Sourdough baking can be exciting, challenging, mysterious, frustrating, delicious, and rewarding — all of the above, and often all at once.

If you've ever gone down the sourdough path — making your own starter, lovingly tending it, testing ways to make it more vigorous, wondering if it's healthy — you understand the many paths (and pitfalls) you encounter on the way to great sourdough bread (or cake, or pretzels, or biscuits).

There's nothing like sourdough baking for raising questions. The following sourdough baking tips address some of the most common questions we hear from you, our readers. And once you're done here, head on over to our complete guide to baking with sourdough, for a bit of history, baking science, and some of our favorite sourdough recipes.

A container of ripe sourdough starter
A bubbly, vigorous starter indicates a healthy culture, but for many home bakers, this is an ideal vision that sometimes slips away. It's OK — you can relax! (Photo by Kristin Teig)

1. I haven't fed my starter in awhile. Did I kill it?

It's actually fairly difficult to kill your starter. Unlike a hothouse orchid, sourdough starter is pretty hardy.

If it's been a while since you've fed your starter, you may find it covered in dark liquid, with mosaic-like, lumpy dough underneath. The dark liquid is alcohol; just stir it back into the firmer dough underneath.

Feed your starter the way you usually would. If it doesn't respond well, feed it again; and again, feeding it every 12 hours until it becomes bubbly and happy.

Very occasionally, starter will attract some "bad" bacteria. It may acquire an unpleasant odor (not its usual sharp acidity, but something "off"), and may have a pinkish liquid on top. If this happens, discard your starter and begin over: our sourdough starter recipe will get you going again. Or jump-start the process with an order of our fresh sourdough starter, carefully grown and tended here in Vermont.

A mason jar full of unfed starter
The liquid that forms on top of an unfed sourdough starter is affectionately known as "hooch." (Photo by John Sherman)

2. What should I do with the liquid on top?

Even starter that's fed regularly will often exude a clear or amber-colored liquid. Again, this is alcohol; simply stir it back in, then proceed with your regular feeding process.

A bowl of starter that's bubbly and expanded in size
It's easy to grow your starter in volume with just a few generous feedings. (Photo by John Sherman)

3. How do I increase the size of my starter?

"I want to bake four loaves of bread; can I make more starter?"

Sure. If your starter generally yields enough for one loaf of bread after feeding, and you want to make two loaves, simply feed it with double the amounts of flour and water.

For instance, if you usually feed your starter with 4 ounces each water and flour, feed instead with 8 ounces each water and flour to increase its volume.

A baker adding flour to a sourdough starter
If you have a scale, now is the time to use it. It makes feeding your starter simple and consistent. (Photo by Kristin Teig)

To grow it even more, simply feed with greater amounts of flour and water. It may take your starter longer to become vigorous since there's less living starter to "inoculate" the newly added flour and water. But give it time; eventually it should become bubbly. Once it doubles in volume within 8 hours, it's ready to use.

A few slices of triple layer carrot cake on plates
Discard sourdough starter can add a rich, elusive flavor and extend the shelf life of baked goods beyond bread. (Photo by John Sherman)

4. When I feed my starter, I hate to just throw some of it away. What can I make with it?

Oh, boy, lots of good stuff. Like this Sourdough Carrot Cake.

Or pizza, English muffins, pretzels, crackers, biscuits... see the 15+ recipes on our site using the starter you'd otherwise discard during the feeding process. And don't miss our blog post, Excess Sourdough: Five Tasty Ways to Use It Up.

Oh, and if you're a gardener/composter — your "discard" sourdough starter is a great compost accelerant! Go ahead and stir it into your outdoor bucket or bin.

A bowl of sourdough dough rising
Dough that contains sourdough starter tends to feel shiny and almost satiny after it has rested and developed strength. (Photo by John Sherman)

5. What should sourdough bread dough look like?

Properly prepared sourdough bread dough should look much the same as any other successful bread dough: smooth, satiny, elastic. It should cling a bit to the sides of the mixing bowl, but shouldn't be unmanageably sticky.

You may notice the surface of your sourdough dough isn't quite as smooth as standard dough; it may look a bit rough or "shredded," which simply reflects the fact that the acidity of the dough makes the gluten slightly more fragile, and a tiny bit less elastic. This is fine; carry on.

Sourdough Dinner Rolls
Sourdough bread can be light and tender, like these Sourdough Dinner Rolls. (Photo by Liz Neily)

6. Is all sourdough bread crusty?

Not at all! In fact, one of our most popular sourdough recipes on our Buttery Sourdough Buns, which are soft and tender: typical dinner roll texture. You can make chewy/soft sourdough pizza crust and pretzels and breadsticks... the degree of your bread's crustiness has more to do with its other ingredients than its starter.

Generally speaking, the more fat in your recipe, the softer your bread will be. The crustiest sourdough breads are simply starter, flour, water, and salt; including milk and butter (or oil) and a bit of sugar will make softer breads.

A loaf of sourdough bread cut in half, with a baker exposing the crumb
How do you achieve just the right level of sourness in your bread? It depends how you treat the dough. (Photo by Rick Holbrook)

7. How can I make my bread more sour?

Ah, the $64,000 question! The more sour your starter the tangier your bread, right?

Not necessarily. The degree of sourness in sourdough bread has more to do with how the dough is prepared than how sour the starter is.

To increase your bread's sour flavor, try shaping the loaf, then refrigerating it overnight. The yeast in dough fermented in a cold environment will create acetic acid (think vinegar), rather than lactic acid (think sour cream); so its sour flavor will be more pronounced.

The loaf will rise slowly in the fridge. The next day, let it come to room temperature, then bake as normal. For stronger sour flavor, try keeping the dough in the fridge longer before baking — for several days, or maybe a week. At some point you'll come to a point of diminishing returns — the yeast will start to die, and your bread won't rise well — but it's worth experimenting with chilling duration to find your own personal "sweet sour spot."

A tray of sourdough popovers fresh from the oven
Adding sourdough starter to classic recipes can put a fresh, tasty spin that makes them better than ever. (Photo by Kristin Teig)

8. Can I use my sourdough starter in recipes that don't call for it?

Yes, within reason. Would you want to use sourdough starter in angel food cake? Of course not. But in popovers (above)? Sure, give it a try.

Here's the rule of thumb: sourdough starter is equal parts (by weight) flour and liquid. Say you want to use 1 cup (8 ounces) sourdough starter in your favorite sandwich bread recipe. If your recipe calls for 3 cups flour (approx. 12 ounces) and 1 cup water (8 ounces), reduce the flour in the recipe to 2 cups (8 ounces), and the water to 1/2 cup (4 ounces).

This works pretty seamlessly for any recipe including both flour, and water or milk. Don't substitute sourdough starter for eggs or oil or butter or honey or other liquids; it will change your recipe's character.

Does the starter need to be fed before using it? Not necessarily. If you're using it in a yeast bread recipe, it's good to feed it first (to help with the loaf's rise). Bonus for using it in yeast breads: sourdough is a mold inhibitor.

But for anything leavened with baking soda or baking powder, use either fed or unfed starter; or starter you'd otherwise discard as part of the feeding process.

How much sourdough starter can you substitute? Keep in mind the more you use, the tangier your baked good will be. Start by substituting starter for no more than 1/3 of the flour in the recipe. If you like the result, then up the percentage the next time.

A loaf of sourdough bread in a ceramic loaf pan
No kneading, just folding is required to develop the strength in this dough that bakes up into a beautiful loaf. (Photo by John Sherman)

9. Do you have a recipe for no-knead sourdough bread?

Yes, we certainly do. It's our No-Knead Sourdough Bread recipe, which delivers rich flavor and a golden, crisp crust.

Or for bread that tastes like sourdough without all the effort of maintaining a starter, make up a batch of our No-Knead Crusty White Bread dough. Leave the dough in the fridge for a week to 10 days before baking. The loaf or rolls you make will be richly flavored, with mild sourdough tang.

Or try this: Make our No-Knead Crusty White Bread dough, substituting 16 ounces of sourdough starter (fed or unfed) for 8 ounces of the water and 8 ounces of the flour. This time, let the dough rest in the fridge for only 2 to 3 days before baking. If you leave it longer than that, the sourdough will start to break down the dough's gluten, negatively affecting the dough's rise.

One important fact to remember: there are many paths to great sourdough baking. And many valid answers to your questions. When you find something that works for you, do it; don't worry about "breaking the rules," or following a recipe to the letter.

Sourdough baking, like most baking, is as much art as science; don't be afraid to color outside the lines!

A loaf of sourdough bread cut into slices
Baking sourdough bread can take a lifetime to master, but there's joy in the fact that you get to eat all your practice! (Photo by Rick Holbrook)

Do you have sourdough questions we haven't answered here — or other baking questions? Contact our Baker's Hotline; we're ready and eager to help.

Cover photo by Kristin Teig

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About PJ Hamel

PJ Hamel grew up in New England, graduated from Brown University, and was an award-winning Maine journalist (favorite topics: sports and food) before joining King Arthur Flour in 1990. Hired to write the newly launched Baker’s Catalogue, PJ became the small but growing company’s sixth employee.&nbsp...
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