kitchengoddess8
Sous Chef
- Joined
- Nov 4, 2011
- Messages
- 904
As jennyema said, fish can be quite good without dredging in flour at all. Try that.
I generally sautée fish without flour, but flounder tends to fall apart if I don't use it.
As jennyema said, fish can be quite good without dredging in flour at all. Try that.
Can you explain what the difference is. When would you use each of them?NO! They are two different things.
Thank you LP. I've been having trouble making rødgrød (a Danish fruit pudding - Rødgrød - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia). I thought the recipe called for potato flour, but I finally checked an online Danish food dictionary and "kartoffelmel" is potato starch, even though it sounds like it should be flour (kartoffel = potato, mel = flour). No wonder my fruit pudding wouldn't set.I thought I explained earlier in the thread but can go into a little more detail.
Potato starch is fine like corn or tapioca starch. It has the same properties so will thicken liquids when cooked and can be combined with heavier rice flour to make a gluten-free all purpose flour mix (mine is rice flour, tapioca starch and potato starch in a 3/1/1 ratio).
Potato flour is more the consistency of ground potato flakes. It is a little heavier and can absorb liquid without being cooked (like flour, but can not be used as flour alone because it absorbs too much).
Here's a link that may help The Food Allergy Queen: Potato starch vs. potato flour