

🍞 Bake Bold, Stay Keto: Flour That Keeps You Ahead of the Carb Curve
King Arthur Keto Wheat Baking Flour is a low-carb, non-GMO, nut-free whole wheat flour blend designed as a 1:1 substitute for all-purpose flour. With only 4g net carbs and 17g protein per 1/4 cup serving, it delivers authentic wheat taste and texture ideal for keto and reduced-carb baking. Packaged in a resealable bag, it ensures freshness and versatility for breads, pizza crusts, cookies, and more—backed by King Arthur’s 230+ years of baking expertise.




| ASIN | B08FYLDG5X |
| Best Sellers Rank | #15,478 in Grocery ( See Top 100 in Grocery ) #175 in Wheat Flours & Meals |
| Customer reviews | 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (3,349) |
| Item model number | 071012060085 |
| Manufacturer | AmazonUs/KIOTJ |
| Product Dimensions | 12.7 x 5.46 x 24.13 cm; 470 g |
| amazon.ae Return Policy | Regardless of your statutory right of withdrawal, you enjoy a 15-30 day right of return for most products. For exceptions and conditions, see Return details . |
R**B
I was baking a lot with oat fiber, vital wheat gluten, almond flour, carbalose, lupin and coconut flours but this is SO MUCH easier and better! Yep, my original bread mix was only 2.5 net carbs I made myself and this is 4 net per serving but it’s worth the few measly extra carbs to get the taste and texture I want in my baked goods. So much closer to white flour in my opinion! Just sub your sugars out in any good bread recipe with inulin to activate yeast and use this flour in place of regular white or wheat flour in your recipe!! You may need to add a little more sugar sub in with flour later in mix in process before knead as inulin isn’t as sweet as real sugar. I use inulin and yeast in warm water to bloom, then add all the ingredients after in the recipe with a little more sugar sub. I do a swerve and allulose mix to avoid the total cool effect that swerve gives to bake goods! This flour is also good for a sub for cake recipes, deep fry breading, flour tortillas, homemade noodles , Dutch babies, biscuits, wonton wrappers, pizza dough, pancakes, waffles, doughnuts, fried dough, bagels, pretzels, crackers (I missed ritz ones so I found a copycat recipe and used this flour!) and softer type chewy cookies. It thickens pretty good if you are not a fan of xanthan gum! I even found a copy cat Schlotzkys bread recipe and made it so I could have that without all the guilt, added carbs and bloat!!! If you want a crispier cookie try making a half batch using this flour in a regular recipe with a 3/4 swerve and 1/4 Splenda sugar mix ratio (no allulose it makes things to soft) and then mix up a half batch of a keto one using almond flour and the sugar mix suggested above again and mix both cookie doughs after and form and bake at 25 degree lower temp (keto sugars and flours do better at lower oven temps) for crispier cookies! To crisp up your crackers or cookies even more, just let them cool and reheat just roll warm agai several times cooling down after and after an hour cook down you will have very crispy cookies/crackers! I have been using this flour for a while now and lost 60 pounds eating good things so close to regular tasting baked goods! It’s helped me stay eating healthy and still having what I want! It has 17 grams of protein per 1/4 cup serving with only 4 net carbs!
J**K
Made the loaf recipe on the back of the pack. It was delicious
S**O
I am really happy with this product. I baked air bread cookies and they came really good, the texture was so delicate that probably could have been alfajor cookies. I agosto made pancakes and they were delicious, my next endeavor will be pasta.
P**7
I was going to subtract a star at first, because the price is so high. But then I felt that would not be fair, because King Arthur really has a good product here, and it is probably not all that easy or cheap to produce it. And it isn't all that inexpensive to make low carb bread from the available recipes anyway... the individual ingredients for those are quite costly. This is by far the best way to make low-carb bread at home that I have yet come across. I have tried I think five other recipes from books and the internet, and none were a good substitute for the real thing. They sort of kinda work, but always have some flavors I am not really fond of, and I've never really gotten used to them. The flavors are wrong, and/or the texture is coarse, or rubbery. There was always something not quite "bread like" about them, despite the claims of the sources. But now I've used this King Arthur Keto flour in two loaves of bread in my old Goldstar bread machine, and cannot believe how nice this is! The flavor and texture is wonderful! If I were served this bread in a restaurant, I would be asking the waiter for the brand. The flavor is rich, the texture is perfect. It makes perfect toast, and is the first low carb bread which I have made, that works in making sandwiches. I really feel this "is the answer" for me, a newly discovered type 2 diabetic, who really thought my good bread days were over. Here is the recipe that worked well in my bread machine. It is very simple, and so far, fool proof: 1 cup warm water, about 110 degrees f. 2 tablespoons white sugar 1 pack rapid rise dry yeast ¼ cup vegetable oil 3 cups bread flour (one one pound bag of King Arthur Keto Wheat Flour) 1 teaspoon salt Put the oil and water in the bread machine. Fully mix the dry ingredients and place on top of the liquid. Make a small crater on the top, and place the yeast in that. Run the machine on the normal settings for white bread. The two tablespoons of sugar would be 26 carbs, and the flour is about 60 carbs. If the yeast ate none of the sugar, this would work out to about 7 carbs per slice, if you cut the loaf into 12 slices. But as I understand it, some or all of that sugar will be used up by the yeast rising process, so perhaps it would be even less. I'm no scientist... do your own calculations and research on all that! But in short, I feel this King Arthur flour is "the answer" I have been looking for. I want to try it for various other recipes, such as pasta and bagels. But for bread machine bread alone, I highly recommend it.
L**8
Just made bagels with this stuff. Cottage cheese, salt, this flour, baking powder Tasted like bread. Wasn't very chewy like I like it, but I think if I worked the dough more, it probably would've been. I think just trying to make regular bread with this would work well if you don't want to knead it that much. I hate the price for the amount you get. I'll probably get like... 2? more things I can make with this stuff. Over $15 for this small amount is ridiculous EDIT: So I just made a milk bread recipe out of this. 3c of the flour 1/3c melted butter 1c warmed milk 2tsp yeast 1 egg, 1tsp salt 1tbs sugar 1/2c allulose (or 1/4-1/2c of regular sugar) So not exactly low low carb, but lower than normal bread. I put all the ingredients in to my bread maker. Dough came together really well. The rising wasn't as much as normal dough. Maybe could've gone longer, but I think with the higher gluten content, it was just preventing it from poofing out more. I baked at the same temp and time (350 for about 19-20min) and it came out great. Very very similar to normal flour milk bread. You can tell there is more gluten and whatever else in this flour to make the texture a bit more springy/rubbery (but not in a bad way.. just that high gluten texture), but the flavor to me was the same. Very yummy. I'm still not happy with how much this stuff is fow how much you get but happy with the results I got when treating it as normal flour.
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