sourdough bread starter recipe in mason jar Credit: Johnny Miller
sourdough bread starter recipe in mason jar Credit: Johnny Miller
sourdough bread starter recipe in mason jar Credit: Johnny Miller
sourdough bread starter recipe in mason jar
Credit: Johnny Miller
Bread making, especially sourdough bread making, can seem mysterious. We’re here to help by showing you what you’re looking for when begining to work with a sourdough starter to make levain and autolyze, then proof the dough. Enlist this basic process for when you’re making our Sourdough Boules, Sourdough Croissants, or Sourdough Focaccia.
Feed the Starter
Most bakers keep their starter in the fridge where the cool temperature slows down yeast and bacteria growth. When you’re ready to bake, adding flour and water “wakes it up” and makes the yeast and bacteria in it grow and multiply. Once it’s lively, bubbly, and fed, it’s ready for baking.
sourdough levain Credit: Johnny Miller
Make the Levain
Adding a certain amount of flour and water to a measured amount of starter, then letting it sit out to ferment (usually overnight), deepens the end flavor.
prehydrating sourdough dough Credit: Johnny Miller
Prehydrate Dough
This is your autolyze/sponge step. Add more flour and liquid and let it rest briefly; this fully hydrates the flour and helps the gluten develop.
folding dough Credit: Johnny Miller
Fold It
Forget what you might have heard, making bread is not necessarily all about the kneading. In sourdough baking, time in contact with water and folding build the gluten, so several rounds of gentle folding will suffice.
proofing sourdough Credit: Johnny Miller
Proof It
This is the final rise before baking. You know dough is properly proofed when you poke a finger into it and the indentation holds or reflattens very slowly.
Now you’re ready to form croissants or shape the dough for boules.
sourdough levain Credit: Johnny Miller
sourdough levain
prehydrating sourdough dough Credit: Johnny Miller
prehydrating sourdough dough
folding dough Credit: Johnny Miller
folding dough
proofing sourdough Credit: Johnny Miller
proofing sourdough