Anybody got some good gluten-free recipes? I can't have gluten anymore. Which is unfortunate. I miss donuts and fried foods!
The internet is your friend here, as there are cultures that don't work with wheat as the main source of carbs and protein, like the ones reliant on corn, rice, and starchy roots.
I recommend
www.epicurious.com visited through a desktop or laptop, as they implemented subscription forced blockades to anyone using a smartphone.
Also
www.bonappetit.com has a good selection of recipes, also under a similar paywall for smartphone users.
As for recipes that would work for you?
There's an African recipe for rice crackers that uses regular rice for it, you can find it online or at youtube. The cook in question tosses in salt, pepper, hot peppers, and bashes the cooked rice with a pistil in her mortar until it becomes a sticky dough that can be thinly spread in between plastic sheets before removing said plastic sheets, cutting to size frying the slices to make chips.
Good enough to keep in a jar or bag to eat later on, too.
Now, the question is, is your gluten intolerance also extended to oats?
In between rice, potato and corn starches, corn flour, nixtamalized corn flour (has more available amino-acids than regular corn flour/meal, but has a different flavor in exchange), corn yellow meal for polenta, potatoes, beets, carrots, and many roots? You can make very neat stuff in myriad ways pan-fried, deep-fried, or baked/vapor-boiled.
Latin-American tamale? Made with nixtamalized corn flour, peppers, hot peppers, meat, seasonings, stock, and depending on recipe can even be made a dessert. This one is cooked using vapor normally, but an oven can be used as well from personal experience.
It can also be enriched with other flours and ingredients for a different texture and sustenance depending on what's available for you.
Or have added vegetables and herbs to make them a whole meal in themselves. I favor cabbage and other greens while mixing in some whole oatmeal to change its glicemic index towards a heartier meal than it would otherwise be.
The 'pache', a
mashed potato-and-nixtamalized corn dough tamale with a pepper and tomato sauce, hot pepper, and meat.
Then there's the
atole, which is also made with nixtamalized corn flour for extra protein availability.
I've seen success baking paches and tamales inside pyrex molds, though it is needed to cover them in plantain leaves to ensure that they don't dry out.
Rice dough can be vapor-cooked in a way similar to Chinese dumplings, and with diverse fillings too.
Beets? Thinly sliced, lightly salted, then patted with a towel? You can have beet chips that are savory. Same with carrots.
But donuts? Oats may hold your answer ... so long as you can tolerate their
slight gluten content. If not? Well, there's a reason why cooking without gluten can be an ordeal if you don't have enough variety in your local marketplace for glutinous carb sources to ape the texture of gluten.
And even that doesn't last once refrigerated.
I hope this post helps you out!
Edit:
Does anyone have suggestions/recipies/advise for bread pudding (or really any dessert with a primary ingredient of old bread)
I experimented by making sourdough with the addition of ground yellow split peas, and it didn't work out how I planned.
Use alcoholic drinks like whiskey, rum, or moonshine to make a sauce to either drizzle over them, or use straight as part of the egg, milk, sugar and salt mixture to cook them with.
Here's an example of a recipe using rum:
https://www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/bread-pudding-with-spiced-rum-sauce-105700
It all comes down to what you have available, 'cause even without the liquor it is still a simple, tasty hearty treat.