Eat Well | Main Dishes | Sides
ByElise New
31K Shares
Jump to Recipe·Print Recipe
Looking for a gluten-free egg noodles recipe? This one is perfect! It’s based on a recipe from my grandma, and adapted to make the best gluten-free noodles ever!
In my family, homemade egg noodles are the ultimate comfort food. It wasn’t long after Gabriel and I married (and I subsequently began cooking gluten-free) that I realized that life would not be complete until I learned to make gluten-free egg noodles.
Okay so, perhaps I’m being a little dramatic, but I do love big, wide, egg noodles, and fortunately making them with gluten-free flours really isn’t any different than making them with wheat. They’re one of the few things you can add nearly as much flour to as you want without adverse affects. Isn’t that great? So often with gluten-free recipes, we have to be so careful about adding too much flour, and sometimes that makes recipes hard to handle.
Tips for making Noodles Gluten-Free
- These are easier to make than you think. Just remember to roll them gently, and sprinkle flour on your board or on top of your dough as needed to keep them from sticking to something. That said…
- I do not recommend using a pasta machine/cutter with gluten-free eggs noodles. This is hard for me to say, because I love that pasta machine!
It is possible to use, but it’s incredibly hard to get just the right texture in your dough to go through the machine without sticking, but not so stiff that it cracks and breaks. Gluten-free dough is completely different than wheat-based, and no matter what kind of binder (such as guar or xanthan gum) you use, it’s never going to be quite the same. It’s much easier and faster to use a lightly floured surface in order to make your egg noodles gluten free. - You can freeze or dry these gluten-free egg noodles for later! I like to lay them on a cookie sheet to flash freeze, and then store them in zip-loc baggies. Just be careful they don’t get mashed and broken up by other things in the freezer!
To dry them, lay on a flour sack towel in a well ventilated area, being sure to flip them over after a few hours for even drying. OR, dry on a cooling grid like this one in a warm (but not hot) oven, or in your dehydrator. Egg noodles dry pretty quickly, and store well. Cook them just like you would fresh noodles, but a little longer.
See AlsoMom Livid At Finding Out Colleague’s Pasta Sauce Recipe Contained Wine As She Served It While Babysitting Her 8 Y.O. KidVegan Gamja-jun (Korean Potato Pancakes) Recipe!SeaWorld responds to questions about captive orcas, ‘Blackfish’ film | CNNJames Duigan Recipes: The Wellness Warrior Goes Back To Basics
Gluten Free Egg Noodles Ingredients
- The finer the flour you use, the better your noodles will be.When you search for rice flour especially, you’ll notice that there’s rice flour, and there’s super fine rice flour. Super fine flour is just that, and makes a much smoother noodle. That said regular rice flour like Bob’s Red Mill white rice flour does work well when mixed with sorghum flour and cornstarch.
- Speaking of flours, My two favorite blends are brown rice, roasted corn, and cornstarch, or white rice, sorghum flour, and cornstarch in equal portions. You’re welcome to try your favorite gluten-free flour blend. For instance, adding some tapioca starch also works well. I’m sure most of them will work pretty well, HOWEVER I would not use coconut flour. It’s just completely different, and tends to fall apart in a recipe like this.
- You can use whole eggs or egg yolks for richer noodles. We often use whole large eggs to make large batches, but my mom almost always used just the yolks because “if you’re gonna make your own pasta, you should do it right.”
- Xanthan or guar gum. Since you don’t have the gluten in these noodles that you’d have with wheat flour, you need something to help bind the dough together. Don’t skip this ingredient! You don’t want to spend a lot of time finagling noodles with no binder in them off the counter top, only to have them fall apart when you boil them.
- Oil and salt are your only other ingredients. I use light olive oil, and sea salt. You can use whatever you prefer!
A few tips:
- Use a larger bowl than you think you need. You see most photos of egg noodles being made on a butcher block, but for me, the cleanup is just a lot easier if you keep it in a bowl. Maybe that’s just me. Anyway, make sure you use a large bowl so you have plenty of room to whisk and stir and work.
- Use a fork to work the wet ingredients into the flour mixture. It’s so much easier than trying to whisk, or spoon, or get your fingers in while the dough is still sticky.
- Roll your dough out in as much of a rectangle as you can. This will help make more uniform noodles.
- Don’t use a sharp knife to cut your dough. A pizza cutter is perfect, or something just a little dull.
While you’re making egg noodles, don’t forget to check out my recipe for homemade spinach pasta. It’s so good, my kids frequently ask to make it, and these days, if I make these regular egg noodles, it’s because I don’t happen to have spinach on hand.
If you’re looking for inspiration, check out this list of recipes using egg noodles.
One of my own favorite things to make (though I do it rarely!) is gluten-free lasagna noodles. They’re just like this recipe, with just a few small differences. You can also cut your gluten-free pasta dough in the shape of fettuccine.
These gluten-free egg noodles would also be a great addition to instant pot chicken stew!
Now on to the recipe.
Gluten-Free Egg Noodles
These gluten-free egg noodles are the ultimate comfort food. Bringing back the nostalgia of pasta making to gluten-free needs. Perfect in your soups and egg noodles dishes.
- Author: Elise
- Prep Time: 10 minutes
- Cook Time: 10 minutes
- Total Time: 20 minutes
- Yield: 2 servings 1x
Ingredients
Scale
- 1 egg or 2 egg yolks
- 1 tsp. oil
- pinch of salt
- 1/2 cup+ gluten-free flour (See notes for recommendations)
- 1/2 teaspoon xanthan or guar gum (note: if you use a flour mix that already contains gum, omit this ingredient)
- Water
Tools needed:
- Rolling pin
- Thin-edged Spatula (optional)
- Pizza cutter (optional)
Instructions
- Combine flour, salt, and xanthan gum
- Egg egg or egg yolks, and oil
- Mix together until dough forms a soft ball, adding water, a few drops at a time, if needed.
- Sprinkle more flour onto a flat non-stick surface (I just use my counter top) and roll the dough as thin as you can or want it – usually about as thick as a quarter or tortilla (sometimes I leave it rather thick and then cut very thin strips for a change). Use a knife or pizza cutter to cut strips.
- Loosen noodles from countertop with a spatula if needed.
- Drop noodle strips into simmering broth and cook for 5-10 minutes.
- Enjoy!
Notes
On the flour mix. There are two blends I like for this recipe:
1/4 cup each of white rice flour, sorghum flour, and cornstarch, or
1/4 cup each of brown rice flour, roasted corn flour (which can be difficult to find), and cornstarch. Feel free to experiment with your own flour substitutions based on your experience with gluten-free flours. HOWEVEr, if you use a pre-mixed flour that contains binders such as xanthan or guar gum, be sure to omit that ingredient from this recipe.
Get Your Garden Cheat Sheets!
Want to know exactly when, where, and how to plant your vegetables? Sign up to get our FREE companion planting guide, and garden planting cheat sheet printable.
31K Shares
Elise New
Elise is a Christian wife, mother of two rambunctious kids, and lover of all things made from scratch.