Cooking & Food Prep

Sourdough Guide

Master the art of naturally leavened bread with our complete guide to creating and maintaining a starter, fermentation, scoring, and baking.

Last updated: December 2025

Why Sourdough?

Sourdough bread uses wild yeast and naturally occurring bacteria to leaven bread, creating complex flavors, better texture, and improved digestibility compared to commercial yeast breads. The fermentation process breaks down phytic acid and gluten, making nutrients more available and the bread easier to digest.

Benefits of Sourdough

  • Better Digestion: Fermentation breaks down gluten and phytic acid
  • Complex Flavor: Tangy, nuanced taste impossible with commercial yeast
  • Longer Shelf Life: Natural acidity prevents mold growth
  • Lower Glycemic Index: Slower rise in blood sugar
  • No Additives: Just flour, water, and salt

What You'll Learn

  • Starter Creation: Build a living culture from scratch
  • Maintenance: Keep your starter healthy for years
  • Fermentation: Understand timing and temperature
  • Shaping: Create proper surface tension
  • Scoring & Baking: Achieve professional results

Creating Your Sourdough Starter

A sourdough starter is a living culture of wild yeast and lactic acid bacteria. It takes about 7-14 days to create an active starter from scratch, but once established, it can last indefinitely with proper care.

Starting From Scratch

Day 1

Mix 50g whole wheat or rye flour with 50g room temperature water in a clean jar. Stir well until no dry flour remains. Cover loosely and leave at room temperature (70-75°F / 21-24°C).

Days 2-3

You may see some bubbles forming. Discard half the starter (about 50g) and feed with 50g flour and 50g water. Stir well and cover loosely.

Days 4-7

Continue daily feedings. The starter should become more active, rising predictably and developing a pleasant tangy smell. Switch to twice-daily feedings if it rises and falls quickly.

Days 7-14

Your starter is ready when it reliably doubles in size within 4-6 hours of feeding and has a pleasant, slightly sour aroma. It should be bubbly throughout and pass the float test (a spoonful floats in water).

Maintaining Your Starter

Room Temperature Storage

Feed once or twice daily with equal parts flour and water. Best for frequent bakers who use starter several times per week.

  • • Keep at 70-75°F (21-24°C)
  • • Feed 1:1:1 ratio (starter:flour:water)
  • • Use or discard excess regularly

Refrigerator Storage

Store in the fridge and feed once per week. Ideal for occasional bakers. Pull out 12-24 hours before baking and give 1-2 feeds to reactivate.

  • • Feed, let rise 1 hour, then refrigerate
  • • Feed weekly even if not baking
  • • Reactivate with 2-3 room temp feeds before baking

Recommended: Starter Jar

A proper sourdough jar with measurement markings makes tracking your starter's rise easy. The KneadAce Pro Starter Jar (34oz) includes volume markers, a thermometer strip, and cloth cover - everything you need for starter maintenance.

Basic Sourdough Bread Recipe

This foundational recipe produces a beautiful, crusty loaf with an open crumb. Once you master this, you can adjust hydration, flour types, and fermentation times to create your own variations.

Ingredients

IngredientWeightBaker's %
Bread flour450g90%
Whole wheat flour50g10%
Water375g75%
Active starter100g20%
Fine sea salt10g2%

Timeline Overview

9:00 AMMix flour and water (autolyse)
10:00 AMAdd starter and salt, mix
10:30 AM - 2:30 PMBulk fermentation with folds
2:30 PMPre-shape and bench rest
3:00 PMFinal shape and into banneton
3:30 PMInto refrigerator for cold proof
Next morningPreheat, score, and bake

Method

1. Autolyse (30-60 minutes)

Mix flour and water until no dry flour remains. Cover and rest. This hydrates the flour and begins gluten development without any effort.

2. Add Starter and Salt

Add the active starter and salt to the autolysed dough. Mix by hand using the pinch-and-fold method: pinch the dough between thumb and fingers, fold over, rotate bowl, repeat for 3-4 minutes until well combined.

3. Bulk Fermentation (4-5 hours)

Perform stretch and folds every 30 minutes for the first 2 hours (4 sets total). Let rest undisturbed for remaining time. Dough is ready when it has increased 50-75% in volume, shows bubbles on surface and sides, and feels airy but strong.

4. Pre-shape

Gently turn dough onto unfloured surface. Using a bench scraper, shape into a loose round by tucking the edges underneath. Let rest 20-30 minutes uncovered.

5. Final Shape

Flip the dough, letter-fold the sides to the center, then roll toward you to create surface tension. Place seam-side up in a floured banneton.

6. Cold Proof

Cover and refrigerate for 8-16 hours. This develops flavor and makes scoring easier.

7. Bake

Preheat oven and Dutch oven to 500°F (260°C) for 45-60 minutes. Score the cold dough, transfer to hot Dutch oven, cover and bake 20 minutes. Remove lid, reduce to 450°F (230°C), bake uncovered 20-25 minutes until deep golden brown. Internal temperature should reach 205-210°F (96-99°C).

Essential: Kitchen Scale

Accurate measurements are critical in bread baking. The My Weigh KD8000 is the gold standard for bakers - it includes a baker's percentage function that makes scaling recipes effortless. Check price on Amazon.

Understanding Fermentation

Fermentation is the heart of sourdough baking. Understanding how time, temperature, and your starter interact will help you produce consistent results and adapt to your schedule.

Temperature's Role

Fermentation speed doubles roughly every 15°F (8°C) increase in temperature. This relationship allows you to control your timeline:

Dough TemperatureBulk FermentationFlavor Profile
65°F (18°C)6-8 hoursMild, creamy
75°F (24°C)4-5 hoursBalanced tang
80°F (27°C)3-4 hoursMore sour
38°F (3°C) - fridge8-48 hoursComplex, developed

Signs of Proper Fermentation

Under-Fermented

  • • Dense crumb
  • • Gummy texture
  • • Poor oven spring
  • • Dough tears when shaping

Properly Fermented

  • • Open, airy crumb
  • • Domed top
  • • Good oven spring
  • • Pleasant, tangy aroma

Over-Fermented

  • • Flat loaf
  • • Overly sour taste
  • • Large irregular holes
  • • Weak structure

The Poke Test

After bulk fermentation, poke the dough with a floured finger: Springs back quickly = under-fermented, needs more time. Springs back slowly = ready for shaping. Doesn't spring back = over-fermented, shape immediately.

Scoring Techniques

Scoring (slashing) the dough before baking serves two purposes: it controls where the loaf expands during oven spring, and it creates beautiful patterns on your finished bread.

Basic Principles

  • Blade angle: Hold the blade at 30-45 degrees to the surface for an "ear" (the lifted edge of a score). Perpendicular cuts create even expansion.
  • Depth: Score 1/4 to 1/2 inch deep. Too shallow won't open; too deep can deflate the loaf.
  • Speed: Score in one confident, swift motion. Hesitation causes dragging.
  • Cold dough: Score straight from the fridge - cold dough holds its shape better.

Classic Patterns

Single Score

One long slash slightly off-center. The classic "ear" design. Best for beginners.

Cross

Two perpendicular slashes forming an X or +. Creates even, balanced expansion.

Square

Four cuts forming a square on top. Opens into a rustic pattern.

Leaf

Central line with angled cuts branching off. Decorative and functional.

Troubleshooting Scores

ProblemCauseSolution
Score seals closedUnder-proofed dough or dull bladeExtend fermentation; use fresh blade
Dough deflates when scoredOver-proofedReduce fermentation time next bake
Scores look jaggedBlade draggingWet blade or score faster; colder dough
No ear developsWrong angle or weak steamAngle blade 30 degrees; ensure lid is on

Recommended: Bread Lame

A proper bread lame gives you control and precision when scoring. The Saint Germain Premium Bread Lame features a hand-crafted wood handle and comes with 10 replacement blades and a leather cover. For a more modern option, the KneadAce Magnetic Bread Lame has an extractable blade system that makes changing blades safe and easy.

Baking Methods

The key to a crispy crust and good oven spring is steam in the first phase of baking. Home ovens don't have steam injection like professional bakeries, but there are effective workarounds.

Dutch Oven Method (Recommended)

The Dutch oven traps steam released from the dough, creating the perfect environment for oven spring and crust development.

  1. Place Dutch oven (with lid) in cold oven
  2. Preheat to 500°F (260°C) for 45-60 minutes
  3. Score cold dough and carefully transfer to hot pot
  4. Cover and bake 20 minutes
  5. Remove lid, reduce to 450°F (230°C)
  6. Bake uncovered 20-25 minutes until deep brown
  7. Internal temp should reach 205-210°F (96-99°C)

Essential: Dutch Oven

A heavy cast iron Dutch oven is the most important tool for home sourdough baking. The Lodge 6-Quart Enameled Dutch Oven is perfect for round loaves and handles the high heat beautifully. For classic pre-seasoned cast iron, the Lodge 5-Quart Dutch Oven is an affordable workhorse that will last generations.

Baking Stone + Steam Method

If you prefer baking directly on a stone or steel, you'll need to create steam manually:

  1. Place baking stone on middle rack, cast iron pan on bottom rack
  2. Preheat at 500°F (260°C) for 1 hour
  3. Transfer dough to stone using parchment
  4. Immediately pour 1 cup hot water into cast iron pan
  5. Quickly close oven door to trap steam
  6. After 15 minutes, crack door to release steam
  7. Reduce to 450°F (230°C) and bake until done

Crust Color Guide

  • Pale golden: Under-baked. Will soften as it cools.
  • Medium brown: Acceptable but could go longer.
  • Deep mahogany: Ideal. Maximum flavor development and crisp crust.
  • Nearly black spots: Still fine! Caramelization adds flavor.

Troubleshooting Guide

Even experienced bakers encounter issues. Here are solutions to the most common problems.

Starter Problems

Starter won't rise

Causes: Too cold, not enough feedings, wrong flour type

Solutions: Move to warmer spot (75-80°F), feed twice daily, try whole wheat or rye flour

Hooch (liquid layer) on top

Causes: Starter is hungry (fermented all available food)

Solutions: Pour off or stir in, then feed immediately. Increase feeding frequency.

Pink, orange, or fuzzy growth

Causes: Contamination with harmful bacteria or mold

Solutions: Discard and start over. Ensure jar and utensils are clean.

Dough Problems

Dough is too sticky to handle

Causes: Under-developed gluten, too much water, over-fermented

Solutions: More stretch and folds, reduce hydration by 5%, shape with wet hands

Dough tears during shaping

Causes: Under-fermented or insufficient gluten development

Solutions: Let bulk fermentation go longer, do more stretch and folds

Dough spreads flat, won't hold shape

Causes: Over-fermented or weak flour

Solutions: Reduce fermentation time, use bread flour with higher protein (12%+)

Bread Problems

Dense, gummy crumb

Causes: Under-fermented, under-baked, cut while still warm

Solutions: Extend bulk fermentation, bake to internal temp of 210°F, wait 1-2 hours before cutting

Large holes with dense sections

Causes: Uneven fermentation or poor shaping

Solutions: Ensure even temperature, degas more thoroughly during shaping, improve tension

Flat loaf with no oven spring

Causes: Over-proofed, weak starter, insufficient steam, oven not hot enough

Solutions: Reduce proof time, use starter at peak activity, ensure Dutch oven lid is on, verify oven temperature

Crust too thick or hard

Causes: Baked too long or at too low temperature

Solutions: Bake at higher temp for shorter time, keep lid on longer in Dutch oven method

Not sour enough

Causes: Short fermentation, mild starter

Solutions: Longer cold proof (24-48 hours), use more whole grain flour, warmer bulk fermentation, use more mature (acidic) starter

Quick Reference

Hydration Levels

  • 65%: Easy to handle, tighter crumb
  • 70%: Good balance, moderate openness
  • 75%: Standard sourdough, open crumb
  • 80%+: Very open crumb, challenging to handle

Timing Reference

  • Autolyse: 30-60 minutes
  • Bulk fermentation: 4-6 hours (room temp)
  • Bench rest: 20-30 minutes
  • Cold proof: 8-48 hours
  • Baking (covered): 20 minutes
  • Baking (uncovered): 20-25 minutes

Essential Equipment

You don't need much to start baking sourdough, but having the right tools makes a significant difference in your results.

My Weigh KD8000 Kitchen Scale

Gold standard for bakers with baker's percentage function for scaling recipes.

View on Amazon

Nicewell Food Scale

Budget-friendly option with reliable 22lb capacity.

View on Amazon

Lodge 6-Quart Enameled Dutch Oven

Perfect for round loaves. Creates the steam needed for proper oven spring.

View on Amazon

Lodge 5-Quart Cast Iron Dutch Oven

Classic pre-seasoned cast iron that will last generations.

View on Amazon

Superbaking Banneton Kit

Proofing basket with all accessories for beautiful ring patterns.

View on Amazon

Banneton Bread Proofing Set

Includes both round and oval baskets for variety.

View on Amazon

Saint Germain Premium Bread Lame

Hand-crafted wood handle with 10 replacement blades and leather cover.

View on Amazon

KneadAce Magnetic Bread Lame

Modern design with extractable blade system for safe, easy changes.

View on Amazon

KneadAce Pro Starter Jar

34oz jar with volume markers, thermometer strip, and cloth cover.

View on Amazon

Superbaking Starter Jar

Includes measurement guides and everything you need for starter maintenance.

View on Amazon

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