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Gluten-Free Sourdough Bread Recipe (Boule Loaf)

Last Updated on August 28, 2023

Just because you can’t have gluten doesn’t mean you need to miss out on the fun and deeply satisfying experience of baking homemade sourdough bread. Do you want to know a little secret? Not only is it possible to make delicious gluten-free sourdough, but the process of making gluten-free sourdough bread is actually exponentially easier than classic sourdough! Yep. You read that right. Making gluten-free sourdough bread takes less time, steps, fuss, and skills than its wheaty counterpart. The news just keeps getting better, right?

Read along to learn how to make your own gluten-free sourdough bread at home. We’ll go through the process step-by-step. I will admit that we are not gluten-free in this household and do thoroughly enjoy wheat sourdough! However, I felt like a meany, teasing you all with photos of our crusty gluten loaves… So over the last few months we’ve been working on tweaking and perfecting this gluten-free sourdough bread recipe for you all. That way, no one feels left out. 

Before we dive in, keep in mind that you’ll need an active gluten-free sourdough starter to make this bread recipe. If you don’t have one yet, no worries! It is actually quite simple to make your own GF sourdough starter from scratch. Learn how to in this tutorial. That article also explains why sourdough bread is healthier for you than non-fermented bread, how wild yeast and bacteria create natural rise in the dough, and other neat tips – if you’re interested. Then, you can also bake these delicious gluten-free sourdough discard crackers!


Alright, let’s get started with some expectation-setting.


The Texture and Flavor of Gluten-Free Sourdough

If you think I’m going to warn you that gluten-free sourdough bread is dense, gummy and tastes terrible, you’re dead wrong. Coming from someone who can and does regularly eat wheat bread, I must say that I have truly enjoyed noshing on the gluten-free sourdough bread we have been whipping up. I do not consider them lesser-than, or feel like I’m “settling”. 

Sure, gluten-free sourdough bread may not get quite as tall and lofty as wheat loves. The air pockets might not be as impressively large. Yet this gluten-free sourdough bread recipe is FAR from “a dense brick” as I too-often hear GF bread described. Big air bubbles aren’t all they’re cracked up to be anyways. Truth be told, I prefer when our wheat-based sourdough bread has only small to medium air pockets. Large air pockets make the bread more difficult to slice nicely – and also leaves too much space for your precious sandwich goodies to fall through!

This gluten-free sourdough recipe should create a wholesome loaf that is full of small air bubbles, is soft and spongy in texture, slices beautifully, toasts to superb crunch, and holds together well. Basically, you’re about to bake the perfect companion for avocado toast.



Now that we set the record straight, let’s bake!


A freshly sliced loaf of gluten-free sourdough bread is shown on top of a wood cutting board. The loaf has been cut in half and one of the halves has been sliced into pieces. Three slices are splayed out to show the inside and crumb portion of the bread while the outermost rounded slice has been left to stand upright on its own.

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SUPPLIES & INGREDIENTS


Supplies


  • A large mixing bowl
  • A kitchen scale. Sourdough recipes are almost always described in weight rather than cups, because various flours all have different weights!
  • Liquid measuring cup
  • A Dutch oven or cast iron combo cooker, explained more below.
  • A lint-free tea towel
  • High-heat oven mitts rated for up to 500°F. Most standard oven mitts are not made to handle temperatures up to 500°F. They can even melt! Protect yourself, please. A second-degree burn from a 475 degree oven or tool is no joke!
  • Thermometer – either a food probe thermometer or an ambient room thermometer
  • Parchment paper
  • A warm location
  • Optional but highly recommended: A proofing Basket, aka a banneton. Choose between a round “boule” shape or an oval “batard” shape.


You might be wondering…


Why bake sourdough in a Dutch oven or combo cooker?

Using a Dutch oven or combo cooker creates a lovely little steamy cocoon for the bread. An “oven inside the oven” if you will – where the dough’s moisture isn’t lost to the larger surrounding. Instead, it steams itself with its own moisture, giving way to an awesome crust and more moist loaf. I heard professional bakers say that this is the closest you can get to a commercial oven at home. 

We use this Lodge cast iron combo cooker. It is basically a dutch oven that can be used upside down! The flat “lid” becomes the bottom, and the dome body sits on top. This makes it incredibly easy to guide a loaf in and out of it without burning yourself.  An added perk of the combo cooker is that it’s multi-purpose! You could use just the skillet side, the pot portion only, or both.


A gluten-free sourdough loaf has just finished baking in a cast iron combo cooker. The loaf is still sitting in the bottom portion of the combo cooker, it as been deeply scored in a square shape, with thinner light scores along the inside which resemble a plant grain pattern.


Alternate Version: Bread Pan

We created this recipe following a very similar process as our classic wheat sourdough. Plus, we already had all the supplies. However, gluten-free bread has a tendency to spread out and go more flat than gluten-based bread. We’ve found our gluten-free sourdough boule (round) loaves cooked in a combo cooker have satisfactory (but not insanely impressive) rise. If you already have a combo cooker or a Dutch oven at home, give this recipe a try and see what you think!

Yet if the open-pan boule method leaves your loaves more flat than you desire (or if you do not care to invest in a dutch oven/combo cooker), you can also bake gluten-free sourdough in a classic tall-sided bread pan. The added structure creates a taller loaf. I am going to write up instructions for that method and post it ASAP! Essentially, it is the same ingredients, preparation, and cook time as below – except the dough bulk ferments and proofs right in the bread baking pan rather than a bowl and banneton.


Ingredients


  • 110 grams of gluten-free sourdough starter, added at peak activity
  • 450 grams total of gluten-free flour. I recommend 150 grams brown rice flour, 150 grams millet flour, 125 grams sorghum flour, and 25 grams buckwheat flour for this recipe. See flour notes below for other options and variations. 
  • 3 tbsp psyllium husk
  • 10 grams salt (sea salt, kosher salt, or Himalayan salt is preferred over iodized table salt)
  • 1.5 to 2 cups of lukewarm warm (2 cups of water works well for the brands and types of flour we used, and for our climate. However, some people have commented that the dough was too wet. Start on the lower end of the called-for water, and work your way up as necessary to achieve the desired dough consistency.)
  • Optional: 1 tbsp honey, for a hint of sweetness and a dash more “food” for the starter to feed on.


Gluten-Free Sourdough Flour Options

When it comes to baking gluten-free sourdough bread, there are dozens of GF flour types to choose from! Millet, potato, brown rice, sweet rice, buckwheat, tapioca, oat, sorghum… the list goes on. Most gluten-free sourdough bread recipes call for a combination of several types of GF flours, along with the addition of psyllium husk and/or xanthan gum to help everything bind well in the absence of gluten. 

We have tried this particular gluten-free sourdough bread recipe with several different flour combinations. So far, we prefer the mix of brown rice, sorghum, millet, and buckwheat flours listed in the ingredients above. Feel free to experiment though! If you choose to use only three types of flour, I would suggest trying 175 grams brown rice, 150 grams of millet, and 125 grams sorghum. Too much sorghum may make your loaf more dense. 

I have seen other gluten-free sourdough bread recipes use a lot more buckwheat flour than we do, but I personally find the flavor too overpowering. We have also tried this recipe with a 1-1 gluten-free baking flour and did not love the results. The finished loaf was far more dense and gummy than the loaves we created with our own GF flour blend. 

Folks with thyroid issues may want to avoid millet flour, especially if you intend to bake gluten-free sourdough bread regularly. Some studies show that regular (very frequent) consumption of millet can suppress thyroid function. In that case, try substituting potato flour or oat flour in the place of millet. I actually want to try both of those flours in this recipe but haven’t yet, so please let us know how it turns out if you do!


Four bags of gluten-free flour are arranged in a line, from left to right they are: Arrowhead mills Organic Millet Flour, Bob's Red Mill Whole Grain Sorghum Flour, Arrowhead Mills Organic Buckwheat Flour, and Arrowhead Mills Organic Brown Rice Flour.



INSTRUCTIONS


Before we get into the step-by-step, here is a quick summary. Sourdough baking is generally a two-day process. Don’t worry, most of the time the dough is just sitting there, hanging out in various stages of fermentation. It doesn’t need a constant babysitter. I will describe everything in detail below, but I thought it would be helpful to go into it with this in mind.

Example timing: Say we want to bake a loaf on Saturday morning. We store our sourdough starter in the fridge, so we’ll need take it out on Thursday evening to let it sit to warm up overnight. Then we’ll feed it a couple times on Friday, and make dough with the active sourdough starter on Friday afternoon or evening. The dough bulk ferments at room temperature for a few hours, then proofs in the fridge overnight. It is ready to bake on Saturday morning. You could also make your dough in the morning and bake the bread later that afternoon, but we have found the best results when the dough has time for an overnight cold proof.

It’s not as complicated as it sounds, I promise! You’ll get your own groove down in no time.


The Importance of Temperature

During this process, try to keep both your starter and the dough around 70-80 degrees Fahrenheit. 75°F is the ideal fermentation temperature for the yeast and bacteria to stay active and happy. During warmer months (or if your house is otherwise warm) you can usually keep everything out on the counter. However, cooler winter conditions lead to less active sourdough (less rise) and also an increased chance of mold in the starter. Excessively warm conditions (over 80°F) will make the dough rise more quickly, but could also lead to over-proofing – or deflating.

I highly suggest using a thermometer in the immediate vicinity of where your starter and dough are hanging out. We like to keep this ambient thermometer on the kitchen counter for easy monitoring. Going by “feel” isn’t always reliable. For example, our house feels very comfortable to us humans at only 65F, but that is a bit too cool for your dough baby.

A couple options to provide warmth to your sourdough are to keep it near a warm appliance, use an electric heating pad or seedling heat mat nearby, or to wrap the container/bowl in classic holiday lights. I emphasize classic lights because newer LED lights do not get warm. Last but not least, our favorite easy way to keep both sourdough starter and the proofing dough warm is to keep it inside the oven – with the oven OFF, but the oven light on! It creates the perfect cozy home. It if gets too warm in the oven, keep the door cracked open slightly. 


A white ceramic square bowl with a damp tea towel resting on top of it is sitting in the oven on top of a baking sheet. The sourdough is proofing inside the bowl until fermentation is complete. There is a digital thermometer next to the bowl to show that it is at the ideal temperature of 75 degrees Fahrenheit.
The oven makes the perfect little warm “proofing box” for the sourdough starter and dough when it is too cool on the counter. Oven light on, oven off! If it gets warmer than 80 degrees inside, crack the door slightly.


STEP 1: Ready Your Starter


Your gluten-free sourdough starter should be at “peak activity” when it is combined with other ingredients to create the dough (the next step). Peak activity happens after a starter has been fed, grown in size (about doubled), is nice and bubbly, but hasn’t yet started to fall back down or deflate in the container. During the winter, we put the fed starter in the oven (described above) to help it peak.

I suggest feeding your starter twice before baking to get it nice and active, especially if it was previously stored in the refrigerator. Don’t fret if your starter doesn’t overflow from its container like you may see online! GF starter is a little less vigorous than gluten-based starters. I also find that a gluten-free sourdough starter will peak and fall more quickly than wheat-based starters, much like the dough itself. Therefore, try to keep an eye on it after feeding to catch it at that ideal time.

If you need more tips about feeding, storing, and maintaining a sourdough starter, check out this article all about it. 


The gluten-free sourdough starter has reached peak activity inside the 2 liter flip top container. The starter has almost double in size from where it first started and there are many visible air bubbles throughout it.
She is peaked and ready!


STEP 2: Mix the Dough


In a mixing bowl, first combine and mix all of the dry ingredients – including flours, salt, and psyllium husk. This is important because the psyllium husk needs to get evenly distributed amongst the flour. When you’re weighing flour, don’t forget to tare/zero the scale. or take the weight of the bowl into account! We typically weigh each type of flour in a smaller bowl, adding them one-by-one to the main bowl.


Four types of gluten-free flour and psyllium husk have been added to a square ceramic mixing bowl. Each ingredient is taking up its own portion of the bowl and each one is visibly different from the next.


Next add the wet stuff: the active starter, water, and optional honey. The recipe calls for lukewarm water because cold water will lower the temperature of the dough and slow the activity of the starter. Also, if you want to add fresh or dried herbs, nuts or seeds, special seasonings, sun dried tomatoes, olives, or other goodies to your loaf, do so now! Avoid adding juicy ingredients like fresh tomatoes.

I typically pre-mix everything fairly well with a wooden spoon, but then dig in with clean hands to mix it further. Another option is to use a stand mixer. That will help fluff air into the dough. However, you do not need to “knead” the dough for any period of time. Once everything is thoroughly combined, form the dough into a large smooth ball. If things feel extra sticky, try using wet hands! I also use a dough scraper to clean up the sides of the bowl if needed. 


A three part image collage, the first image shows two hands initially mixing the dough after the wet ingredients have been added to the dry. The second image  shows the same as before yet the ingredients are starting to form together into a cohesive unit. The third image shows two hands holding the dough after it has been mixed. The dough is still slightly flat and will need to be shaped after it has been placed back into the bowl.


STEP 3: Let the Dough Rest in Bulk Ferment


Here is the easy part. Just let it sit! Unlike classic wheat sourdough, gluten-free sourdough doesn’t require routine stretching and folding, slapping, or other fussing during the bulk fermentation phase. In fact, the less you touch it, the better. Just sit back and let her go through a long slow rise. This stage can be anywhere from 3 to 5 hours.


Tips for Bulk Ferment:

  • Place the formed dough ball in the bottom of the bowl.
  • Cover the bowl with a damp lint-free towel, like a tea towel or flour sack towel. Dampening the towel helps prevent the dough from drying out – without the need for plastic wrap!
  • Tuck the bowl somewhere warm and cozy, but not hot. 
  • Take a peek at the dough every so often. Is it puffing up a bit? We usually let our gluten-free sourdough sit in bulk ferment for about 4 hours, and then transfer it to the banneton for the final proof.
  • If it is really warm in your home (over 80F), your loaf will ferment more quickly. Because gluten-free sourdough is more prone to over-proofing than gluten sourdough, reduce the bulk ferment time to 2-3 hours.


The finished gluten-free dough ball has been formed into a nice round loaf inside the square ceramic white bowl.



STEP 4: Proof Overnight


Next, we’re going to transfer the dough into the proofing basket, aka banneton. Proofing is essentially the final rise. After much experimentation, we have found the best results with our gluten-free sourdough bread when the room-temperature bulk fermentation phase is followed by a long cold proof in the refrigerator. This is almost exactly how we bake our wheat-based sourdough bread, with one exception: time. Wheat is more forgiving and can sit for up over 24 hours in cold proof. On the other hand, gluten-free sourdough peaks and falls faster, so I suggest a 7-12 hour cold proof instead.

By putting the dough into a banneton, it helps it form and hold the perfect loaf shape. A banneton proofing basket is made from woven material, which allows extra air into the loaf – adding to the rise. Last but not least, using a banneton for proofing makes the transfer into the hot baking pan a bit easier. If you do not have a bannteon, simply transfer the dough into a smaller bowl (a loaf-size bowl that will easily fit in the fridge.


To transfer the dough into the banneton:

  • Sprinkle a light dusting of flour over the bare banneton and/or cloth liner. I use a small fine mesh strainer (like a flour sifter) to evenly dust the basket. This prevents the dough from sticking.
  • Then gently pick up your dough ball, with an effort to keep it all in one piece and squish it as little as possible. If it seems to stick to your bowl, don’t pull at it. Use a wet dough scraper to help lift the ball away from the bowl.
  • Set the dough ball in the middle of the banneton, cover it again with a damp towel.
  • We sometimes leave the banneton out at room temperature for another hour to puff up slightly before putting it into the refrigerator. Other times (aka when it’s already bedtime) we put it right into the fridge.



The gluten-free sourdough dough ball is resting inside a boule banneton after its overnight proof. The damp tea towel has been partially pulled away from the top to show the dough ball hiding within.


Step 5: Preheat the Oven


It may seem silly for “preheat the oven” to be its own step, but it is an important one! When baking sourdough, we preheat the oven with the combo cooker or Dutch oven inside for an hour before the dough even goes in. When you add cold dough to a piping-hot pan it begins to cook and rise immediately, rather than having time to fall flat.

So, before you take the cold dough out of the refrigerator, turn the oven on to 475°F, stick your baking pan inside, and set the timer for an hour. Leave the dough in the fridge until right before it goes in to the oven.

(This step only applies if you are using a dutch oven, cast-iron combo cooker, or pizza stone. Otherwise, pre-heat the empty oven as you usually would when baking) 


STEP 6: Transfer Dough to the Hot Pan


Once the oven (and combo cooker or dutch oven) have been heating for an hour, get ready to carefully transfer your cold dough into the hot pan.

The easiest way to get your dough out of the proofing basket or bowl (without manhandling and smashing it) is as follows:

  • Cut a piece of parchment paper to just larger than the banneton size
  • Set the parchment paper on top of the banneton, and place a cutting board on top of that
  • Holding both the cutting board and banneton together, carefully flip everything upside down.
  • Gently lift the basket up and away.
  • The sourdough ball should now be on the cutting board and parchment paper. (Yes, you can reuse the parchment paper!)
  • Before sliding it into the pan, I like to use a small fine-mesh strainer or sifter to very lightly dust the top of the loaf with flour. If you choose to score your dough, it creates contrast and pretty designs. 


A five part image collage, the first image  show the gluten-free sourdough loaf sitting inside a banneton with a piece of parchment paper sitting on a wood cutting board nearby. The second image shows the banneton upside down on top of the parchment paper. This has happened after the board and paper was set on top of the banneton and both the banneton and board were flipped over upside down. The third image shows a hand pulling away the upside down banneton from the dough loaf. The fourth image shows a fine mesh strainer being used to lightly dust the top of the loaf with flour. The final image shows a hand gently smoothing the top of the freshly floured dough before it is scored and baked.


Optional Step: Score the Dough

Before hitting the hot pan, you may want to score the top of your loaf. Scoring is the process of using a bread lame (essentially an easy-to-handle razor blade) to create a slit in the top of your dough, along with optional fancy designs. It isn’t required, but it does help give your loaf a place to naturally expand as it rises. Without scoring, a loaf will likely split open haphazardly during baking. 

The loaf will expand and split open the most where you score it. Deeper scores are used for directing that rapid expansion. It may even create a nice little lip on your loaf. Bakers call this the “ear”. Smaller, shallow scoring can be used to create beautiful designs. Move quickly here so your loaf doesn’t start to go flat on you!


An unbaked gluten-free sourdough loaf is sitting on a piece of parchment paper on top of a wood cutting board. A bread lame is being used to score the top of the loaf before it is placed in the oven. There are lighter slices that resemble grain covering half of the loaf in the shape of a Christmas tree. The lame is now being used to cut a larger score across the middle of the loaf resembling a rounded horizon. The bread lame is wood with brass adornments that help keep the razor blade in place.
Using a bread lame, a deeper score guides the direction of the expansion (the main long one on this loaf). Smaller shallow scores can be used to create fun designs.


STEP 7: Bake


After flipping the dough onto the cutting board (and possibly scoring it), get that baby into the oven as soon as possible! Gently ease the loaf and parchment paper into the dutch oven or combo cooker. This is where the combo cooker is extra handy. We poise the cutting board near the edge of the (very hot!) flat bottom portion, grab the sides of the parchment paper, and carefully slide the whole thing off the board and into the combo cooker. Place the lid on top, and put it all in the oven.

A two way image collage, the first image shows the unbaked loaf of bread sitting on a piece of parchment paper, on top of a cutting board. The loaf has just been floured and scored and is ready to be placed in the combo cooker which is resting just behind the poised loaf, on top of the stove. The second image shows the same image as before, yet the loaf and parchment paper are now sitting in the bottom of the combo cooker, the lid just needs to be placed on top before baking it in the oven.


Bake the loaf covered for 60 minutes on 475°F. Hellooooo steam! Next, pull it all out and take the lid off. This is the best part – the big reveal! But don’t oogle over it too long. Quickly put it back in the oven to finish baking – this time uncovered, for a final 5 minutes to finish browning the top. Once it’s finished, quickly get the loaf out of the hot pan and on to a cooling rack.


Tip to Prevent a Burned Bottom

Depending on your oven, the bottom of the loaf sometimes turns out a bit more browned than some folks prefer. To prevent a burned-bottom, try this tip: While baking, put a cookie sheet on the empty oven rack just below the one your baking vessel (e.g. combo cooker or dutch oven) is resting on! It absorbs and blocks the extra heat from getting to your precious loaf instead.


STEP 8: Eat & Enjoy!


It is almost time to dig in and enjoy your very own homemade gluten-free sourdough bread! But not so fast. Allow the loaf cool down for a few hours before cutting it. I know, I know. It is extremely difficult to resist cutting into it right away. But the steam is still doing its magic inside and you don’t want to let it out too early. Cutting into your loaf while it is still warm will make it dry out faster in storage.  

Speaking of storage… We have found that is it best to wrap sourdough bread in a dry tea towel, and then put the bundle inside a paper bag. A paper bag alone seems to dry out too quickly. An air-tight container can cause it to mold. The use of a bread box also increases freshness. Homemade sourdough bread is always best the first day or two after baking. Then, it does become increasingly stale with time. To combat that, we like to toast or broil the older slices of sourdough. It brings it back to life!

If you don’t think you can eat a whole loaf within 3-4 days, try freezing some! Cut the loaf in half on the first day while it is still nice and fresh, and then put it in the freezer in an air tight container. You could even freeze slices. Pull it out to defrost at room temperature. Toasting may help improve the texture in that case as well.


A hand holding a slice of gluten-free sourdough bread. It has many smaller air bubbles in it with a couple that are slightly larger. In the background, the rest of the loaf sits on a wooden cutting board. The loaf is cut in half with half of the loaf left untouched while the remaining half of the bread has been sliced into pieces. The end of the sliced loaf piece is sitting face down with the rounded end piece pointing upwards.
This was an experimentation of this recipe using equal parts buckwheat, brown rice and millet flours (150 grams each). The texture and rise was nice, but the strong rye-like flavor of buckwheat was a bit too overpowering for my personal preference.



Boom! You just made some righteous gluten-free sourdough bread.


I sure hope this recipe works well for you, and enables you to enjoy delicious and nutritious homemade bread that you may have otherwise been missing. Please let us know how it goes by coming back for a review, sharing how your personal tweaks to the recipe go, or to ask questions! I would also love to see your results over on Instagram by tagging #homesteadandchill and/or @deannacat3. Happy baking!

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4.58 from 163 votes

Gluten-Free Sourdough Bread Recipe

No gluten? No problem. Come learn how to make gluten-free sourdough bread at home – which is even more simple than wheat sourdough! This recipe creates a wholesome homemade GF loaf that is full of small air bubbles, soft and spongy in texture, slices beautifully, toasts to superb crunch, and holds together well. Basically, you’re about to bake the perfect companion for avocado toast.
Prep Time20 minutes
Cook Time1 hour 5 minutes
Ferment & Proofing Time8 hours
Course: Side Dish, Sourdough
Keyword: Gluten-free baking, Gluten-free bread, Gluten-free sourdough, Gluten-free sourdough starter
Servings: 1 loaf of bread

Equipment

  • Large mixing bowl
  • Lined banneton bread basket, for shaping and proofing dough
  • Kitchen scale
  • Cast iron combo cooker or dutch oven
  • Bread lame for scoring (optional)
  • Tea towel
  • High-heat oven mitts
  • Thermometer
  • Liquid measuring cup

Ingredients

  • 110 grams active gluten-free sourdough starter
  • 450 grams total GF flour – we use 175 grams of organic brown rice flour, 150 grams of millet flour, 100 grams of sorghum flour, and 25 grams of buckwheat flour
  • 3 tbsp psyllium husk
  • 10 grams salt – sea salt, kosher salt, or Himalayan salt is preferred over iodized table salt
  • 1.5 to 2 cups filtered water, room temperature and filtered/non-chlorinated (*see water notes below)
  • 1 tbsp honey (optional)

Instructions

  • Before making the dough, be sure to feed your sourdough starter at least twice, allowing it to reach peak activity level.
  • Combine all dry ingredients (flours, salt and psyllium husk) in a mixing bowl.
  • Add wet ingredients (starter, water, and optional honey). Mix with a utensil first, and then you may want to use clean hands to thoroughly mix further. Or, use a stand mixer.
  • Form the dough into a fairly smooth ball, and set it in the bottom of a bowl. No need to knead the dough, or perform "stretch and folds" as you would with gluten-based sourdough.
  • Cover the bowl with a damp cloth. Set it aside in a location that is as close to 75F as possible to "bulk ferment" for 3-5 hours.
  • After an average of 4 hours of bulk fermentation at room temperature, gently transfer the dough into a flour-dusted (and potentially cloth-lined) banneton proofing basket of choice.
  • Cover the banneton with a damp lint-free towel. You can leave it at room temperature for another hour (optional) and then move it to the refrigerator, or just refrigerate immediately after transfer.
  • Move the banneton to the refrigerator to cold-proof the dough overnight (7 to 12 hours). Leave the dough in the fridge until immediately before transferring to hot pre-heated baking pan.
  • Preheat the oven to 475 degrees F. If you’re using a dutch oven or combo cooker, place it in the oven to preheat for one hour.
  • After an hour of preheating the baking pan, use the cutting board trick (see Note 2 below) to carefully transfer the cold dough out of the banneton and into the hot combo cooker or dutch oven. Score the top of the loaf with a bread lame while it it is still on the cutting board if desired.
  • Bake the loaf covered for 60 minutes, and then remove the lid and bake for an additional 5 minutes uncovered. (See Note 3 below)
  • Once done, immediately remove the finished sourdough loaf from the oven and combo cooker and place the loaf on a wire rack to cool.
  • Let the sourdough bread loaf sit at room temperature for several hours before cutting. The steam trapped inside is important moisture to retain!
  • Enjoy!
  • Store the finished gluten-free sourdough bread wrapped in a dry lint-free cloth towel, and then inside a brown paper bag. Toasting or lightly broiling the bread helps revive stale bread that is a few days old. Freeze some while still fresh (the first day) if you do not think you'll be able to finish the loaf within 3-4 days.

Notes

 
  1. WATER RANGE: 2 cups of water works well for the brands and types of flour we used, and for our climate. However, some people have commented that the dough was too wet. Start on the lower end of the called-for water and work your way up as necessary to achieve the desired consistency.
  2. To transfer the dough from the banneton to the hot combo cooker or dutch oven, try this trick: Place a piece of parchment paper (cut to just larger than the banneton and loaf) on top of the banneton and exposed dough. Then place a cutting board on top. Holding both the cutting board and banneton, flip the whole thing over. Lift the banneton away, leaving the dough ball sitting on the parchment paper and cutting board. Carefully slide the parchment paper into the combo cooker or dutch oven. 
  3. If the bottom of your loaf seems to brown more than you’d like, try adding an empty baking or cookie sheet to the empty oven rack directly below your combo cooker or dutch oven. It deflects some of the heat away from the bottom of the loaf, reducing burning or browning. 



DeannaCat signature, keep on growing

Deanna Talerico (aka DeannaCat) is a garden educator and writer with over 15 years experience in organic gardening. She is a retired Senior Environmental Health Specialist, and holds a M.A. in Environmental Studies and B.S. in Sustainability and Natural Resources.

269 Comments

  • Rosie

    Could I split this into 2 smaller loafs? If so, I assume adjust the baking time – what would you recommend? Or better to double the recipe and make 2 big ones?

  • Alice

    Hi, wanting to try a GF sourdough recipie and was going to give this a go but I only have a bread tin. How would the recipie differ ? I saw you mention that you would ferment and prove in the tin so I was wondering how that works in terms of getting the tin hot first and also in terms of covering it for the first but of cooking?

    • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

      Hi Alice, you can’t really heat the bread pan beforehand (due to proofing in the pan) and you may be able to cover the pan with a baking sheet but the tips on using cast iron doesn’t really transfer to using regular bread pans. The recipe could differ somewhat using a bread pan but you could try it as is as well (your oven temperatures would likely be 425 F to 450 instead of 500 F with cast iron), we played around with baking GF bread in a bread pan but the bread never got the same crunch that we achieved with the cast iron combo cooker. GF bread has a tendency to be a tad “gummy” in general and we found the cast iron did the best job of making that less so, granted, making our own GF bread in cast iron or a bread pan is/was far better than anything we can find in a store. Hope that helps and have fun baking.

  • Dana

    3 stars
    Just made baked the bread this morning! Flavor is good but do you have any tips for the bread to not be “gummy”. Not sure if I didn’t cook it long enough. Been trying to find a GF Sourdough recipe that is not gummy. Thank you!!

    • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

      Hi Dana, we have found that gluten free baking takes quite a bit of experimenting to find what works best for you. I would try and increase your bake time to see if you are able to make the bread less gummy inside.

  • Jessica Bennett

    I just placed the dough in the fridge! In the directions it says to transfer the dough from the fridge to the preheated Dutch oven. I’m making sure I don’t let the dough warm up for the hour on the counter as the Dutch oven is preheating?

    • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

      Hi Jessica, correct, we bring the dough out of the fridge once the oven and dutch oven have preheated and put it straight into the hot dutch oven. Have fun baking!

      • Jessica Bennett

        Just took it out of the oven! Now the hard part (wait to slice). Thank you for the reply. I should have read your directions more throughly. You stated it in the step by step instructions.

    • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

      Hi Sapienta, oat, quinoa, sorghum, or buckwheat are good substitutes for brown rice flour, you can really mix and match various GF flours and see which ones you prefer. We have found experimentation is the key to finding what works best for you in GF baking, hope that helps and have fun!

  • Sapientia

    Looks delicious! Planning on making this as soon as Eloise (my sourdough starter) is ready. But I don’t have buckwheat flour. Can I use something else? Thanks!

    • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

      Hi Sapientia, yes you can use any of the GF or other types of flour you have on hand in replacement of the buckwheat, good luck and have fun baking!

  • cassandra

    5 stars
    Hello, I am just about to place my proofed loaf in the Dutch oven and noticed it has a slight purple color, is that normal?

    Thanks,
    Cassandra

    • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

      Hi Cassandra, it probably depends on the type of flour you used but I wouldn’t be too worried about it for the most part. Good luck!

  • Becky

    We are not strict GF in our house either but try to reduce where we can. Wondering if you have tried this recipe with a non GF/regular soudough starter?

    • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

      Hi Becky, we have not baked a GF loaf using regular sourdough starter but you should be able to use your regular sourdough starter instead with no issues whatsoever. Have fun baking!

  • Wendy Taylor

    4 stars
    Questions: what is supposed to occur during proofing b/c my dough looks exactly the same (quite dense) when it comes out of the refrigerator? Is it suppose to be rising? Am I doing something wrong? My starter rises beautifully but the dough not at all. Thx!

    • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

      Hi Wendy, we don’t find GF loaves to rise as much as regular wheat sourdough bread when they are proofing, you will likely get more rise from “oven spring” when you add the loaf to a preheated combo cooker or dutch oven during baking. Hope that helps and good luck!

4.58 from 163 votes (102 ratings without comment)

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