Anonymous wrote:Oh. Yum.
But doughnut making sounds tricky--trickier than quickbreads, pancakes, etc. I'd be a lot more comfortable with a GF recipe from someone who's tested it than just subbing in a GF flour and hoping for the best. Once you get into yeast bread recipes, GF flours are pretty finicky. I assume the same would be true of a yeast doughnut. (They have yeast in them, right? Jelly doughnuts?)
Anonymous wrote:OP, are you sure the mom will even let him eat the food you bring in? "Don't worry about it" might be polite code for "I won't let him eat anything prepared by someone else, because I can't guarantee that the kitchen is safe, even if the food does not have the allergen"
I would confirm with mom that he will be allowed to eat your food before you go to all the trouble of modifying the recipe.
Anonymous wrote:(I'm showing my non-Jewishness here. Unleavened is at Passover, right? Yeasty treats OK at Hannukah?)

Anonymous wrote:You don't need anything but eggs and the potato starch that is already in the grated potatoes. After you grate the potatoes, drain them in a colander over a bowl with a plate on top of the potatoes and something heavy on top to press them down. Then allow the liquid to sit until the water separates from the starch. The starch will look like a grey thick putty at the bottom of the bowl. Pour off the water and add the starch back to the potatoes. You will get the crispiest, most wonderful latkes ever if you fry them hot enough. Most people don't let the oil get hot enough before they fry. Don't add any nasty GF flours to ruin the taste and texture.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:op here-thank you so much! What about the sufganiyot? will a gf flour work? I just don't want want one child to be excluded from trying the food we bring in-her mom already told me not to worry about it and the latkes are plenty but still...
PP 11:14 here. I wouldn't try sufganiyot without a specific GF recipe. All purpose GF flour only works for some things and it can really ruin the taste of foods that have high amounts of wheat flour. I have my doubts that you could make a really tasty GF sufganiyot.