Gluten-Free Pizza Crust

Gluten-Free Pizza Crust
The recipe Gluten-Free Pizza Crust is ready in approximately 45 minutes and is definitely a spectacular gluten free, dairy free, and fodmap friendly option for lovers of Mediterranean food. For 90 cents per serving, you get a crust that serves 8. One serving contains 509 calories, 12g of protein, and 7g of fat. Head to the store and pick up potato starch, egg, rice flour, and a few other things to make it today.

Instructions

1
Whisk together the flour mix, yeast, psyllium, and salt.
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Flour MixFlour Mix
YeastYeast
SaltSalt
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WhiskWhisk
2
Pour this mixture into the bowl of a stand mixer.
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Stand MixerStand Mixer
BowlBowl
3
Finishing the dough: With the stand mixer running on low, add the olive oil, then the egg. Slowly, pour in the water. Here's the important part: gluten-free pizza dough will not look the same as gluten dough. It will be far wetter, even a little like pancake batter. As you pour the water, look for the dough to come together around the paddle. However, when your turn off the mixer, the dough should slump off the paddle immediately.
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DoughDough
Olive OilOlive Oil
WaterWater
EggEgg
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Stand MixerStand Mixer
4
Letting the dough rise: Scrape the pizza dough into a large greased bowl. Cover it with plastic wrap and set the bowl in a warm place. Gluten-free dough does not rise as much as gluten dough. Instead, you are looking for the dough to hydrate fully and increase in size by about one-third. When the dough has risen a bit and has the texture of traditional dough, about 1 1/2 hours, you're ready to bake.
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DoughDough
WrapWrap
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Plastic WrapPlastic Wrap
OvenOven
BowlBowl
1
Heat the oven to 500 degrees F. If you have a pizza stone - and we recommend you do - put it in the oven now.
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Pizza StonePizza Stone
OvenOven
2
If you own a pizza peel, lay down a piece of parchment paper on it now. If you don't own one, put the parchment paper on a pizza pan or baking sheet.
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Baking PaperBaking Paper
Baking SheetBaking Sheet
Pizza PanPizza Pan
3
Put the dough down on the parchment paper then top it with another one the same size. Using your hands or a rolling pin, flatten the dough slowly and evenly. You want a pizza dough about 12 inches in diameter. Take the top piece of parchment paper off the pizza dough.
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DoughDough
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Baking PaperBaking Paper
Rolling PinRolling Pin
4
Sprinkle some olive oil over the top of the dough.
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Olive OilOlive Oil
DoughDough
5
Bake the dough in the oven until the edges are starting to brown and crisp and the top of the pizza is a little firm to the touch, 5 to 8 minutes.
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DoughDough
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OvenOven
6
Pull out the pizza dough and top with whatever toppings you desire.
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Pizza DoughPizza Dough
7
Pour all the flours into a large container. (Restaurant supply stores sell large plastic containers that fit this purpose well. You could also use a large glass jar.) Shake and shake and shake harder until all the flours have become one color.
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ShakeShake

Recommended wine: Chianti, Trebbiano, Verdicchio

Chianti, Trebbiano, and Verdicchio are great choices for Italian. Italians know food and they know wine. Trebbiano and Verdicchio are Italian white wines that pair well with fish and white meat, while Chianti is a great Italian red for heavier, bolder dishes. The Badian a Coltibuono Cultusboni RS Chianti Classico ( half-bottle) with a 4.3 out of 5 star rating seems like a good match. It costs about 11 dollars per bottle.
Badia a Coltibuono Cultusboni RS Chianti Classico ( half-bottle)
Badia a Coltibuono Cultusboni RS Chianti Classico ( half-bottle)
It is a fruity, soft and typical wine that is particularly food friendly.
DifficultyHard
Ready In45 m.
Servings8
Health Score25
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