Feeding Sourdough Starter
So you’ve made your starter. Now you’ve got to keep it alive. Your starter doesn’t have to be a burden — you either feed it at regular weekly intervals if you’re not baking OR you feed it a few times before you make a loaf.
Note that I use a scale when doing this (some folks like to eyeball it, but I’m not quite there yet).
Ingredients
- Sourdough starter (my starter’s weight is 150g)
- Flour (unbleached all-purpose, whole wheat, or bread)
- Water
Steps
- Discard 100g of your starter
- A few options that I’ve done with flour combinations (as long as you’re putting in 50g):
- 100% AP
- 50% AP + 50% whole wheat
- 100% bread (I usually reserve this kind of feeding when I’m about to bake)
- Add 50g filtered water
- Mix it all up in your container to make sure there are no dry bits left
- Scrape the sides down (clean) and then use a wet paper towel to clean the rim of the glass (this prevents the lid from getting ‘glued’ to the container)
- Boomski.
If I’m not baking, I’ll usually keep the newly fed starter on the kitchen counter for about an hour, then move it to the fridge for a weekish (if you see it starting to pool some water on top, then you’ll want to feed)
If I’m about to bake a loaf, I’ll place the container into the oven with the light on (this is an ideal warm environment for the starter to grow). I’ve found that it usually takes about 4 hours for the starter to reach its peak. I like to feed the starter each morning for 2-3 days before baking.
Tips
- DON’T discard your starter down the sink. Instead, discard into a gallon ziplock bag and store that bag in your fridge (prevents/slows down any fermentation from happening)
- Use unbleached all-purpose flour — when I first had my sourdough, I was using bleached flour (like a chump). I got some bubbles/growth out of the starter, but it was slow. After switching to unbleached flour, activity has really picked up and it even consistently passes the float test!
- Keep note of how much your empty starter container weighs — makes things easier when you’re discarding
