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Sliced gluten-free cassava flour bread loaf on a wooden board, showing interior crumb
You slice into the loaf and find a gummy, sunken center. Or the crust holds but the crumb falls apart on contact with a knife. If you've baked cassava flour bread before, one of those moments probably…
Pale cassava flour and golden almond flour in separate bowls on a wooden counter, set up for a baking comparison
You followed the recipe. You swapped almond flour for the cassava flour it called for, cup for cup, and the tortilla that came out of the pan snapped like a cracker instead of folding. That's not a te…
Cassava root and pale cassava flour arranged on a wooden surface
You've tried almond flour. The pancakes were fine, but the savory flatbread tasted like marzipan. Then you tried coconut flour in a muffin recipe, added the same volume as the recipe said, and ended u…
Pale cassava flour on a wooden surface, illustrating single-origin sourcing and supply chain transparency
You pick up a bag of cassava flour, and the label says "single-origin." It sounds like information. It feels like a commitment. And if you've bought specialty coffee or premium olive oil before, you k…
Cassava root and pale cassava flour arranged on a wooden surface
Cassava flour is paleo, grain-free, and nearly 1:1 with wheat. Here's the structural reason it became the default paleo staple flour.
Pale cassava flour in a white ceramic bowl beside a whole cassava root on a kitchen counter
You have read the label. It says "gluten-free." The ingredient list shows one item: cassava flour. And yet you're still unsure, because you've been burned before. You bought a naturally gluten-free fl…
Sliced gluten-free cassava flour bread loaf showing interior crumb texture on a wooden cutting board
You pulled a cassava bread out of the oven. It looked right: golden crust, risen top, set edges. Then you cut it open and found a dense, gummy layer underneath that crust. Every gluten-free baker who …
Pale cassava flour ground from the whole peeled root, a lower-glycemic-index baking option
La farine de manioc affiche un index glycémique inférieur à celui de la farine de blé raffinée ou de la farine de riz. L'amidon résistant RS2 en est la raison. Voici ce que dit vraiment la recherche de 2025.
Cassava flour in a bowl, an autoimmune-protocol-compliant alternative for elimination diet baking
Pourquoi la farine de manioc est une farine conforme à la Phase 1 du régime AIP, ce que dit la recherche clinique de 2024, et comment la question des glycosides cyanogéniques est résolue par une transformation appropriée.