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🍕 Elevate your gluten-free game with Italy’s finest flour — because real pizza waits for no one!
Antimo Caputo Gluten Free Pizza Flour is a premium, all-natural, gluten-free flour blend imported from Naples, Italy. Crafted since 1924, this proprietary mix of rice and potato starches, soy flour, and dietary fibers delivers authentic Neapolitan pizza crusts with a soft, chewy texture and flavorful bite. Perfect for professional and home bakers seeking gourmet gluten-free pizza, bread, and pasta with no compromise on taste or quality.










| ASIN | B00FXH8QFQ |
| Allergen Information | Gluten Free |
| Best Sellers Rank | #4,654 in Grocery & Gourmet Food ( See Top 100 in Grocery & Gourmet Food ) #19 in Wheat Flours & Meals |
| Brand | Antimo Caputo |
| Brand Name | Antimo Caputo |
| Container Type | Single Package |
| Cuisine | European |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 out of 5 stars 3,438 Reviews |
| Diet Type | Vegetarian |
| Flavor | origin |
| Item Form | Raw |
| Item Package Weight | 1.02 Kilograms |
| Item Weight | 1000 Grams |
| Manufacturer | Caputo |
| Model Number | 017202 |
| Number of Items | 1 |
| Package Weight | 1.02 Kilograms |
| Part Number | 017202 |
| Region of Origin | Italy |
| Size | 2.2 Pound (Pack of 1) |
| Specialty | All Natural,Gluten Free |
| UPC | 801460165434 |
| Unit Count | 35.2 Ounce |
J**R
Best GF pizza crust!
This makes an amazing gluten free pizza crust! It is nice and chewy and comes close, even on par with regular crust.
J**S
Tastes like gluten!!!
Best GF bread yet! Looks, tastes and smells like there’s gluten in this bread. It fills your home with such an amazing aroma I haven’t experienced since diagnosed with celiac. I’m in love 😍
K**O
This is the flour that makes the Gluten Free pizza that tastes all wrong!!!!!
When I was in Italy, I thought ... hey, I'm trying the GF pizza here. I want to see what it tastes like. So, I ordered "senza gluten" pizza @ a place in Rome. Pizza came and I panic after I take my first bite. "OMG! They served me real bread! THIS TASTES WAY TOO GOOD!" Well, the restaraunt assured me that, indeed, I was served a GF pizza. Ok ; I trusted them & ate the rest of my food. Lo and behold I didn't get sick ; I'm eating a bready pizza that tastes good and I'm not getting sick!!! All of the subsequent pizzas I had were made of this SAME FLOUR --- INCLUDING IN NAPLES! Wow, I was in heaven - having a GF pizza that tastes like a real pizza. I thought - why can't I have this same experience in the USA? Why do all the pizza places in the USA make GF pizzas with such terrible & disgusting cardboard or dessicated hardtack crusts??!?! Just this past year - I found out that the flour that is used to make GF pizzas in Italy was ... Antimo Caputo Fioreglut! THIS FLOUR! Ok. I went all out. I bought a backyard pizza oven. I bought this flour. I bought some killer Olive Oil and the best imported Italian diced tomatoes I could find. I wanted to repeat the experience of having a GF pizza that tastes like a pizza. Well. The pic with my review speaks for itself. Real crust. Chewy. Bready. Soft on the inside, crispy on the outside. I used the recipe that Antimo Caputo puts on the bag to make my GF pizza - and it came out holy ... flawless. I am never eating another GF pizza in a US restaraunt again. Unless the place uses THIS flour - their pizza is terrible. I don't care which half-baked hipster kitchen makes their "best GF crust" or whatever they want to claim - if it isn't made with Caputo Fioreglut - it is NOT good. This is the absolute best GF Pizza flour in the world. Period. End of conversation. This is the only flour out there that makes a REAL pizza crust that is GF. BUY THIS. COOK IT. EAT IT. ENJOY A REAL PIZZA THAT IS GF. Everything else sucks. Tip I've got for this - the dough can be sticky + you need flour to prepare the pizza for baking. I keep a bag of Bob's Red Mill (or some cheaper more accessible) flour to use for dusting my peel & the dough while working it into a pizza shape. I don't waste my Caputo flour during final prep of the pizza before cooking. Be sure to also slide the pizza around a bit while preparing it so it doesn't stick to the peel. ( Assuming you're using a peel & pizza oven. ) Last off - you can halve or quarter the recipe + it comes out just fine. Enjoy this stuff.
F**H
Premium gluten free flour
I have been using caputo gluten free flour for over a year and I use it with my gluten free sourdough starter to make bread and pizza dough. Best pizza and bread flour I’ve baked with. The results are consistent and I’ve had several compliments on the taste.
T**R
Amazing Flour
I have used other GF flours for making Detroit-style pizza with okay success, but decided to give the Caputo gluten free flour a try. The results were VERY impressive. I also make that style of pizza using wheat flour, but this GF result was every bit as good as a wheat flour version. One would never know it is a gluten free pizza. I wish the flour were not so expensive, but that is an issue with GF flours in general.
M**O
Decent Flavor - One of the best GF flours out there
We use the Caputo 00 for pizza and needed a GF flour for a relative with a gluten allergy. I hate to say it, but there are no really "good" Gluten Free flours on the market, but this is one of the better ones. Gluten is what makes wheat flour what it is, so removing it leaves a lot to be desired. Having used multiple GF flours over the years, this one is similar, but with slightly better working characteristics and better flavor. The consistency is very powdery, similar to confectioner's (powdered) sugar. It does not leaven very well with yeast alone and will need baking powder or baking soda (or both) to fully rise. We do use yeast in our recipe, mostly for flavor along with baking soda and it makes a huge difference in the overall taste of the pizza crust. The wet dough works well and isn't quite as crumbly as some others, but is sticky. Like all GF flours, it doesn't stretch well like regular flour dough and will tear easily - just the nature of all GF flour. It is pricey and given that it is only marginally better than some other GF flours that I have tried, I'll leave it to you to decide if the juice is worth the squeeze. **NOTE** This flour contains wheat starch so if you have a wheat allergy and not just a gluten allergy, this flour is NOT for you
K**E
Fantastic GF flour for pizza
This made the BEST gluten free pizza dough that even gluten eaters love. It made a delicious crust with a wonderful chew that had air bubbles. It was not flat or dense like other GF crusts. This would make a wonderful focaccia bread too. I was even able to make some stuffed-crust pizza with it. In the past I’ve used Cup 4 Cup flour, which is also excellent, but this was even better. (I did not use the recipe on the label, but maybe I’ll try that next time. I used my tried and true GF pizza recipe that adds psyllium and almond flour.) My daughter has celiac and I’m always trying to make breads that are just as good (or almost) as regular bread. If your in that same boat, you definitely want this in your pantry.
L**E
Pizza gluten free
Makes the most amazing gluten free pizza crust.
R**O
La migliore e semplice da impastare
La migliore di questa categoria senza glutine, provate molte ma questa è semplice sia da preparare che buonissima di gusto. Io non sono celiaco ma gestisco la mia intolleranza alimentare al grano duro con questa farina. Un pochino cara, ma la qualità di paga e non credo abbia concorrenza.... Vi consiglio un lievito di pasta madre di riso.
L**A
Best gf flour
Best gluten free flour.
T**L
Great gluten free flour!
This flour makes an amazing pizza crust. It is really expensive, as most gluten free things are. The dough feels and tastes like "real" wheat based bread/Pizza.
T**N
Closest gluten flour to real flour
Really good flour for pizza and focaccia breads. Doesn’t taste like other gluten free flours and rises really well. Use more yeast, baking powder and or baking soda to really make it rise and look like real bread
C**.
Mega gut
Seit einiger Zeit muss ich auch auf Gluten verzichten. Da ich früher schon das "normale" Weizenmehl von Caputo zum Pizzabacken verwendet habe und immer begeistert war, habe ich auch jetzt auf die Marke vertraut und wurde nicht enttäuscht. Ich habe gestern meine Freundin, die Gluten verträgt, eingeladen als Testerin. Wir waren beide der Meinung, dass sie total lecker war und es keinen Unterschied zu einer normalen Pizza gibt. Auch der Teig ist so schön glatt und lässt sich prima verarbeiten. Aber bitte nur mit den Händen, nicht mit der Teigrolle. Der Preis ist schon ziemlich hoch aber aus einem Kilo bekommt man gut 5 große runde Pizzen (inkl. Mehl für die Arbeitsfläche) So gesehen sind das geschätzt 2 Euro pro Pizza und das ist es mir echt wert.
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