Grain Products Category

Grain Products
Includes flour, noodles, and dough.
gluten-free flours
gluten-free flours
Gluten is what makes wheat-based bread dough so sticky and elastic. This helps the dough hold in the air bubbles created by the yeast so that it will rise and eventually bake into a fluffy, porous loaf. If you're gluten-intolerant, though, you'll need to use gluten-free flour, along with an arsenal of ingredients to make it behave like it has gluten.
Learn more
gnocchetti
gnocchetti
Gnocchetti is an Italian pasta made to look like gnocchi, the popular potato dumplings. Gnocchetti, though, contains no potatoes. To confuse matters, a larger version of gnocchetti is also called gnocchi. Both sizes are good with thick sauces.
Learn more
gnocchi
gnocchi
Gnocchi are Italian dumplings made from potatoes and other ingredients. They work best with light sauces, so as to showcase the pasta's subtle flavor and texture.
Learn more
gomiti
gomiti
Gomiti is Italian for "elbow," and this pasta shape is like elbow macaroni, only it's bent more. Use it in pasta dishes with chunky sauces, pasta salads, or macaroni and cheese.
Learn more
gook soo, gougsou, kooksoo
gook soo
A staple of Korea, these flat wheat noodles resemble fettuccine. They're usually served in a soup.
Learn more
grape leaves, grape vine leaves, vine leaves
grape leaves
Greeks stuff these with ground lamb and rice to make dolmades, but they're used elsewhere to make pickles and beds for food. They're hard to find fresh in markets, but you can often find them in cans or jars. Trim the stems and rinse off the brine before using. To make your own: Plunge grape leaves (that haven't been sprayed with harmful chemicals) for one minute in boiling, salted water (2 teaspoons pickling salt per quart), then drain.
Learn more
grattoni
This egg pasta consists of tiny diamond shapes. It's used in broths and light soups.
Learn more
gyoza wrappers, gyoza skins
gyoza wrappers
The Japanese use these round wrappers to make pork-stuffed dumplings similar to Chinese potstickers. Western cooks sometimes use them to make ravioli.
Learn more
harusame, harusame sai fun, harusame saifun, Japanese vermicelli
harusame
These thin, translucent Japanese noodles are typically made with potato, sweet potato, rice, or mung bean starch. They're similar to Chinese bean threads.
Learn more
hazelnut flour, filbert flour
hazelnut flour
This is ground from the cake that remains after the oil is pressed from hazelnuts. This is hard to find, but you can order it from Baker's Find (1-800-966-BAKE) or online from from King Arthur Flour.
Learn more
hazelnut meal, filbert meal, ground filberts, ground hazelnuts
hazelnut meal
This is used to make cookies and other desserts.
Learn more
hiyamugi
hiyamugi
These slender Japanese noodles are often served cold. They're made of wheat flour.
Learn more
Hokkien noodles
Hokkien noodles
These egg and wheat-flour noodles are popular in Malaysia and Singapore. They look like thick yellow spaghetti.
Learn more
Hong Kong noodles, Hong Kong-style noodles
Hong Kong noodles
These egg and wheat-flour noodles are used to make chow mein. Cook them first in boiling water, drain, and then fry.
Learn more
Indonesian noodles, mi, mie
Indonesian noodles
Indonesians like to use bean threads (which they call su un), and rice vermicelli. They also use egg and wheat-flour noodles to make bami goreng, a fried noodle dish.
Learn more
Instant Clearjel, Clear-jel, ClearJel® starch
Instant Clearjel
This is a modified cornstarch that professional bakers sometimes use to thicken pie fillings. It has several advantages over ordinary cornstarch. Instant ClearJel® thickens without cooking, works well with acidic ingredients, tolerates high temperatures, is freezer-stable, and doesn't cause pie fillings to weep" during storage. Don't use Instant ClearJel® for canning--it tends to break down.
Learn more
Instant flour, instant-blending flour, instantized flour, quick-mixing flour
Instant flour
You can mix this granular all-purpose flour into liquids without getting many lumps, so it's perfect for making gravies and batters. It's also good for breading fish. Wondra flour and Shake & Blend are popular brands.
Learn more
instant tapioca, granulated tapioca, instant pearl tapioca, quick tapioca
instant tapioca
These small, starchy granules are used to make tapioca pudding and to thicken pie fillings. The grains don't dissolve completely when cooked, so puddings and pies thickened with them end up studded with tiny gelatinous balls. If you don't mind the balls, you can also use instant tapioca to thicken soups, gravies, and stews. If the balls are a problem, just pulverize the instant tapioca in a coffee grinder or blender, or buy tapioca starch, which is already finely ground. Instant tapioca tolerates prolonged cooking and freezing, and gives the fillings an attractive glossy sheen. To use it in a pie filling, mix it with the other ingredients, then let it sit for at least five minutes so that the tapioca can absorb some of the liquid. Don't confuse instant tapioca with regular tapioca, which has larger beads, or with the even larger tapioca pearls sold in Asian markets. Minute® tapioca is a well-known brand.
Learn more
isinglass
isinglass
This gelatin comes from the air bladders of sturgeon and other fish. It's sometimes used to clarify wine.
Learn more
Japanese noodles, menrui
Japanese noodles
The Japanese like to serve noodles in soups and salads. It's customary to make loud slurping sounds when eating noodle soup, though younger Japanese are rebelling and eating more quietly. Kishimen, udon, hiyamugi, ramen, chuka soba, and somen are all wheat noodles, while soba is made from buckwheat, shirataki from yams, and harusame from mung bean or other starches.
Learn more
kadaif, kataifi, knafeh, konafa, konafah, shredded fillo dough
kadaif
Cooks in Greece and the Middle East use this shredded dough to make sweet desserts. You can find it among the frozen foods in Middle Eastern and Greek markets. While working with it, cover any unused dough with a damp cloth.
Learn more
kamut flour
kamut flour
Kamut flour is tolerated by many people with wheat allergies and is a good substitute for wheat when making bread and pasta, especially if it's combined with other flours (e.g., spelt flour).
Learn more
kamut®  pasta
kamut pasta
Kamut® contains gluten, but it's tolerated by many people with gluten allergies.
Learn more
kishimen
kishimen
These are flat and slippery Japanese wheat noodles. They're served both hot and cold.
Learn more
Korean buckwheat noodles, naeng myun, naengmyon
Korean buckwheat noodles
These Korean noodles are made with buckwheat flour and potato starch. They're usually served cold, but sometimes added to soups. Boil the noodles for about 3 to 4 minutes before using.
Learn more
Korean noodles, myun
Korean noodles
Korean sweet potato vermicelli (which they call tang myon) is very slender, and has a somewhat rubbery texture. Korean buckwheat noodles are also chewy, and usually served cold. Koreans are also fond of rice sticks and Chinese egg noodles.
Learn more
Korean sweet potato vermicelli, dang myun, dangmyun, Korean vermicelli
Korean sweet potato vermicelli
A Korean specialty, these long, chewy noodles are made with sweet potato starch. Before using, soak them in hot water for about 10 minutes, then add them along with some broth to stir-fries.
Learn more
kreplach wrappers
kreplach wrappers
Jewish cooks use these to make kreplach, a kind of Jewish ravioli.
Learn more
kudzu powder, kuzu powder
kudzu powder
This thickener is made from the tuber of the kudzu, the obnoxious vine that was imported from Japan a number of years ago and is now growing out of control all over the South. It's very expensive, and the main reason to buy it is for its reputed medicinal benefits. It comes in small chunks. To thicken a liquid, crush the chunks into a powder, mix them with an equal amount of cold water, then stir the mixture into the hot liquid and simmer for a few minutes until the sauce is thickened. Look for kudzu in health food stores.
Learn more
laganelle
This is a kind of Italian ribbon pasta, similar to lasagne only narrower.
Learn more
laksa noodles
laksa noodles
These rice noodles look like white spaghetti. They're used to make laksa, a noodle dish popular in Indonesia and Malaysia. Don't confuse the noodles with laksa leaves, a kind of mint that's often used to season the noodles.
Learn more
lasagne, lasagne, no-boil lasagne, oven-ready lasagne, Precooked lasagne
lasagne
These thick, wide noodles with ruffled edges are used to make an Italian casserole dish that Americans call lasagne. Italians call the noodle itself lasagna (plural: lasagne), and the casserole lasagne al forno. Thinner noodles are best. Precooked lasagne = oven-ready lasagne = no-boil lasagne work fairly well and save time, but the noodles tend to absorb moisture from the sauce, resulting in a drier product.
Learn more
lasagnette
lasagnette
This is a thin version of lasagne, the wide Italian noodles used to make baked lasagne. Lasagnette is often used like fettuccine, and simply tossed with a light sauce and served.
Learn more
linguine
linguine
Linguine ("little tongues" in Italian) consists of long, slender ribbons of pasta. It's often served with clams or shrimp.
Learn more
lo mein noodles
lo mein noodles
These popular Chinese egg noodles are often used to make lo mein, in which the noodles are stir-fried along with the other ingredients. They come in various sizes; use the flat ones for stir-fries and the round ones for soups. They're available fresh, dried, and frozen in Asian markets.
Learn more
lotus leaves
lotus leaves
These leaves open up like butterfly wings, each about two feet high. They're often wrapped around rice and other fillings, to which they impart an earthy aroma when the bundles are steamed. The leaves are available either fresh or, more commonly, dried in Asian markets. Soak them for at least an hour in warm water before using, and keep fresh leaves in a cool, dry place or else freeze them.
Learn more