HOW TO SOURDOUGH STARTER RECIPES

facebook share image    twitter share image    pinterest share image    E-Mail share image

RYE SOURDOUGH STARTER RECIPE - BBC GOOD FOOD



Rye sourdough starter recipe - BBC Good Food image

Use rye flour to make an easy sourdough starter with a deep molasses flavour. Once active, you can use it to make any type of sourdough bread

Provided by Barney Desmazery

Categories     Side dish, Snack, Soup

Prep Time 15 minutes

Yield 1 LOAF (12-15 SLICES)

Number Of Ingredients 1

250g wholemeal rye flour

Steps:

  • Day 1: To begin your starter, mix 50g flour with 50g tepid water in a jar or, better still, a plastic container. Make sure all the flour is incorporated and leave, covered with a tea towel, at room temperature for 24 hrs.
  • Day 2: Mix 25g flour with 25g tepid water and stir into yesterday’s mixture. Make sure all the flour is incorporated and leave, covered with a tea towel, at room temperature for 24 hrs.
  • Day 3: Today you might see a few small bubbles forming and the mixture should smell grassy and a little acidic. Mix 25g flour with 25g tepid water and stir into yesterday’s mixture. Make sure all the flour is incorporated and leave, covered with a tea towel, at room temperature for 24 hrs.
  • Day 4: More bubbles should have appeared today and the mixture should smell of yeasty beer. Mix 25g flour with 25g tepid water and stir into yesterday’s mixture. Make sure all the flour is incorporated and leave, covered with a tea towel, at room temperature for 24 hrs.
  • Day 5: Fermentation should have set in now and the mixture might be ready to use. If a teaspoon of the starter floats in warm water, it’s ready. If not, mix 25g flour with 25g tepid water and stir into yesterday’s mixture. Make sure all the flour is incorporated and leave covered, with a tea towel, at room temperature for 24 hrs.
  • Day 6: The mix should be really bubbly and be giving off a strong smell of alcohol. Test in the same way as yesterday. If it’s not ready, continue mixing 25g flour with 25g tepid water into the mixture daily until it becomes active. If your jar is becoming full, spoon half the mix out of the jar and continue. You now have rye starter, which is a malty flavoured base to sourdough bread. Keep it in the fridge (it will stay dormant) and 12 hrs before you want to use it, spoon half of it off and feed it with 100g flour and 100g water. Leave it at room temperature and it should become active again. The longer the starter has been dormant, the more times it will need to be refreshed – the process of pouring off half the starter and replacing it with new flour and water – to reactivate. Use the starter to make rye sourdough bread.

HOW TO MAKE SOURDOUGH BREAD RECIPE | BBC GOOD FOOD



How to make sourdough bread recipe | BBC Good Food image

Make our easy sourdough starter seven days ahead to make our simple homemade sourdough loaf. Serve with your favourite casseroles or soups

Provided by Good Food team

Categories     Side dish

Total Time 1 hours 40 minutes

Prep Time 1 hours

Cook Time 40 minutes

Yield Makes 1 loaf (cuts into 10 slices)

Number Of Ingredients 6

50g strong white flour to start, then 25g extra a day for 6 days
50g strong wholemeal flour to start, then 25g extra a day for 6 days
450g strong white flour , plus extra for dusting
50g wholemeal flour
10g fine salt
100g sourdough starter (see above)

Steps:

  • To make the sourdough starter, whisk 50g strong white flour and 50g strong wholemeal flour with 100ml slightly warm water until smooth. Transfer to a large jar or plastic container. Leave the lid ajar for 1 hr or so in a warm place, then seal and set aside for 24 hrs. For the next six days, you will need to ‘feed’ it. Each day, tip away half the original starter, add an extra 25g of each flour and 50ml slightly warm water, and stir well. After a few days, you should start to see bubbles on the surface, and it will smell yeasty. On day seven, the starter should be bubbly and smell much sweeter. It
 is now ready to be used, but make sure you keep half back and carry on feeding for your next loaf.
  • Tip both the flours, 300ml warm water and the starter into a bowl, stir with a wooden spoon into a dough and leave somewhere for an hour.
  • Tip in 25ml more water and the salt and bring everything together. Cover and leave somewhere warm for 3 hrs, folding the dough onto itself several times in the first hour. The dough should increase in size by about a third.
  • Line a medium bowl with a clean tea towel and flour it really well, or flour a proving basket. Tip the dough back onto your work surface, shape into a tight, smooth ball and dust it with flour.
  • Place the dough, seam-side up, 
in the bowl or proving basket, and leave at room temperature for 3 hrs – or better still in the fridge overnight – until risen by about a quarter.
  • Heat oven to 230C/210C fan/gas 8 and put a casserole dish with a lid or a baking stone in the oven for at least 30 mins to heat up, and a large roasting tin filled with boiling water underneath. After 30 mins, carefully remove the casserole dish, invert the loaf into it and slash the top. Cover and bake for 20 mins, then take the lid off and bake for another 20 mins. Or invert onto the baking stone, slash and bake for 40 mins, or until the crust is as dark as you like it.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 202 calories, FatContent 1 grams fat, SaturatedFatContent 0.2 grams saturated fat, CarbohydrateContent 41 grams carbohydrates, SugarContent 0.3 grams sugar, FiberContent 2 grams fiber, ProteinContent 7 grams protein, SodiumContent 0.9 milligram of sodium

MY TOP 3 LEFTOVER SOURDOUGH STARTER RECIPES | THE PERFECT L…
Feb 27, 2015 · My previously outlined schedule for creating a sourdough starter and my guide on maintaining a sourdough starter will work well with any of the following recipes, ensuring you have enough starter each day to meet the requirements. Note that you might have to adjust the hydration of the recipes below to suit your particular sourdough starter.
From theperfectloaf.com
See details


10 BEST SOURDOUGH BREAD WITHOUT STARTER RECIPES - YUM…
Mar 18, 2022 · sourdough starter, sugar, lukewarm water, salt, unbleached all-purpose flour and 1 more Sourdough Bread A Farmgirl's Kitchen active dry yeast, all purpose flour, kosher salt, …
From yummly.com
See details


RECIPES - SOURDOUGH COMPANION
Seeded sourdough (makes 2 loaves) 75%. This “recipe” assumes a slightly-better-than-beginner skill set. All techniques are easily searchable on …
From sourdough.com
See details


BEGINNER BASIC SOURDOUGH STARTER RECIPE USING YEAST
Feb 26, 2021 · Once the starter has had a chance to bubble up and grow more yeast, you can use it in sourdough bread recipes. A sourdough starter can be kept alive for months or even years with proper care. Remember, yeast is a living organism, and this starter …
From thespruceeats.com
See details


HOW TO MAKE RYE SOURDOUGH STARTER - THE GOOD HEARTED W…
Mar 14, 2020 · This Rye Sourdough Starter is a what is referred to in the sourdough world as a "100% hydration starter." A 100% hydration sourdough starter is a sourdough culture which is …
From thegoodheartedwoman.com
See details


GLUTEN-FREE SOURDOUGH STARTER - KING ARTHUR BAKING
For tangier yeast bread recipes, try using 1 cup starter in place of 1/2 cup water and 1 cup flour. For a fun experiment, try substituting 1/2 cup starter for 1/2 cup of the flour and 2 ounces (1/4 cup) of the …
From kingarthurbaking.com
See details


ORGANIC FLOURS & FOODS - DOVES FARM
A sourdough starter is a paste made from a whole grain flour* and water that captures and develops wild yeasts to create the basis of leavening for sourdough bread making. This paste …
From dovesfarm.co.uk
See details


SOURDOUGH STARTER RECIPE | COLES
Sourdough starter . Before making sourdough, you need to create a starter which is the raising agent in the bread. You’ll need kitchen scales to weigh the ingredients (yes, including water!). For …
From coles.com.au
See details


RECIPES - SOURDOUGH COMPANION
Seeded sourdough (makes 2 loaves) 75%. This “recipe” assumes a slightly-better-than-beginner skill set. All techniques are easily searchable on …
From sourdough.com
See details


BEGINNER BASIC SOURDOUGH STARTER RECIPE USING YEAST
Feb 26, 2021 · Once the starter has had a chance to bubble up and grow more yeast, you can use it in sourdough bread recipes. A sourdough starter can be kept alive for months or even years with proper care. Remember, yeast is a living organism, and this starter …
From thespruceeats.com
See details


Are you curently on diet or you just want to control your food's nutritions, ingredients? We will help you find recipes by cooking method, nutrition, ingredients...
Check it out »