There are probably more sourdough starters quietly bubbling away across America than ever before. But if you’re new to the home bread-baking game, let us help you catch up.
“Sourdough” bread is leavened with natural bacteria and yeast found in flour (and its surrounding environment), as opposed to loaves that rely on commercial yeast. Sourdough’s signature flavor comes from various species of lactic acid–producing bacteria, that same bacteria that gives sour cream, yogurt, and buttermilk their tang.
All sourdough breads (and myriad sourdough-based baked goods) begin with a live culture, called a “starter” (aka levain or “mother”) that is added to the dough to make it rise. Although you can make excellent bread (such as our No.8 No-Knead Bread) sans starter, sourdough bread has a few advantages: it has a more complex flavor, the nutrients and starches in sourdough are easier for your body to absorb, sourdough bread stays fresher, longer, and sourdough contains less gluten than commercial bread, making it more tolerable for gluten-insensitive digestive systems.
Making a starter couldn’t be more simple—mix flour and water, wait, repeat—but the Internet might have you think otherwise. If you’re sourdough curious, you’ve probably seen loads of tutorials that offer more complicated pathways to a starter, from adding pineapple juice, raisins, and potatoes, to following a strict feeding schedule that engenders postpartum stress.
The easiest way to make a starter is to not make one at all. Chances are you know a friend or local bakery who’ll gift you a spoonful of theirs, and all you have to do is feed it water and flour on a semi-regular basis. There’s also a cottage industry of mail-order starters, but you’d really just be wasting your money: Despite the lore, a starter that can be traced back to an 1800s homestead won’t make discernibly better bread than a starter made in a 2020 apartment.
Our starter-making method is as basic as it gets, and lets nature and time do most of the work. Let’s get...started:
Preparing the starter
The most important step in making a starter is to accept the fact that it might fail. This happens all of the time, and can be caused by many factors, but you’re only investing a few minutes of effort and a few pennies’ worth of ingredients in your starter, so don’t make an emotional investment as well. If your starter doesn’t take (we’ll explain how to spot this below), just try again. We’ve made dozens of starters, and never had more than one successive failure.