These Auntie Anne’s-style gluten free soft pretzels with sweet mustard dipping sauce will keep you from having “just one” gluteny pretzel at the mall!
Why this recipe for homemade soft gluten free pretzels is so special
I haven’t had an Auntie Anne’s pretzel in the mall in, like, 100 years. But Auntie Anne’s pretzels are like Cinnabon. You can’t help but get something of a contact high if you set foot in a mall that sells them.
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That buttery, salty goodness just lives there permanently. Just ask the tired parents waiting in line at that pretzel counter on any given Saturday in America. You can’t escape it. Well, when you’re gluten free, clearly you must escape it.
Boiling the pretzels in a baking soda bath, like boiling bagels, is what gives them that chewy exterior. They wrinkle up, but don’t worry! They plump right up when you bake them.
Auntie Anne’s pretzels are thinner than I made mine, but I found that when I rolled them super super thin, they didn’t hold their shape very well during boiling. Who knows what kind of black magic those Auntie Anne’s people do with their super skinny pretzels.
How to store homemade gluten free soft pretzels for later
If you don’t plan to serve all of these gluten free soft pretzels right after baking, try salting only the ones you intend to serve. Then, moisten and salt the other ones right before serving.
They freeze quite well after baking and cooling. Just wrap them tightly in a freezer-safe wrap and freeze. Defrost at 50% power in the microwave and then warm in a toaster oven, then serve!
And by the way I’d be remiss if I didn’t tell you that I’ve got 8 brands of packaged gluten free pretzels for you to try. None are soft pretzels, they’re the crunchy kind, but thankfully there are lots to choose from on the market today.
Tips for making the best homemade gluten free soft pretzels
How (and why) to boil gluten free soft pretzels
The most common difficulty in making any yeasted boiled bread like bagels or pretzels is making sure that the shaped, risen dough doesn’t fall apart during boiling. Bagels and pretzels are boiled for similar reasons but in different water-based solutions.
Boiling bagels and soft pretzels (or pretzel rolls) is what gives them that hard, chewy exterior. Bagels are traditionally boiled in a bath of water and barley malt syrup. Our gluten free substitute is a molasses bath, which does a good job of mimicking the color and flavor of the barley malt bath.
Pretzels are traditionally boiled in a highly diluted solution of lye (or sodium hydroxide, which is also used to make soap), which requires extreme caution and rubber gloves. I’m all for DIY, clearly, but let’s not be ridiculous. A baking soda bath does a reasonable approximation of ensuring a nice deep color on the outside of your pretzels after baking.
How to make gluten free soft pretzels
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Making gluten free soft pretzels has 3 main steps: making the raw dough then letting it rise and chill, shaping it and letting it rise again, then boiling and baking the dough. Since, like gluten free bagels, pretzel dough is boiled before it’s baked, that’s an extra step but it’s well worth your time.
Boiling the bagels helps control the rise, so they stay chewy, and brown when they bake because we boil them in a baking soda bath and the alkaline solution aids browning.
Make the pretzel dough.
This is the most straightforward part, and as long as you use the right ingredients and you’ve measured them accurately by weight, you can’t mess this part up! Whisk together all of the dry ingredients (gluten free flour blend with xanthan gum, tapioca starch, buttermilk powder, yeast, cream of tartar, baking soda, and brown sugar) in the bowl of a stand mixer.
Then, whisk in the salt. Next, add the wet ingredients (apple cider vinegar, butter, egg whites, and milk) and beat with the paddle attachment until the dough is so well-combined that it begins to get irregular and look sort of whipped.
We’ll let the dough rise, covered tightly, before shaping it so that it develops some flavor and the flour can absorb some of the liquid to make it easier to handle. We’ll even chill the for a bit, which will also make it easier to handle. We don’t want it to rise for too long, though, or it tends to be harder to control the rise after shaping.
Shape the dough into pretzels.
Now, the dough is ready to be shaped into that twisted pretzel shape. We don’t want to add too much additional flour to the dough during shaping, or we’ll lower the hydration ratio and the dough won’t rise (yeast needs enough moisture to be active).
Divide the dough into 8 equal pieces by using a metal bench scraper or sharp knife to cut it in half, then half again, and finally half again for 8 equal pieces.
Working with one piece at a time, here’s how we’ll create that pretzel shape: roll the dough into a 12-inch rope, then curve it into an upside down “U” shape; criss cross the ends over one another into an “X” shape about 3 inches away from each end, then grab each crossed end with the opposite hand, criss-cross them once. Finally, turn them over onto the round end of the original U shape, and press the ends down to help them adhere so the twist doesn’t unravel during boiling.
Cover and let the raw soft pretzels sit just until they’re beginning to rise. This is one particular dough that can easily overproof.
Boil and bake the bagels.
Create a baking soda and salt water bath in a large pot, and bring it to a rolling boil on the stovetop. Place the risen pretzels gently in the boiling water and, without crowding each other, let them boil for about 1 minute each. Don’t flip them so you don’t risk disturb the shape. Instead, gently immerse them in the boiling water so the tops boil, too.
All that’s left is to return the boiled pretzels to a lined baking sheet, brush them with butter, sprinkle with salt, and bake at 400°F until they’re golden brown all over.
Tips for baking gluten free soft pretzels right the very first time.
How to make sure your soft pretzels don’t fall apart during boiling
There are three ways to ensure that your soft pretzels don’t fall apart during boiling. The first is to ensure your baking soda bath is at a full, rolling boil before you add the shaped, risen pretzels. A slow boil will do little to seal the outside of the pretzel, and will just sort of cause it to wilt.
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Second, do not overproof the dough. This is a rare case of yeast bread baking in which you should only allow the shaped, raw pretzels to rise until they seem merely swelled, and not even necessarily risen to 150% of their original size.
Overproofing is not a function of just time but is rather determined by amount of rising. If the environment in your kitchen is cold and dry, yeast dough will rise more slowly. If it’s warm and humid, more quickly.
Finally, if you boil the pretzels for too long, you risk their beginning to dissolve in the water. Err on the side of less boiling, rather than more. The dough is enriched enough and wet enough that the pretzels will still be tender inside.
Sometimes, wait to salt the outside of your soft pretzels
If you don’t plan to serve all the pretzels immediately after baking, consider baking without the coarse salt entirely, or with a very light sprinkling of it. Salt on the top of bread draws moisture out of the bread and causes it to go stale more quickly.
The salt in the bread dough itself is essential for controlling the yeast production and, more importantly, for taste. Bread without any salt is bread for the trash bin. If you do eliminate the salt sprinkled on top of the pretzels during baking, simply brush them with more melted butter and sprinkle with coarse salt before serving.
Gluten free soft pretzels ingredients, substitutions, and necessary equipment
Gluten free dairy free soft pretzels
If you need to make this recipe dairy-free, in addition to the buttermilk powder, you’ll have to replace the butter. In place of the butter in the dough and for brushing on the pretzels before baking, try using Earth Balance buttery sticks or virgin coconut oil.
Buttermilk powder
If you can’t find buttermilk powder, you can use nonfat dry milk powder in its place. It doesn’t add as much richness, but the recipe will still work. If you need to be dairy-free, you can try replacing the buttermilk powder with powdered coconut milk.
Gluten free egg free soft pretzels
There are two egg whites in the bread dough recipe. I haven’t tried replacing them, and I’m afraid I’m really not sure what, if anything, would work in their place.
How to replace the tapioca starch/flour
The addition of tapioca starch/flour to the bread dough helps make it stretchy and tender. In its place, you can try using arrowroot.
Cream of tartar
The cream of tartar can be replaced with 1/2 teaspoon of lemon juice or white wine vinegar.
Stand mixer
If you don’t have a stand mixer, you may be able to use a food processor to make the dough, especially if you have a plastic attachment, rather than the metal blade. All you do, essentially, is dump the ingredients, in the order listed in the recipe, into the bowl, and let the mixer process it fully.
If you have access to a stand mixer, though, it’s really the best way to make a smooth, integrated dough that is relatively easy to shape, boil, and bake.
FAQs
How to make homemade gluten free soft pretzels, step by step
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