Potato Starch vs Potato Flour: They Are Not the Same
Many home bakers use potato starch and potato flour interchangeably, but they are fundamentally different products with different uses, flavors, and baking behaviors. Understanding the distinction is essential for successful gluten-free baking.
Potato Starch
Potato starch is extracted from potatoes by grinding them, washing away the fiber, protein, and outer skin, and drying the remaining starch. The result is a very fine, pure white powder with almost no flavor. It behaves similarly to cornstarch: it thickens sauces and gravies when added to a cold liquid and heated, and it lightens the crumb in baked goods by creating a more delicate texture.
Potato Flour
Potato flour is made by cooking, drying, and grinding whole potatoes, including the skin. It retains the flavor, color, fiber, and nutrients of the whole potato. It is heavier, denser, and has a pronounced potato taste. A small amount adds moisture retention to baked goods; too much makes them gummy and dense.
Are They Gluten-Free?
Both potato starch and potato flour are naturally gluten-free. However, cross-contamination is a real risk if processed in facilities that also handle wheat. Always choose products specifically labeled certified gluten-free from dedicated or verified GF facilities.
How to Use Potato Starch in Baking
- Thickening: Use 1 tablespoon of potato starch per cup of liquid (same as cornstarch). Unlike cornstarch, potato starch thickens at a lower temperature and produces a clearer gel.
- Lightening flour blends: Add 15–30% potato starch to a GF flour blend to create a lighter, more airy crumb in cakes, muffins, and pancakes.
- Crispy coatings: Coat fish, chicken, or tofu in potato starch before frying — produces a crispier crust than rice flour.
- GF bread: A typical GF bread blend uses 30% potato starch + 40% rice flour + 30% tapioca starch.
How to Use Potato Flour in Baking
- Moisture retention: Add 1–3 tablespoons per cup of flour blend to keep baked goods moist longer. Do not exceed 25% of the total flour blend or the texture will become gummy.
- Flatbreads and dumplings: Small amounts add the subtle potato flavor that makes certain dumpling wrappers and flatbreads distinctively satisfying.
- GF pasta: 10–15% potato flour in a pasta dough adds binding and chew.
Substituting Between Potato Starch and Potato Flour
They are not direct substitutes for each other in baking due to their different textures and flavors. In a pinch, cornstarch or arrowroot powder can substitute for potato starch at a 1:1 ratio in thickening applications. There is no ideal substitute for potato flour's moisture-retention properties, though tapioca flour can partially replicate the binding effect.
Certified Gluten-Free Brands
Potato Starch
- Bob's Red Mill Potato Starch (certified GF)
- Authentic Foods Potato Starch (dedicated GF facility)
- Anthony's Potato Starch (batch tested, certified GF)
Potato Flour
- Bob's Red Mill Potato Flour (certified GF)
- King Arthur Gluten-Free Measure for Measure Flour (contains potato flour; certified GF blend)
Storage
Store both in airtight containers in a cool, dry location. Potato starch keeps for up to 2 years. Potato flour has a shorter shelf life due to its oil content — use within 6–12 months and refrigerate in warm climates.
Always verify that any food products you use are certified gluten-free. Individuals with celiac disease should consult their healthcare provider before making significant dietary changes.