dough won’t rise well or at all)? 2. Did you use the ingredients as directed, particularly the flour blend? You can’t use just any gf flour blend. 3. Did you let your dough rise long enough? I often discuss in yeast bread posts how rising times will vary quite widely, depending on ambient temperature and humidity in your rising environment. You must be patient!
Amy says
You mention possibly replacing teff flour with chia seeds. My husband has an intolerance to teff, so I’m wondering about that. Would I be using the chia seeds whole or ground? Thanks!
Nicole Hunn says
I’m really unsure, Amy, which is why I only provide some preliminary information. My suspicion is that it would be better ground, but I’m afraid you’ll just have to experiment! If this is your first experience with baking gluten free bread, I’d recommend beginning with a less complicated ingredient list, like our white gluten free sandwich bread before branching out with making substitutions.
Linda D says
Sounds great and looks delicious
Teri says
Can I make rolls using this mixture? Thank you. Your recipes are awesome.
Nicole Hunn says
I’m afraid I don’t recommend that, Teri. The dough is just too soft and wet to hold together properly for rolls. This is really just for a loaf, but I think you’ll still love it! And thank you for the kind words. They really mean a lot!
Maria says
Hi I’m abit confused my naturopath has told me that oats contain gluten but your calling them gluten free rolled oats?? So do oats contain gluten or not? Thankyou
Nicole Hunn says
Hi, Maria, certified gluten free oats are gluten free. I have a whole post on whether oats are gluten free. Please see that!