7 Tips for Starting a Good Sourdough Start (2024)

7 Tips for Starting a Good Sourdough Start (1)

Now that you have asourdough starter going, here are seven tips to ensure your success:

Glass canning jars are good for growing a starter but stay away from metal lids.

#1:Containers For Your Sourdough Starter

Most folks I know use glass canning jars to grow and maintain their starter. But nearly any glass or plastic container with a loose-fitting lid will work. If you use plastic, make is made from food-grade plastic.

For all that, the traditional choice is a stoneware crock. I have one that might otherwise hold coffee or tea, but a crock like the one fromKing Arthur Flourshown here takes up quite a bit of space inyour fridge when you are not using your starter every day.

The fermentation process begins when the wild yeast from flour and the environment combine with pure filtered or bottled water in a lightly covered container—Carroll Pellegrinelli

#2: Real Water

Use spring water, bottled water, orfiltered purified water. Home tap water, from a city supply, is treated withchloramine, a chemical that does not dissipate from water when left out overnight as chlorine used too. Tap water kills bacterial like theLAByou need for a healthy starter. Likewise, if your home water supply is hard there may be too many minerals for good growth. If you have a water softener, the bacteria don’t react well to that kind of treated water. And if you don’t have a water softener but your water is extra hard, you’re going to get a really dense heavy loaf of bread.Distilled water is a bad choice because the minerals that the bacteria need to do their thing have been removed. Just stick tofiltered spring or purified water for your starter and bread baking.

#3: Real Flour

To get a starter going, Caroll Pellegrinelli recommended using freshly ground whole wheat. Another author suggested a mix of half rye and whole wheat, which I did.

The reason for using whole grain, says Pellegrinelli, is that wild yeast and other favorable “microorganisms make whole-grain whole-wheat flour the best flour to use for sourdough starter. It provides a strong base to continue to build the starter. It is possible to make the entire starter with this flour, but it doesn’t maintain the desired results of a long-lasting starter. It may become too heavy with an overpowering sour smell.”

#4: Temperature Control

Starting with lukewarm water between 90-100°F (32-38°C) will helpincrease the rate of fermentation, although on days 2–7 and on every other day, I use filtered water that has been sitting on the counter.

Pellegrinelli says, “The best way to boost fermentation is by increasing the temperature of the starter. Keeping the starter in an oven with just the light on will accomplish this. Be very careful. It is just as easy to kill a starter with too much heat as it is to boost the process.” Personally I think the top, near of a fridge works just as well.

#5:Use a Kitchen Scale

A scale helps since you will be weighing equal amounts of water and flour for these daily feedings. Using cups can work, but each baker uses them differently. For example, for daily feeding, I have a metal cup for flour and aMeasure-all Cupfor liquids. The way I measure water, ¾ cup of it weighs about the same one cup of flour. But serious bakers realize the need for a scale rather than cups for measuring. This will prevent too much or too little flour in a recipe.

“Every cook wields a measuring cup differently and even cookbook authors and pastry chefs use them differently from one another. If every recipe included reliable weights, and everyone started using a scale, the overall quality of baking …would improve overnight! “—Food52

#6: Regular Feedings

Regular feedings of flour and water will aid the process of getting your starter going and keeping it healthy too. Once it’s going well, you might start an all whole wheat start or an all rye start and though you may not use them often, you can keep them for months in the freezer.

#7: Other Add-ins

Some bakers suggest that you can enhance your starter with other ingredients. Things like small amounts of sugar, or even traces of salt. Others swear by adding pineapple juice as the beginning liquid in the starter’s first mix. While these may allspeed up the process, mine worked well with just four and water.

Tell us how yours is doing in the comment section below, and now I have got to run to make those English muffins for Sourdough Saturday.

Author:Darryl Alderlives with his wife in Riverside Lodge, which is their home, along the Provo River in Utah. He is a retired career Scouter and outdoorsman who spent many hours over a campfire using a Dutch oven and loves sharing recipes for the kitchen and the campfire alike. You can read many of hisoutdoor recipes hereand on this site by searching for Sourdough Saturday or Recipes on the top right-hand side of the blog.

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Hi, thanks for the useful article! I would note, however, that distilled water is a fine choice for starter and for baking. I see that people say it’s bad but I’m guessing they’ve never actually tried it. My starter has been flourishing on it for years and, even generally being my own toughest critic, I know that the bread I bake with it is delicious. I believe the whole thing about lacking minerals is more just repeated conventional wisdom rather than tested science. Of course flour itself is full of minerals.

Just wanted to point this out so that anyone who doesn’t have really good clean water available but they could get distilled water should go ahead and use it.

7 Tips for Starting a Good Sourdough Start (2024)

FAQs

How do I make my sourdough starter better? ›

Feeding Your Sourdough Starter Different Ratios

Feed your starter 1:2:1 which means you'd feed it twice as much flour as water. This 1:2:1 ration can be handy if you are trying to strengthen your sourdough starter. It will decrease the hydration though, so it's often something you just do for a few days.

What to do on day 7 of sourdough starter? ›

Day 7: Discard all but 25g. Feed 50g Flour Blend and 50g Water. On Day 7, your starter should begin bubbling more vigorously and rising. It will begin to smell sweet, ripe and acidic.

How often should I stir my sourdough starter? ›

It is important that you stir the sourdough starter every day in the morning and in the evening. Feed the starter. Add 60 g flour and 60 g lukewarm water, stir well to combine, and let sit out for 24 hours.

Do you have to discard sourdough starter every time you feed it? ›

Do I have to discard my sourdough starter? It would be best if you discarded some portion of your starter each time you feed it unless you want to continue to let it grow. Eventually, you need to discard the used “food” (flour and water) that's been used to sustain your starter during the last fermentation period.

How do you enrich sourdough starter? ›

The easiest ways to increase the wild yeast colonies in your jar are to feed regularly and consistently, use whole grain flour, adjust the feeding ratio to slightly thicker, keep your sourdough starter warm and use unchlorinated water.

How to get big bubbles in sourdough starter? ›

Feed your sourdough starter with a high protein bread flour, rather than all purpose flour. Add some rye flour to your sourdough starter - this is a great way to strengthen your sourdough starter and introduce some whole grains into your wild yeast colony. Rye starters will often produce those big, mousse like bubbles.

How long do you leave sourdough starter out before using? ›

Getting ready to bake

Let it rest at room temperature for about 8 to 12 hours, until bubbly. Repeat as necessary, every 12 hours, until you notice the starter doubling or tripling in volume in 6 to 8 hours. That means it's strong enough to leaven bread.

Why is my sourdough starter bubbling but not rising? ›

If your starter gets completely covered on top with bubbles but does not rise, it is healthy but may just be a wet mix. Try reducing the water in your next feeding and see if you have different results. Also, the type of flour you are using can impede the rise of your starter.

What happens if you forgot to discard half of your sourdough starter? ›

If you don't get rid of the excess, eventually you'll have more starter than your feedings can sustain. After a few days, your daily 1/4 cup flour and water won't be enough to sustain your entire jar of starter, and your starter will be slow and sluggish, not much better than discard itself.

Do you refrigerate sourdough starter discard? ›

Store it for future baking: You can store sourdough discard in an airtight container in the refrigerator for future baking with sourdough discard recipes. When you're ready to use it, let the discard come to room temperature before using it to bake. I will keep sourdough discard in the fridge for about one week.

Is discard the same as starter? ›

Sourdough discard is the portion of starter that gets removed as part of its routine maintenance. Sourdough discard is the portion of starter you don't feed during routine maintenance. You can choose to dispose of it or bake with it.

How do I make my sourdough starter healthy again? ›

Reviving Your LIVE Sourdough Starter
  1. Spoon out the contents of the zip lock bag into a small bowl or container.
  2. Add 2 tablespoons of room temperature purified or spring water and 3 tablespoons of unbleached white flour (bread or AP). ...
  3. Cover loosely with plastic wrap and let sit at room temperature for about 8 – 12 hours.

How do you increase the flavor of sourdough starter? ›

Here are my best tips for increasing the sourness of your sourdough bread.
  1. Use more whole grain flours across the sourdough process.
  2. Oxygenate your starter.
  3. Feed starter less and keep the hooch.
  4. Use a stiff starter.
  5. Add starter after peak.
  6. Ferment the dough longer and at cooler temperature (using less starter)
Jun 10, 2020

Does sourdough starter get better the older it is? ›

While the age of your starter won't make your bread any better — turns out, only good sourdough practices can do that — it's a link in the long legacy of sourdough, one of the oldest forms of baking that exists. Whether your starter is a week or a decade old, you can become part of that lineage as well.

Is it better to make sourdough starter with milk or water? ›

No, milk should not be added to a sourdough starter. Sourdough starter needs only flour and water to colonise wild yeast.

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