Sourdough Starter Feedings

Sourdough Starter Feedings

Sourdough Feedings

Ingredients

  • 30g sourdough starter 
  • 125g water (distilled or osmosis)
  • 140g organic unbleached all-purpose flour 

Feeding the Starter

  1. Keep your starter in a large mason or Weck jar, this allows for room to grow. Loosely lidded and in a warm, cozy spot in the kitchen is the best place to store the jar. 
  2. Sourdough starter is a LIVE, wild yeast, which means it needs regular feedings for best results. I feed mine once per day when I’m making bread habitually. Between 12-24 hours after feeding is when you’ll have the most active bubbles. 
  3. Discard! You will discard the starter with each feeding. You only need 30 grams of starter every feeding.  The excess can be discarded into the fridge. If you do not discard a portion of your starter at each feeding, your sourdough starter will require larger and larger quantities of flour and water at each feeding to provide food for your ever-growing starter.
  4. What to do with your discard?  There are countless recipes to bake with your sourdough discard. If throwing away, I suggest not putting down your sink as dry starter is like cement.
  5. You can refrigerate your sourdough starter for long periods of time. Cold temperatures slow yeast and bacteria activity and will naturally extend how long your starter can sit between feedings. I usually push it about 2 weeks before needing a fresh feed or using the discard. 
  6. Depending on how long it has been refrigerated, your starter may require an additional 2 to 3 regular feedings at room temperature before it has resumed regular activity levels and is strong enough for baking sourdough bread. 
  7. Sourdough is wild, so it doesn’t always go perfectly to the plan. That’s okay! This is an ancient form of bread, let nature take its course.
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