🍽️ Elevate Your Pizza Game with King Arthur!
King Arthur Gluten Free Pizza Flour is a specially formulated blend designed to create crispy, airy Neapolitan-style pizza crusts. This 32 oz box combines gluten-free wheat starch, sorghum flour, and xanthan gum, making it perfect for those with celiac disease or gluten sensitivities. With a legacy dating back to 1790, King Arthur Baking Company ensures quality and authenticity in every bite.
P**N
Makes THE best gluten free pizza!
This flour makes the best GF pizza! Having Celiac Disease, I was very skeptical when this first came on the market as it has wheat starch. But research confirmed it's safe from a gluten perspective (do not consume if you a wheat allergy, of course).I've now made dozens upon dozens of crusts with this flour, and it's the bomb! I've made pizzas for folks who don't have to avoid gluten, and they cannot tell the difference.The first few times I made pizza crust, I stuck pretty closely to the recipe on the back of the package, substituting honey for the sugar. Now, I just wing it and add more flour or water depending on what kind of pizza I wish to make (thin, pan, etc.). It's been a success every time. So, so easy to make.I've found the flavor is much better if it rises for at least 2 hours, preferably longer. I usually try to make mine to allow for a 3-4 hour rise. I do not refrigerate unless I want an overnight rise (be aware if you follow the recipe for a overnight dough, it will not rise much when removed from the fridge as there's a very small amount of yeast when the overnight recipe is followed).I always use honey in place of sugar, I add pizza dough flavoring from KAF, and I up the salt. I also add more olive oil. I also very generously coat the dough with oil for the rise. Oil helps keep the pizza from sticking to hands when forming the crust, and it adds a lovely crispness when it bakes. I use parchment paper for forming the dough, and then I remove the paper after the pizza cooks for a couple of minutes (I use a pizza stone)...makes for a very easy release. It's also delicious when I take the very easy route of leaving it on the parchment paper; still crispy and browned). This is a very forgiving recipe, and it seems pretty foolproof. But I'm a very experienced cook and know what I'm looking for in the texture, so for a beginner or novice this might be different.Another thing I changed from the directions was the cooking temp. 500 degrees in an electric oven doesn't really give me leoparding for the crust, but I also don't care. We like our toppings to be browned and the crust to be crispy, so I cook at 450 degrees for a longer period. We prefer it this way. It's light and crispy and absolutely delicious.I highly recommend this product. I've been GF for 9 years now, and it wasn't until I discovered this flour that I made truly excellent GF pizza. Good ones, yes, but this product creates stellar pizza as close to the gluten filled one as you can get. Love, love, love this flour! I always keep this flour stocked in my pantry as we make pizza once a week, usually, and I will not use anything else.If you do not have a wheat allergy and you love pizza, do yourself a favor and try this. I get very sick if I ingest anything containing or cross-contaminated with gluten, and this flour has never caused any issues. KAF does certify their GF products, and I've never had a problem with them.
J**S
Game changer!
Made my first pizza today with this and the claims are 100% right. Forget Almond Flour, and all the others. Directions on package are accurate. Dough mixes easily with a spatula. Rises as expected and is super easy to work with. I'm not allergic to gluten but it does make me feel sluggish and you can always drop a few pounds when you cut it out just by virtue of switching up from a carb heavy diet. since I'm not allergic I found it helpful to sprinkle a little regular flour on my hands and the dough when working with it since it is a bit sticky. used a rolling pin to spread and got pizzas much larger than the 10" they advertise (more like 12 1/2") Well worth a try and a great price considering what some others cost. Some helpful notes: roll it on parchment paper. DO NOT try and roll it between 2 pieces - it will stick and be unusable. Precook the pizza shell at round 450 for a few minutes until the dough solidifies to shape. Easily separates from the parchment paper onto an aerated pizza tray to allow for circulation in the oven. DO cook it at the full 500 degrees for crispiness. Good undercarriage, can hold a lot of weight and DOES NOT crumble. Very Solid and essentially identical to regular pizza. Because it is wheat starch and uses yeast it has the same dough flavor as typical pizza. I will try and pre-make a few shells and freeze and see how that goes. This is 10 of 10.
R**N
The best gluten free dough we’ve found!
We LOVE to use this flour for pizza. There are instructions we follow on the back of the bag and it always makes the perfect dough. Very comparable to normal gluten pizza.
T**L
Worked great so far on pizza crust
A friend recommended this flour and this company (in my experience) always produces high quality products. Since it’s 1:1 it was super easy to convert recipes using this flour. We made 1 batch and it produced 3 personal pizza crusts with a thinner crust. I’m used to gf products and this one tastes terrific! With the recipe I used (I found one online), this bag will probably make 3 batches of pizza crust. Again, depends on what you’re making and recipes used, but this bag seems like a good size for the price. It also is a good texture to work with-it didn’t do anything weird and functioned the way you’d expect any flour to!
M**.
The best I've found
I found myself looking back fondly at some amazing focaccia I'd made in the past but now would make me feel icky. I picked this up with low expectations to give it a shot and it blew me away. I made a focaccia with toppings and the pizza dough on the bag and both were amazing. Lots of olive oil underneath gives it an amazing bottom crunch that reminds me of Jet's pizza and a local chain I grew up by where I'd get Pizza Nuggets. A deep thick airy crunch.The dough also has a great bite. To be honest, and I know it sounds corny or cliche, but I like this better than regular pizza dough. Even regular pizza dough can be crappy, but this stuff is like always as good as the GOOD kinda regular pizza dough.Granted, I've only made it twice in one week but both times I've been super happy. I measured by weight, which is what you need to do anyway to be consistent with baking, especially with gluten free which is probably less forgiving.The bag seems to have two more pizzas left in it for me, and for the $9 I got it for that's cheap in my books. Even at the regular $13 I'll still be getting it. I guess regular flour is a lot cheaper but KA is high quality and also the end product I've never matched before.But now I need to be cautious because pizza 3 or 4 times a week isn't the greatest for my health 😅I like the dough so much I think I'm not going to bother with toppings all the time and make a more plain focaccia. Just smear some tomato paste a bit maybe and olive oil and seasoning, maybe olives. Then get some yummy red sauce to dip it in. But less veggies is even less healthy 🤣 oh well. One night a week then. Or two.
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