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Blender Short Grain Rice Bread - free of Psyllium, Xanthan gum, and Starch

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© 2025 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com




© 2025 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com


Creating bread from rice or rice flour is not a new culinary concept. My mom ususally steamed them after overnight proof using very little yeast or wild yeast. Had it at home all the time, I didn’t and still don’t give a toss about it. So, this is for you, Dezzy. However, using 100% whole raw rice kernels to bake gluten free bread without the help of psyllium, xanthan gum or starch can be a bit tricky and time-consuming than simply using rice flour. The rice batter tends to dry out very easily, that’s part of reasons that rice must be soaked for at least 4 hours, preferably overnight, and esp. if you don’t own a high-speed blender. For a better result, use short grain white rice, but long grain rice could and should work too. The result could be different though. Make one large loaf or several small ones. Top the loaf/loaves with some seeds for different flavours if desired. It’s crusty outside and very soft and tender inside, ideal for sandwiches and for toasting.

 

Blender Short Grain Rice Bread

adapted from Einfach Backen and Emmy
  1. To make the dough, soak the rice with plenty of cold water for at least 4 hours or overnight in the fridge.
  2. Grease or line a 24cmx10cmx9cm loaf pan with baking paper or grease several smaller loaf pans.
  3. Pour the rice through a sieve, rinse briefly with cold water and place in a high-speed blender. Add room temperature water, maple syrup and melted coconut oil and blend on the highest setting for 2 minutes until the batter is silky smooth and warm. The batter looks very much like marshmallow cream.
  4. Add the instant yeast and blend for 35 seconds until combined. Pour the bread batter into the prepared pan. The batter should fill the pan 1/3, not more than 1/2 of the height. Cover with a clean towel and set aside on your counter for 30 minutes.
  5. Place an oven safe tray filled with some water at the bottom of oven and preheat to 100C/210F. Place the pan in the middle of hot oven and increase the temperature to 190C/375F and bake for 45-50 minutes until golden brown.
  6. Leave the bread to cool for 5 minutes before turning it out on a wire rack to cool completely before slicing. The bread will keep for at least 3 days in an airtight container at room temperature.

© 2025 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com



© 2025 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com



© 2025 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com




30 comments:

David M. Gascoigne, 23/5/25 13:12

I don’t think I have ever had rice bread. Looks good though.

[Reply]
Tom 23/5/25 13:14

...Angie, this new for me.

[Reply]
Lola Martínez 23/5/25 13:17

Me encantaría probar este pan, ahora no puedo comer trigo y estoy segura que esta opción me gustará mucho.

[Reply]
Ananka 23/5/25 13:22

That looks really tasty and healthy :-D

[Reply]
kathyinozarks 23/5/25 13:28

Thank you for this recipe-saving it to my pinterest gf board thank you

[Reply]
DEZMOND 23/5/25 13:41

Ooooh, it turned out so great, bet it was soft as heavens. I have never tried to make it, but always admired it over at different YouTube channels. I do not mind the soaking overnight, I do that with lentils all the time, but during the day I do not have the time to wait for the dough to rise twice, not even once, so that is why I never made it, but would eat up the whole loaf that you made LOL I have heard that what can create a problem is if the mixture gets too hot in the blender during the long process of mixing, so it needs to go slow apparently.

[Reply]
ellie 23/5/25 13:48

It looks so tastey! But I have feeling I couldn't have it due to my blood sugar. Although, it looks so rewarding from the work you put into it. Awesome!

[Reply]
Caitlin'nMegan 23/5/25 13:48

Looks amazing for breakfast!

[Reply]
Ivy's Closet 23/5/25 13:49

Awesome bread! Looks very yummy 🌸❤️💕

[Reply]
My name is Erika. 23/5/25 14:05

This is really a fascinating bread . I'm printing off the recipe as I'd like to try it. Thanks for sharing Angie.

[Reply]
Margaret D 23/5/25 15:03

That looks interesting. Never had it but have seen it.

[Reply]
Anonymous 23/5/25 17:47

This sounds so easy and really interesting. I look forward to giving it a try. David (C & L)

[Reply]
DeniseinVA 23/5/25 21:45

Looks a delicious texture, wonderful!

[Reply]
J.P. Alexander 24/5/25 00:46

Gracias por al receta. Tomó nota. Te mando un beso.

[Reply]
Linda's Relaxing Lair 24/5/25 01:10

I have never had rice bread, but I know that this is popular in countries like Japan...and is apparently very healthy and tasty as well. Thanks a lot for sharing this, Angie.

[Reply]
Brian's Home Blog 24/5/25 01:28

WOW, that bread looks perfect!

[Reply]
Tandy (Lavender and Lime ) Sinclair 24/5/25 06:52

This is so intriguing and I hope helpful to people who need gluten free bread.
Tandy (Lavender and Lime) https://tandysinclair.com

[Reply]
MELODY JACOB 24/5/25 09:42

This is such a thoughtful and resourceful recipe, Angie. I appreciate how you made it feel approachable, especially for those of us avoiding gums and starches. It’s the kind of bread that feels both wholesome and nostalgic—definitely bookmarking this.

New post: www.melodyjacob.com

[Reply]
P-and-P 24/5/25 10:48

I've never had rice bread before, but it sounds good.

[Reply]
eileeninmd 24/5/25 13:04

Hello Angie,
The bread sounds yummy and healthy for me.
Take care, have a wonderful weekend.

[Reply]
Jeff the Chef 24/5/25 16:04

Wow, does that look fantastic. I've never had rice bread!

[Reply]
Bill 24/5/25 20:29

Sounds and looks healthy

[Reply]
Lowcarb team member 24/5/25 23:56

Not something I've tried.
Thank you for sharing the recipe.

All the best Jan

[Reply]
Norma2 25/5/25 17:30

Angie, surely your recipe will turn out very well because the rice ferments, thus obtaining yeast. With it, sake is made, the alcoholic drink from Japan.

[Reply]
Cooking Julia 25/5/25 23:48

This bread looks wonderfu! I think I have to try it...

[Reply]
sherry 26/5/25 04:28

i am confused! when you say you don't give a toss about it ... do you mean you don't like rice bread?? but your recipe ...

[Reply]
Angie's Recipes 26/5/25 05:11

Sherry, I baked it for Dezzy who requested it a while ago in my another post. :-))

[Reply]
Raymund | angsarap.net 29/5/25 04:19

Now this is impressive! Using whole rice instead of rice flour takes gluten-free baking to another level. Love how crusty it looks, bet it makes amazing toast too.

[Reply]


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