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How to Make a Sourdough Starter From Scratch

by DailyNT

Baking bread at home can be intimidating, but with some patience and practice, you will be turning out crusty, chewy, bakery-quality sourdough that will satisfy any connoisseur. And there are many advantages to making your own bread from scratch: The process of slowly kneading and shaping dough can provide a meditative and much-needed break. Plus, a homemade loaf can be far more cost-effective and (of course!) delicious than what you would get from the store.

While many types of bread only require flour, salt and yeast, you will need a sourdough starter (instead of yeast) to make a crusty sourdough loaf.

What is a sourdough starter?

A key ingredient in sourdough bread, sourdough starter is a mixture of flour and water that has been left at room temperature to ferment over the course of about a week. Throughout that period, the starter harvests yeast from the air around it. As you feed it with new flour and water each day, the yeast will start to multiply and create good types of bacteria and bubbles.

Those bubbles are what will eventually be used to leaven — or give rise — your bread naturally without the help of commercially produced yeast. This fermented mixture is also what gives sourdough bread its signature tang. After the initial period to create the starter, it can be stored in your refrigerator and fed with more flour and water on a weekly basis indefinitely to keep the yeast and bacteria you created fresh. (Fun fact: Sourdough starter is considered a living thing, which means you have to continuously feed and water it as you would a plant.)

How to make a sourdough starter

Ingredients to begin

  • 1 cup (113 grams) whole wheat or rye flour
  • 1/2 cup (113 grams) water (some suggest bottled mineral water is best, but tap water also works just fine)

Ingredients to feed your starter

  • 1 cup (113 grams) all purpose flour
  • ½ cup (113 grams) water

Tools

  • For measuring: A digital kitchen scale ensures precise amounts, though traditional measuring cups and spoons could suffice.
  • For storing your starter: You will need a non-reactive container (glass, stainless steel, or ceramic all work) that can hold at least 1 quart, since your starter will need room to grow in it, plus cheesecloth and a rubber band. If you’re looking to pamper your starter at just the right temperature, consider a starter incubator.

Day-by-day instructions

Day 1

Combine 1 cup (113 grams) of whole wheat or rye flour with ½ cup (113 grams) of water thoroughly in the non-reactive container. Leave the container out at room temperature (at least 70 degrees) for 24 hours. Cover the container with cheesecloth and a rubber band, or opt for a jar with a lid that is designed for air circulation without drying out the starter.

Days 2 and 3

Discard half the starter (about 113 grams or ½ cup of the mixture). You’ll be discarding quite a bit of starter over the next few days, which you can either reuse to make pancakes or compost. To the remaining starter, add 1 cup (113 grams) all-purpose flour and ½ cup (113 grams) water. Combine and let sit at room temperature for 24 hours.

Day 4

You should notice some bubbles and will want to start feeding your starter every 12 hours now. Continue feeding by weighing out 113 grams starter, discarding the remainder, and feeding with 113 grams all-purpose flour and 113 grams water. Mix, cover, and let rest for 12 hours before repeating again.

Day 5

Repeat the same 1:1:1 ratio of starter, flour and water feeding every 12 hours. By the end of Day 5, you may have an active sourdough starter. A sourdough starter is ready to use when you see lots of bubbles on the surface and the mixture has doubled in volume. An active sourdough starter will also smell a little bit fruity or tangy.

If your starter hasn’t doubled in volume and is not bubbly, repeat the process of discarding and feeding every 12 hours until it does. The process often takes up to a week, so continue feeding for a few extra days if it hasn’t doubled yet — patience is key here.

How to store sourdough starter

Once you have an active sourdough starter that has doubled in volume, you can begin to store it in your refrigerator, covered and reduce the feedings to about once a week.

Feeding your sourdough starter

To maintain your sourdough starter, you should feed it at least once a week (even if you’re not using it to bake).

Before you bake with it, you must revive your starter first. Sourdough starter cannot be used straight from the fridge. The night before you plan on baking a loaf of sourdough bread, remove the starter from the fridge and feed it with fresh flour and water, then leave it out (covered) at room temperature.

Either way, the feeding process is the same: weigh out 113 grams or ½ cup of starter and discard the rest. To the remaining mixture, add 1 cup (113 grams) all purpose flour and ½ cup (113 grams water). Mix and let rest, covered, until the mixture has doubled. Depending on the warmth of your house and how active your starter is, this could take as little as an hour or two, or up to 12 hours. If your house is a little chilly, you can speed up the process by keeping your starter in the oven with the light on. Be sure to leave a note to let people know not to turn the oven on and ruin your starter by baking it.

How to tell if your starter has gone bad

If you have stored your starter in the fridge for a while, you may notice a clear liquid floating on the top of it. This is hooch, a naturally occurring alcohol that is harmless. Just be sure to pour it off before using or feeding your starter.

However, if your starter is growing mold, or has orange or pink streaks on the surface, it has gone bad and should be discarded. If your starter also smells bad — instead of the naturally tangy or fruity scent it had before — that is a sign that it’s best to throw out and start over again.

What to make with your sourdough starter once it’s ready

The obvious choice is a loaf of sourdough bread, but you can also find recipes online for everything from sourdough pancakes, to sourdough focaccia, to sourdough pretzels, to sourdough crackers. The best part about these other recipes is that they often make use of the discarded sourdough starter you’re left with when you feed it. King Arthur Flour is a great resource for recipes that use sourdough starter discard.

Where to buy sourdough starter

If you’re overwhelmed or don’t have a week to go through the whole discard and feed process to get a sourdough starter going, you can also buy one online (we won’t tell!). King Arthur Flour sells its sourdough starter online, which is super fresh and best to use right away. Or, you can find dehydrated options on Etsy. Check with local bakeries to see if they will sell you some of their sourdough starters.

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