In gluten-free cooking, texture depends mainly on the balance between flours, starches, and binders. Starches bring softness and elasticity, flours provide structure, and ingredients like xanthan gum help replace gluten. By adjusting these elements, you can achieve a crispy, soft, airy, or even chewy result.
When you remove gluten, what you lose first is structure. That’s what gives bread and baked goods their elasticity, softness, and sometimes crispness. Without it, textures can quickly become dry, crumbly, or overly dense.
The good news? These textures can absolutely be recreated.
And with your base mix (brown rice flour + potato starch + tapioca starch + xanthan gum), you already have a strong foundation.
Now it’s just about understanding how to adjust it depending on what you want to achieve.
Understanding what each ingredient does
Your all-purpose flour is already well balanced, but each ingredient plays a specific role.
Brown rice flour
This is the base.
It provides structure and a slightly dense, nourishing texture.
→ Too much: results can become dry or crumbly
Potato starch
Adds softness and lightness
→ Best for:
- cakes
- muffins
- soft breads
Tapioca starch
Brings elasticity
→ It adds:
- binding
- stretch
- a slightly chewy texture
→ Best for:
- breads
- pizza dough
- soft, flexible textures
Xanthan gum
Acts as a gluten substitute
→ It helps:
- prevent crumbling
- hold the dough together
- stabilize structure
How to adjust texture depending on the recipe
This is where everything changes. You can start from your base and tweak it depending on the result you want.
Soft texture (cakes, muffins, pancakes)
Goal: light, moist, not dry
What to adjust:
- slightly increase starches (especially potato)
- keep some tapioca
- avoid too much rice flour
👉 Result: softer, more airy texture
💡 Tip: adding a bit more liquid (milk or plant-based drink) helps prevent dryness
Crispy texture (cookies, pie crusts)
Goal: dry, clean snap
What to adjust:
- increase rice flour
- reduce starches
- limit tapioca
👉 Result: crispier, drier texture
💡 Mistake to avoid: too much tapioca → makes cookies soft instead of crispy
Elastic texture (bread, pizza, brioche)
Goal: flexible, holds together, slightly chewy
What to adjust:
- increase tapioca starch
- keep xanthan gum
- hydrate the dough well
👉 Result: dough that stretches, closer to wheat-based texture
💡 Expert tip: gluten-free doughs are often more hydrated than traditional ones. A slightly sticky dough is normal
Fudgy texture (brownies, desserts)
Goal: dense, moist, melt-in-your-mouth
What to adjust:
- increase starches
- reduce rice flour
- keep enough fat (butter or oil)
👉 Result: rich, soft, almost fudgy texture
Adapt starting from scratch
No need to create a new recipe every time.
Your all-purpose flour already works well. You just need small adjustments depending on the use.
👉 Examples:
- making muffins → add 1–2 tablespoons of starch
- making pie crust → add a bit more rice flour
- making bread → add a bit more tapioca
Small tweaks = big difference
Why some gluten-free recipes fail
Most of the time, it’s about imbalance:
- too much flour → dry
- too much starch → too soft or unstable
- not enough binder → crumbles
And a common mistake: trying to copy traditional recipes exactly.
With gluten-free cooking, you need to think in terms of texture first.
How to use Cannelle products effectively
Cannelle's all-purpose flour is already designed to work for most recipes.
But if you want to go further:
- use Cannelle's tapioca starch → for elasticity and softness
- use potato starch → to lighten
- adjust according to the type of recipe
👉 That’s what turns a “decent” result into something really good
FAQ — Frequently Asked Questions
Why are my gluten-free recipes dry?
Often because there's not enough starch or hydration.
Why is my dough sticky?
This is normal for gluten-free, especially with tapioca. It's not a problem.
Can I remove xanthan gum?
Yes, but the texture will be more fragile and crumbly.
What's the best texture to start with?
Soft textures (muffins, pancakes) are the easiest.
Starch or flour: which to prioritize?
Both. Their balance creates the right texture.