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First of all, I have to come clean here on this gluten free recipe – I haven’t actually tasted “regular” brioche since going gluten free almost 2 decades ago, so I had to rely on references to what brioche should be like to know if this recipe came close.
So I did my homework and determined the characteristics of brioche then compared my version to what my research turned up. In fact, this is how my gluten free brioche recipe was developed.
- Yeast bread enriched with butter and eggs… Check.
- Slightly sweet… Check.
- Tender crumb… Check.
- Dark golden crust… Check.
Is this brioche just like one you would buy from a bakery in Paris? I don’t know. What I do know is that this recipe for gluten free brioche is absolutely delicious!
It produces a rich loaf of bread that is not too soft and not too dense and that lasts for days! Perfect for sandwiches, French toast and bread pudding. Perfect just sliced and eaten (especially warm).
I had seen a recipe going around the internet for Brioche, however the copious amounts of cornstarch turned me off and the recipe lacked eggs which, along with butter, is what makes brioche, “brioche!” I can understand subbing-out dairy free butter for the butter but I can’t see how a bread recipe without eggs can be considered brioche. It may be lovely bread but I am not sure I would call it brioche—at least not when compared to this gluten free brioche recipe which uses all the traditional ingredients.
So I went and studied traditional brioche recipes, came up with a plan and then I tested and tested and tested – painstakingly changing one thing at a time and retesting until I came up with this recipe. I played with flours, adjusted ingredients and rising times and even tested different pan sizes and shapes. What resulted was my final gluten free brioche recipe.
I always like to share the process with you in case you’re interested. I believe that understanding what goes into a recipe and why helps you use the recipe for a springboard in case you want to go off and come up with your own creation. That’s especially true for any gluten free brioche recipe you might like to try.
The Ingredientsfor gluten-free brioche
Brioche is yeast bread that is enriched with butter and eggs. Use the best butter you can get or, if you’re dairy-free, use a good quality butter substitute. The eggs actually add a lot of flavor so again, use really good eggs. I prefer to use organic, cage-free, pastured eggs, from chickens fed with pure grains with no animal fats or by-products. These all really matter when it comes to flavor in this gluten free brioche recipe.
Brioche is also a little sweet. I made the bread with agave, honey and sugar. As much as I wanted the agave recipe to be the best, the one with sugar won the blind taste tests. But if you don’t eat refined sugar, agave is a great substitute. Honey came in third but still made an awesome loaf of bread. These variations can be used in a gluten free brioche recipe to suit your taste.
To keep the bread light enough in texture, it requires starch. I tried potato, tapioca and a combination of the two. Tapioca starch alone produced the best crumb. This is a key tip for any gluten free brioche recipe you try at home.
To make the bread a little denser and to add some whole grain goodness I used superfine brown rice flour. I actually didn’t test it with white rice flour but making an educated guess I would say it would work just fine as long as it is super fine. What I wouldn’t use is brown rice flour that isn’t milled really finely; I think it would be too heavy.
The Appliances & Pans
I tried making the dough in a stand mixer with the whisk and paddle attachment and in the food processor. They all worked but the easiest was using the stand mixer with the paddle attachment. I didn’t try mixing by hand, I love you all very much but I am way too lazy to mix dough with a spoon. You could do it if you put some elbow grease into it. The technique works well whether you follow my gluten free brioche recipe or use another version.
Loaf pan size seemed to make a difference, the best was an 8- by 4-inch loaf pan, the bread rose higher and the sides were straighter. Since my husband likes a high crust ratio I tried baking it in a ring mold – it was ok by a little dry. Letting the bread cool in the pan after baking is essential, the added structure of the pan helps the sides not cave in.
Technique Tips
One of the challenges was getting a deep brown crust and having the inside of the bread not come out too wet. Making a ¼ deep slit down the middle (lengthwise) of the loaf helped allow steam to escape while baking handling the wetness, and doing a double coating of egg wash (an egg beaten with about a tablespoon of water) and baking the bread in the lower third of the oven produced a beautiful crust. Before baking I brushed the top of the loaf with egg wash, let it sit for 5 minutes and then brushed it again. These details will perfect your gluten free brioche recipe at home.
You don’t want to rush this recipe – when blending in the butter, take your time. Blend the butter in 1 tablespoon at a time until it is fully incorporated. Don’t try to hurry this along with melted butter (tried that!) believe me when I say this makes all the difference. Take the time to let all your ingredients come to room temperature first, the eggs and butter need about half an hour. And this recipe requires two risings. It seems that I could be a little loose with rising times. Two hours seemed perfect for the first but once I forgot and it rose for almost an hour longer, everything was fine. I also tried doing a long second rise in the fridge overnight and to my delight, it worked great! Such a great thing if you want to have freshly baked bread in the morning! With all these steps, your gluten free brioche recipe will be a success.
After I perfected the recipe I tried doubling the recipe because heck, if you are gonna make bread why not make 2 loaves instead of one? It worked perfectly! I even tried using the dough for a simple cinnamon bun – more on that in a later post.
The really great news is that while coming up with the recipe was complicated; the recipe itself is very straight forward and simple. Yes, it takes a little to make the dough and then there are those two risings but it is not at all difficult and it rises unattended.
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Gluten Free Brioche Recipe
Ingredients
- 1 tablespoon dry active yeast
- 5 tablespoons sugar, (or agave nectar or honey)
- ¼ cup warm, (not hot) water
- 2/3 cup superfine brown rice flour
- 1 cup tapioca starch
- 2 teaspoons xanthan gum
- ¾ teaspoon kosher or fine sea salt
- 4 large organic pastured eggs – use divided
- 9 tablespoons unsalted butter, (or dairy free butter) at room temperature – use divided
Instructions
- Combine the yeast, 1 tablespoon of sugar and warm water in a small mixing bowl and whisk to combine. Let sit until the mixture is foamy, about 6 minutes.
- In the bowl of a mixer whisk together the brown rice flour, tapioca starch, remaining 4 tablespoons of sugar, xanthan gum and salt. Make a well in the center and add the yeast mixture. Put the bowl in the mixer and mix on low speed to combine. Add 3 of the eggs, one at a time, mixing each egg in thoroughly. Add 8 tablespoons of butter, one tablespoon at a time, mixing after each addition until the butter is fully incorporated. Increase the speed of the mixer to medium and beat for another minute or two until the dough is smooth. Scape the dough into a clean mixing bowl, cover with a tea towel and let sit in a warm, draft free place until it has doubled in size, about 2 hours. If it looks a bit more than doubled, that’s ok.
- Butter an 8- by 4-inch loaf pan with the remaining tablespoon of butter. Make sure you really coat the pan well. Scrape the batter into the prepared pan and smooth into the pan evenly. With a wet spatula, smooth the top. Cover with a tea towel and let rise for 45 minutes. (To do a cool rise in the fridge, cover the pan with a tea towel and let rise in the refrigerator from 2 to 24 hours. When ready to bake, uncover the pans and let the pans sit at room temperature for 15 minutes while the oven preheats.)
- Place the rack of the oven in the bottom third and preheat to 350 degrees.
- Cut a slit about ¼ inch deep down the center of the loaf with a sharp knife or razor blade dipped into some tapioca starch. Mix the remaining egg with 1 tablespoon of water, whisking well. Brush the mixture onto the top of the loaf, let sit for 5 minutes then brush again with the egg wash. Bake for 40 – 45 minutes or until the bread is deeply golden brown and the bread sounds a little hollow when tapped. Let cool in the pan for 15 – 20 minutes.
- The bread stays moist for several days. Wrap well in plastic wrap and store in the fridge.
Notes
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.














I’d love to try this! Is there any way to do this without a stand mixer? Will hand mixer with bread hook attachment work?
Thanks!
Hi there,
Yes I am sure that would work, just make sure not to over work it.
xo,
Carol
Can you substitute GF all purpose for the rice and Tampico.
Yes you can Angela. :)
xo,
Carol
Only because you dont advertise your own goods I ll subscribe to your emails. Thanks. And I ll try the recipe,too
How much brown rice flour did you use…was it 2/3 cup?
Hi Brienne! Yes it was 2/3 cups super fine brown rice flour! :)
xo,
Carol
Thank you so much for this as a wheat lover. I am not gf sensitive, but my best friend is. I went through about 3 other recipes trying to find her a good one for basic sandwich bread that did not cost ridiculous amounts at the local grocery. The others were not fit to feed a dog, let alone my friend.
Then I found you. Attractive golden brown crust? Check. Wonderful yeasty aroma? Check. Stiff enough to slice with a bread knife? Check. Flexible enough to handle after slicing? Check. Bubley, moist and light interior? Check. So does it taste like something I would feed someone I like? Check. can i toast it, grill cheese it, and french toast it? Definitely. And would I use that for a bread pudding? The loaf has never lasted long enough to find out.
the original 5 spoons of sugar has her calling it “pound cake”, and she’s happy to just toast it and add syrup like french toast because of all the egg in it. For sandwich I drop it back to 2 spoons and still get an excellent loaf. We both mix manually rather than with electric help, and it does not seem to harm the texture any. I have also skipped any wash at all, and still gotten a decent loaf, just less glossy on top.
Now I got so used to the ideal that this is how a basic sandwich bread should taste, gf or not, that when a well meaning friend got her a Sara Lee gf white, I was down right horrified by the commercial substitute. The store bought is down right vile, and I wish I could have found this recipe for her sooner.
haha You’re so welcome, I love how you so elegantly described this! I’m happy to hear that you are pleased with this recipe :)
xo, Carol
I found the opposite of those who had it really rising, I got very little rise out of it at all. Then again, I had a dough so stiff that it would just coagulate around one of the blades in my stand mixer, causing one of the internal gears to break. I tried the dough mixer in my Bullet Express (yes from that horrible infomercial), proving my theory that a 400W motor is wimpy. I ended up hand mixing it, so I didn’t get that much of a rise. When it came time to bake, I split the dough into 7 balls and placed them in a circle in a round cake tin, which is always how I saw brioche. It rose surprisingly well in the oven. It’s a bit heavier than I’d like for brioche, it came out more like, well, cake, good enough for Marie Antoinette to lose her head over. (Seriously, no one else has mentioned this?)
I’m in love with your brioche. I was diagnosed with celiac 5 years ago and just recently SIBO. Any ideas on how to convert this to the specific carbohydrate diet?
Hi Lindsey, Thank you! Not yet, but I would certainly be happy to work on it when I get a chance.
xo,
Carol
I tried the recipe today for the first time and straight away doubled it. Wanted to try to do burger buns as the ones you get here in Finland gluten free……………….
The dough rose nicely but is extremely wet. Did two batches with one letting to raise for 1 hour in our sauna (not heated of course :D ) and one overnight in the fridge. My brioche rings hold the first batch through baking quite well but they do resemble more scones than buns :’D
But the texture! OMG! So light and airy and delish! Bit sweet to use as a burger bun but soo delish!
Excited to see the second batch tomorrow morning. Posted a picnif the first batch on IG tagging simply glutenfree.
Thanks for the great recipe!
You’re so welcome Mikko!
Hi there, love your website!!! It’s amazing. You have truly beautiful recipes that I can’t wait to try. I follow a paleo diet, but I honestly try to stay away from paleo recipe sites because their substitutes in baking are loaded either with nutflours which I find heavy and hard to digest, or some other unpalatable low-carb substitute which defeats the purpose of making a nice starchy treat to satisfy my cravings. I need to be happy with my food…LOL otherwise what’s the point of living?! :O) Just wanted to know if I can substitute the brown rice flour for white rice flour in this recipe???
Thank you for this website and for your time.
Anita
I’ve made this bread so many times in the past couple years and it’s amazing every time!! I’m just curious if you ever shared the cinnamon roll recipe that you mentioned? I searched and couldn’t find it but maybe I’m just missing it!
Hi Marissa,
I’m glad you like it! I actually never ended up making a post about the cinnamon rolls but I’ll do my best to make a post about them next month, so check back in January for them.
xo,
Carol