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Healthy Home Economist / Archives / Recipes / Grain Recipes / Bread Recipes / Easy to Make Sourdough Starter Recipe

Easy to Make Sourdough Starter Recipe

by Sarah Pope / Affiliate Links ✔

Jump to Recipe

Table of Contents[Hide][Show]
  • Homemade Sourdough Starter+−
    • Rye Flour Works Best (but you can go gluten free too)
  • Buying Bread Starter
  • Sourdough Starter Storage
  • Ready To Make Sourdough Bread?
  • Reference +−
    • More Information

Easy to follow homemade sourdough starter recipe to enjoy traditionally prepared, easy to digest sourdough bread made from whatever grain flour you choose. No active yeast required!homemade sourdough starter

When I first got into Traditional Food in 2001, I pretty much had to make anything and everything myself. The reason is because there were few companies (and none in my local area) that made the type of food I was seeking. Worse, few people understood what I was even talking about! This was true even with the perennial favorite sourdough bread. My quest to learn how to make sourdough starter was usually met with puzzled expressions.

“Isn’t using yeast the proper way to get bread to rise? Isn’t this the way it’s always been done?” people would blankly ask.

“If the bread is organic, isn’t that good enough?”

Uh, no, no and no!

Yeast for breadmaking is relatively new in the grand scheme of human history. In fact, when baker’s yeast was first introduced as an alternative to true sourdough starter in France in the mid-1600s, it was strongly rejected. Renaissance scientists at the time knew that this quicker, more convenient approach to breadmaking would negatively affect public health.

Ancestrally prepared bread never contains added baker’s yeast!

Instead, traditionally baked bread utilizes a starter culture loaded with friendly Lactobacilli. This is a beneficial strain of bacteria found on the surface of all living things. Yes, it’s even crawling all over you right now if your skin is healthy and in proper pH balance.

In addition to the absence of baker’s yeast to make the bread rise, true sourdough bread as baked by traditional cultures throughout the world and by my own ancestors in Northern Europe – the type of bread ideal for my personal genome – is baked at a lower temperature for a longer period of time which protects the integrity of the proteins in the cereal grains as well as the nutritional value. This slower, more careful preparation method also eliminates anti-nutrients such as phytic acid. These substances interfere with proper digestion and block absorption of the minerals in the cereal grains. Traditional preparation also helps breaks down gluten, a very difficult to digest plant protein.

Best of all?

When you eat traditionally prepared sourdough bread (not the fake sourdoughs at the store that use yeast), you only eat a little because it is so filling!

The “bread makes you fat” argument is of much less concern when consuming traditionally prepared carbs. Eating the whole bread basket like what happens at the typical restaurant would not happen if those bread baskets were filled with true sourdough (and served with real butter of course!)

Homemade Sourdough Starter

Are you convinced yet that traditionally prepared bread is the way to go if you choose to consume carbs (which I do … I love bread!)

The next step then is to get hold of sourdough starter to try your hand at making a loaf.

Below are the directions I’ve always used to make sourdough starter, adapted, of course, from the must-have cookbook Nourishing Traditions!

Rye Flour Works Best (but you can go gluten free too)

Note that learning how to make sourdough starter really requires freshly ground rye flour. The chances of the starter “taking” are highest going this route.

If you use store-bought flour, even if organic, or another type of grain, it is likely the starter will not take and grow mold before it is ready. I know this from experience!

Note that even if your starter is made from rye, you can still use it to make sourdough bread with whatever flour you like!

To emphasize this point one more time, you will get your best results from making your sourdough starter with rye flour instead of wheat. Once your sourdough starter is ready, you can, of course, bake your bread with whatever grain you like. It’s just best to use rye for the starter alone .. you don’t have to make rye bread with it, in other words.

If you really want to make your sourdough starter with wheat, I would recommend einkorn. It is is the only heirloom wheat left on planet Earth that is completely unhybridized. By comparison, note that heirloom wheat like spelt, Kamut and emmer are hybridized! This is a frequent point of confusion.

Like rye, einkorn is lower in phytic acid and contains an easier to digest form of gluten than modern hybrid wheat. Another point to keep in mind is that while no GMO wheat currently exists on the market, most conventional wheat is toxic due to widespread desiccation practices using glyphosate-based herbicides during harvesting. Organic is going to be the safest choice for this reason.

Note that the total time to make a proper sourdough starter is one week. It doesn’t take much time each day, but you have to give the dough a chance to get “ripe” with lactobacilli.

Buying Bread Starter

It’s true. Making a sourdough culture is not a fast process. Even though it doesn’t take a lot of hands-on time, it takes a full week of waiting to let Mother Nature do her thing. And, sometimes, despite your best efforts, the sourdough starter fails and gets mold on it before the 7 days is up.

If you would rather buy starter to save time, I recommend this quality, vetted sourdough starter brand.

Gluten-free? Use this gluten-free sourdough starter instead.

Both of these types of sourdough starter are available here at 20% off.

homemade sourdough starter
4.67 from 3 votes
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Sourdough Starter Recipe

Easy to follow homemade sourdough starter recipe to enjoy traditionally prepared, easy to digest sourdough bread made from whichever grain you choose.

Author Sarah Pope

Ingredients

  • 8 cups freshly ground rye flour
  • 8 cups cold filtered water
  • 2 large mixing bowls
  • 2 fine mesh cheesecloth

Instructions

  1. Day 1: Mix 2 cups flour with 2 cups of cold water. The mixture will be rather soupy.  Cover with a *double* layer of cheesecloth secured by a rubber band. This will allow beneficial wild yeasts and bacteria to get into the culture but will keep critters out.

    If the weather is good, set the bowl outside in the shade if you live in an unpolluted area and you don't spray any pesticides around your yard.  If this is not possible, set the bowl in a warm, open area like an indoor patio.

  2. Days 2-7: Every day for a total of 7 days, transfer the ripening sourdough starter to a clean bowl and add 1 cup of fresh flour plus 1 cup of cold water or even a bit more to make the mixture soupy. Cover with a fresh cheesecloth and let stand.

    After a few days, you will notice the mixture begin to bubble. It will also smell a bit like wine. The frothy stage will begin to subside and after 7 days, the sourdough is ready for breadmaking!

diy bread starter

Sourdough Starter Storage

If you need to go on vacation or take a break from breadmaking for a while, this article on how to store sourdough bread starter can help.

Whether you need to put your starter on hiatus for a week, a month, or even a full year, taking the proper precautions will save you from the process of having to make sourdough starter again later on.

Ready To Make Sourdough Bread?

This recipe for no-knead sourdough is simple and perfect for first-timers. Simply mix the ingredients together before you go to bed. In the morning, form into a rough round and bake for an hour! What could be simpler?

If you choose to buy sourdough bread rather than bake it yourself, I recommend this family-owned bakery that will ship freshly baked sourdough bread to your door.

If you are considering another brand, beware of imitation commercial sourdough! Watch out also for these common sourdough bread myths that continue to make the rounds.

Reference

Nourishing Traditions

More Information

Can Celiacs Eat True Sourdough Bread?
Einkorn Sourdough Crackers with Nut Butter
Benefits of Farro

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Category: Bread Recipes, DIY
Sarah Pope

Sarah Pope MGA has been a Health and Nutrition Educator since 2002. She is a summa cum laude graduate in Economics from Furman University and holds a Master’s degree from the University of Pennsylvania.

She is the author of three books: Amazon #1 bestseller Get Your Fats Straight, Traditional Remedies for Modern Families, and Living Green in an Artificial World.

Her four eBooks Good Diet…Bad Diet, Real Food Fermentation, Ketonomics, and Ancestrally Inspired Dairy-Free Recipes are available for complimentary download via Healthy Home Plus.

Her mission is dedicated to helping families effectively incorporate the principles of ancestral diets within the modern household. She is a sought after lecturer around the world for conferences, summits, and podcasts.

Sarah was awarded Activist of the Year in 2010 at the International Wise Traditions Conference, subsequently serving on the Board of Directors of the nutrition nonprofit the Weston A. Price Foundation for seven years.

Her work has been covered by numerous independent and major media including USA Today, ABC, and NBC among many others.

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Reader Interactions

Comments (92)

  1. di

    Feb 2, 2021 at 11:42 pm

    how do I maintain this sourdough to use on a regular basis?
    thank you

    Reply
    • Sarah Pope MGA

      Feb 3, 2021 at 9:04 am

      Here you go. https://www.thehealthyhomeeconomist.com/storing-sourdough-starter-short-long-term/

  2. Jessica

    May 15, 2020 at 12:10 pm

    Hello Sarah,

    I’m just doing my first go of sourdough. I followed the recipe exactly just like it is in nourishing traditions and on your blog. In nourishing traditions it says that I’m supposed to yield three quarts of starter at the end of the seven days but I only had 2. I usually added a bit less than a cup of water each day because that seemed sufficient. The starter is still really soupy and did bubble. Just wondering your thoughts if you think it’s all good? Thanks for all you do!

    Reply
  3. Diane G

    Apr 29, 2020 at 1:01 am

    We don’t have a Health Food store nearby to purchase Rye to grind nor ask about a local company. Where do you suggest to purchase Rye?

    Reply
    • Sarah Pope MGA

      Apr 29, 2020 at 8:12 am

      Do you have a Breadbeckers co-op in your area?

  4. Scott

    Apr 28, 2020 at 9:53 pm

    Yes, bread is food, but, like practically all starches, eaten as starches, they are prime for gunking ones body, and making the body more of a petri-dish more susceptible to disease proliferation and ‘diseasements’. Starches are best for making beer. Beer is better handled than starches for human health. Starches are the main cause of disease due to the gunking nature of starches in ones body. Homogenized milk is also not good. But, they are better than nothing,… so, they’re survival food if nothing else adequate available. Not prime, but ok for survival, but not thriving, not for virility.

    Reply
    • Sarah Pope MGA

      Apr 28, 2020 at 10:14 pm

      I disagree. Bread and other starches can be safe and fine to eat when prepared traditionally. There are several healthy cultures that ate them and experienced little to no chronic disease. The Swiss were one described in Dr. Price’s book. Sourdough bread was a staple and they had very little tooth decay, their children had straight teeth and no TB despite it ravaging the rest of Europe at the time.

  5. Donna

    Mar 26, 2020 at 1:08 pm

    Do you have a recipe for making he bread once the starter is finished?

    Reply
    • Sarah Pope MGA

      Mar 26, 2020 at 8:47 pm

      Yes, try this one. https://www.thehealthyhomeeconomist.com/no-knead-einkorn-sourdough-bread/

  6. Connie Rathbun

    Mar 26, 2019 at 10:55 pm

    Great information. Can’t wait for more time to read and digest all this information.

    Reply
  7. Ariane

    Nov 7, 2018 at 9:13 am

    5 stars
    Good morning! I tried it with kefir and flour. Then fed it with water and flour. I feel like it didn’t take as much time to mature since there was already plenty of yeast from the kefir. After 5 or 6 days it was quite bubbly and active, so I baked my first loaf this morning. I left it double overnight for 15 hrs just to be safe and to make sure everything was nice and fermented. It definitely was doubled in size. And it baked quite beautifully. I used Einkorn flour then for the actual recipe. The only thing is mine didn’t get as high as sourdough bread I’ve bought fresh from a farm to table restaurant. But it tastes good, the recipe in the other article on sourdough bread is a good one! So there is some FYI for you to store in you’re memory bank LOL. I’ve heard you can help out a fizzling starter with a bit of kefir as well!

    Reply
  8. Ariane

    Oct 25, 2018 at 8:33 am

    I am going to try, I will go with your suggestion of rye flour to start with as well! I’ll update after I’ve ordered the flours needed and make my first loaf *fingers crossed*

    Reply
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