Learn how to make the easiest homemade sourdough bread recipe perfect for beginners. All you need is a few ingredients, some time, and patience. You’ll never want to go back to store-bought bread again.

sourdough bread with a leaf pattern on parchment paper with a copper container to the left

I remember when I first started out on my sourdough journey. It was about 12 years ago, around the time of when my second daughter was born.

That first loaf of sourdough bread was not pretty, or really that edible to be honest. But I was proud I created something out of my own two hands from just a few ingredients.

Over the years I’ve really honed in on my sourdough baking skills and now have hundreds of recipes on this blog to show you just how simple it can be.

So today I’m going to show you step-by-step how to make an easy sourdough bread perfect for a beginner. Walking you through how you will know when your starter is ready to use, common terms (so you don’t feel lost in the gibberish), shaping, and everything else in between.

I promise it is not that hard. Once you get it down, it will become second nature and you will be whipping up everything from sandwich bread to Hawaiian rolls. Everyone will be amazed at the things you can create.

loaf of sourdough bread on parchment paper a counter with a copper lid in front of the loaf and a banneton basket to the left

What is sourdough bread?

Sourdough bread is a fermented bread that uses natural wild yeast from the environment that has been captured to rise and ferment, rather than relying on commercial yeast. 

Sourdough Health Benefits

As the grain is fermented, the gluten and phytic acid are broken down, making it easier to digest and more nutritious. Those who are sensitive to gluten (not celiac) may be able to tolerate sourdough products (especially long fermented), due to the fermentation of the grains. 

Phytic acid (that is naturally present in wheat), is an anti-nutrient that blocks absorption of the nutrients found in wheat. During the fermentation, this gets broken down and the nutrients are more bio-available to the body.

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Common Sourdough Terms:

hands holding a beginners sourdough boule

Sourdough Starter

A mixture of flour, water, wild yeasts, bacteria, and organic acids that is used to ferment and leaven breads and grains. You can easily create one from scratch, purchase one or get one from a friend to start your sourdough adventure.

Sourdough Discard

The amount of starter that is removed from the sourdough starter before feeding. You can toss it or use it for many wonderful sourdough discard recipes

Technically, you never have to actually throw it away. You can use it in discard recipes, or, once your starter is mature enough, you can just keep feeding it and using it. Make sure you don’t get too much starter or else it will be hard to maintain and keep healthy (which is the reason most discard).

Fed Sourdough Starter Or Active Starter

This is a sourdough starter that has been fed 4-12 hours before starting the dough. It is active and bubbly. It should pass the float test when a small amount of starter is placed in a cup of water. If it floats, it is ready to use for bread.

Autolyse

The process of hydrating the flour with water and allowing it to rest for 15-60 minutes during the bread making process.

Bulk Fermentation Or Bulk Rise

The first period of time a recipe rises. It is a very important step in sourdough baking. Not allowing the dough to rise enough will leave you bread that doesn’t get a good rise in the oven. Bulk ferment too long and the dough will over ferment and become a wet soupy mess. Usually, the dough should be about double in size.

Score

Cutting a line or design on the top of the dough with a sharp utensil like a razor, lame, or knife to give bread a beautiful design. There are two kinds of scores: expansion score (a deep score that allows the bread to expand). Artistic scores: the pretty design that doesn’t have much function except to make beautiful bread.

Windowpane Test

Taking a small amount of dough, stretch it between your fingers into a square to see if it can stretch thin enough to be able to โ€œseeโ€ through it without breaking. This is a good indicator that enough gluten formation has been created to capture a good rise and large holes in the crumb.

Proofing

The final rise for the dough before baking to leaven the dough.

This post contains affiliate links, which means I make a small commission at no extra cost to you. See my full disclosure here.

a women wearing a gray apron adding sourdough starter to a bowl on a white countertop

Tips:

  • You will need a very active sourdough starter that passes the float test. Check out how to make your own sourdough starter and how to care for one here.
  • The dough may seem dry when it is first coming together. Resist adding more water. Use wet hands during the stretching and folding if the dough is too sticky.
  • The amount of time it takes for your dough to double can be determined by many environmental factors, such as the temperature in your home, the maturity of your starter, and the hydration status of the loaf.
  • The most accurate way to create consistent results is by using a kitchen scale. I’ve included both gram measurements and cup measurements in the recipe.

Ingredients

All purpose flour – Since this is a beginners loaf I’m using something most people already have in their pantry, all-purpose flour. You could also substitute with bread flour.

Water

Active sourdough starter – This is a starter that has been fed 4-12 hours before starting the recipe, is active and bubbly, and has about doubled in size. Learn how to make your own starter here.

Salt

Tools you may need to make this recipe:

Large bowl

Kitchen scale or measuring cups and spoons: I prefer to weigh my bread to get the most accurate and consistent results.

Banneton (optional): You could also use a towel lined basket or bowl.

Dutch Oven: This gives the bread a really nice crispy crust. If you do not have a dutch oven you could bake it on a baking sheet. To get the crust you will need to create steam in the oven. You can spray the loaf with water, and add a baking dish of water to the bottom rack of your oven.

Parchment paper: You could also add cornmeal to the bottom of the dutch oven to help prevent sticking, but I’ve never had great luck with this and prefer the parchment paper method.

Lid or plastic wrap: A lid, plastic wrap, a large plate, or beeswax wraps can all work.

Lame

a homemade boule of easy sourdough bread on parchment paper on a white counter. A copped container and banneton basket is behind the loaf

How To Make Beginner’s Sourdough Bread: Easy Step-By-Step Instructions

Feed a sourdough starter 4-12 hours before starting the dough, ensuring it is active and bubbly.

woman pouring flour into a bowl over a scale in a white kitchen

Add warm water, active starter, salt, and flour to a large mixing bowl. A kitchen scale will give the most accurate results.

women mixing up ingredients in a large mixing bowl in a white kitchen

Mix together with wooden spoon or even just your hands.

Cover with plastic wrap or a lid and allow to rest for 30 minutes for the water to hydrate the flour. This is the autolyse process.

Stretch And Fold

hand holding onto bread dough stretching it upwards from a stoneware bowls

Rather than kneading the dough we are going to do a different method called the stretch and fold method. This is a way to get those desirable large holes in the crumb.

a women pulling dough up dough from a large bowl to complete a stretch and fold for making sourdough bread

Grab the edge of the dough and pull up stretching it out as you pull upwards. This may be difficult and you may need to kind of bounce the dough to get it to stretch.

hand placing dough in the center of the bowl to complete. stretch and fold method

Place dough that is in your hands back into the center. Turn the bowl about a quarter turn and complete another stretch and fold. Repeat two more times. This is considered one round. If the dough is too sticky, dip your hand in warm water.

Cover and complete two more rounds 30 minutes apart.

Cover with a lid, damp towel, or plastic wrap. Let the dough bulk ferment in a warm place until it has doubled in size. This could be anywhere from 6-12 hours (or longer) depending on the temperature of your kitchen, maturity of your starter, etc.

beginners sourdough bread dough after rising until doubled in a stone bowl with a blue and white towel on the edge of the bowl

Be careful not to let it over ferment. If it is allowed to go too long, it will rise too much and become a soupy mess. It will not get a good rise when it bakes and resembles more of a pancake than a fluffy loaf. If this happens you can make stuffing, croutons, or bread pudding. It is not a total loss.

Shape

shaping a loaf of sourdough bread on a white countertop

Place the dough on a clean work surface that has been lightly dusted with flour.

hands spinning a round loaf of bread on a white countertop

Fold the dough onto itself and roll up. Then shape into a ball by gently spinning it toward you.

(Optional)Set out 15-20 minutes uncovered. This allows the surface to develop a skin, so that it doesn’t stick to the tea towel during the overnight rise. 

Then, place your dough upside down (smooth side down) on the counter and shape. I do this by folding the two sides over to meet in the middle, pinch together and then repeat on the other two sides. This creates surface tension which helps give it more oven spring (a good rise).

boule placed in a banneton basket

Transfer to a floured banneton or bowl with a floured tea towel (typically floured with rice flour, this is not necessary and all-purpose will work just fine) seam side up. You want the smooth side or pretty side facing down in the banneton. (Remember, the crust was so it wouldn’t stick to the tea towel!)

a banneton basket full of dough in a plastic grocery bag on a white countertop

Cover with plastic or place in a plastic bag and tie the ends. Let the dough rest for 12-15 hours in the refrigerator. You can also let the bread rise at room temperature for 3-4 hours. I like using the longer rise time in the refrigerator because it is easier to score and I feel like the oven spring is better.

Bake

Preheat a dutch oven to 500 degrees for 1 hour.

Remove dough from the fridge right before baking.

taking dough out of a banneton basket onto parchment paper

Place dough on a piece of parchment paper.

a woman dusting flour onto a loaf of bread dough on parchment paper
woman scoring sourdough boule dough on parchment paper on a white counter

Dust with flour, if desired, and score with lame or razor blade. I like to do one large score (called an expansion score) and then a cute design for the other score.

a woman transferring bread dough on parchment paper into a hot dutch oven

Carefully, transfer the piece of parchment paper with the dough into the hot dutch oven. Careful not to burn your fingers.

Place the lid back on and place the dutch oven into the hot oven. Bake for 20 minutes.

removing lid from dutch oven during the bread baking process

Carefully remove the lid with oven mitts, turn the oven temperature down to 475, and bake an additional 15-25 minutes or until golden brown.

a loaf of sourdough bread with a slice laying next to the loaf on parchment paper

Best Tips For Scoring

overhead photo of a rectangular shaped loaf of sourdough bread with a beautiful wheat pattern scored on top. The dough sits on parchment paper
  1. I highly recommend the long fermentation in the fridge. Yes it takes a long time, but this is the best way to make the dough more firm making the scoring easier and prettier.
  2. To make the pattern stand out more, dust the top of the dough with a bit of flour.
  3. Use a razor. A knife will just not have the same results.
  4. Find pretty patterns online to try to replicate. I have a post on my go-to patterns here.
  5. Practice. It takes a lot of trial and error to figure out bread baking in general and how to create pretty designs, the right depth to cut, etc.
girl wearing a burn orange sweater holding a loaf of sourdough bread with parchment paper on the bottom of the loaf

Bakers Timeline For No-Knead Sourdough Bread

9 pm: Feed sourdough starter with flour and water.

8 am the next day: If the sourdough starter is mature, then proceed to creating the dough. 

Combine ingredients together. Rest for 30 minutes.

Cover with a damp towel or plastic wrap. Rest for 30 minutes.

8:30 am: Stretch and fold.

3 stretch and folds – every 30 minutes

Cover with a wet towel or plastic wrap and allow the dough to bulk ferment until doubled. 

Anywhere from 4:00 pm to 10 pm: Shape dough.

Sit out 15-20 minutes, uncovered.

Turn over and shape.

Transfer to a floured banneton basket or bowl with tea towel and cover with plastic. Place in the refrigerator for 12-15 hours.

The Next Day

9:00 am: Preheat the dutch oven on 500 for 1 hour.

10:00 am: Take dough out of the fridge, dust with flour, and score. Bake the sourdough bread and let it cool.

FAQ:

beginners loaf of sourdough bread on parchment paper on a white countertop with a copper container to the right and a banneton basket to the left

How do you make a sourdough starter?

Creating a sourdough starter is actually pretty simple. It is the process of mixing water and flour together and discarding for multiple days until yeasts in the environment are captured and the flour bubbles. You can find the tutorial on how to make a sourdough starter here.

Is it necessary to knead sourdough?

Not necessarily. The act of kneading is supposed to help create gluten formation in the bread, which can then help create a good texture and air pockets in the bread. But no-knead sourdough bread uses a stretch and fold method to develop the gluten.

What flour is best for beginner sourdough?

All-purpose flour or bread flour are perfect for the beginner baking just getting into sourdough. These flours can be used to feed the starter and bake with.

What are three top tips when making sourdough starter?

  • Give it time. It takes a while for a sourdough starter to mature enough to make bread. Eventually it will happen and it is totally worth it.
  • Don’t give up. Even if it doesn’t look like there is a lot of activity going on, there is.
  • It probably isn’t dead. Many times people come to me asking if their sourdough starter is dead because it has a black liquid on top, a hard crust, etc. But unless there is mold, it can probably be revived.

What do I need to start making sourdough?

There are a few baking essential that you will need to start:

Large bowl- one with a lid is even better

Measuring cups and spoons or a digital scale. Scales are more reliable and will give you more consistent results.

Dutch oven and/or loaf pans

Other tools that are optional, but helpful:

Bench scraper

Banneton baskets or a proofing basket (can also use baskets or bowls lined with a tea towel)

Lame

Dough whisk

What is the secret to a good sourdough starter?

The secret to a good starter is to use it when it is active and bubbly, and at its peak. You can tell this by how it looks: has it about doubled in size, have nice bubbles, and does it float when a small amount is placed in a glass of water?

Why is sourdough difficult to make?

Sourdough is not really that difficult to make, it just takes longer and has more variability compared to bread made with commercial yeast. While a dough made with active dry yeasts typically rise 1 1/2 to two hours during the bulk rise. A simple sourdough bread may take 8-12 hours.

Find More Sourdough Bread Recipes:

If you try this recipe and love it, I would love it if you gave it 5 stars! Thank you! Tag me on Instagram @farmhouseonboone.

Beginners Sourdough Bread

4.66 from 1155 votes
A sourdough bread perfect for beginners. This delicious recipe has a soft chewy crumb and crusty exterior. All you need is a few ingredients, some time, and patience.
Prep: 2 hours
Cook: 40 minutes
Additional Time: 19 hours 20 minutes
Total: 22 hours
Servings: 12
sourdough bread with a leaf pattern on parchment paper with a copper container to the left
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Ingredients 

  • 475 grams all-purpose flour, 3 1/2 cups
  • 100 grams starter, active and bubbly (1/2 cup)
  • 325 grams water, 1 1/3 cups
  • 10 grams salt, 2 teaspoons

Instructions 

  • Feed a sourdough starter 4-12 hours before starting the dough, ensuring it is active and bubbly.
  • Combine warm water, active starter, salt, and flour with a wooden spoon or even just your hands in a large mixing bowl.
  • Cover with plastic wrap or a lid and allow to rest for 30 minutes for the water to hydrate the flour.

Stretch And Fold

  • Grab the edge of the dough and pull up stretching it out as you pull upwards. This may be difficult and you may need to kind of bounce the dough to get it to stretch. Place dough that is in your hands back into the center. Turn the bowl about a quarter turn and complete another stretch and fold. Repeat two more times. This is considered one round.
  • Thirty minutes later, complete another round of stretch and folds. Cover and allow the dough to rest another 30 minutes.
  • Complete one last stretch and fold round.
  • Cover with a lid, damp towel, or plastic wrap. Let the dough bulk ferment in a warm place until it has doubled in size. This could be anywhere from 6-12 hours (or longer) depending on the temperature of your kitchen, maturity of your starter, etc. Be careful not to let it over ferment.

Shape

  • Place the dough on a clean work surface that has been lightly dusted with flour. Fold the dough onto itself and roll up. Then shape into a ball by gently spinning it toward you.
  • Optional – Let the dough sit out for 15-20 minutes uncovered. This prevents the dough from sticking to the tea towel during the overnight rise.
  • Turn over and shape. I do this by folding the two sides over to meet in the middle, pinch together and then repeat on the other two sides. This creates surface tension which helps give it more oven spring (a good rise).
  • Transfer to a floured banneton or bowl with a floured tea towel (typically floured with rice flour, this is not necessary and all-purpose will work just fine) seam side up.
  • Cover with plastic or place in a plastic bag and tie the ends. Let the dough rest for 12-15 hours in the refrigerator. You can also let the bread rise at room temperature for 3-4 hours. I like using the longer rise time in the refrigerator because it is easier to score and feel like the oven spring is better.

Bake

  • Preheat a dutch oven to 500 degrees for 1 hour.
  • Remove dough from the fridge right before baking. Place dough on a piece of parchment paper.
  • Dust with flour, if desired, and score with lame or razor blade. I like to do one large score (called an expansion score) and then a cute design for the other score.
  • Carefully, transfer the piece of parchment paper with the dough into the hot dutch oven. Careful not to burn your fingers.
  • Place the lid back on and place the dutch oven into the hot oven. Bake for 20 minutes.
  • Remove the lid with oven mitts, turn the oven temperature down to 475, and bake an additional 15-25 minutes or until golden brown.

Notes

  • You will need a very active sourdough starter that passes the float test. Check out how to make your own sourdough starter and how to care for one here.
  • The dough may seem dry when it is first coming together. Resist adding more water. Use wet hands during the stretching and folding if the dough is too sticky.
  • The amount of time it takes for your dough to double can be determined by many environmental factors, such as the temperature in your home, the maturity of your starter, and the hydration status of the loaf.
  • The most accurate way to create consistent results is by using a kitchen scale. I've included both gram measurements and cup measurements in the recipe.

Nutrition

Calories: 152kcal | Carbohydrates: 32g | Protein: 4g | Fat: 0.4g | Saturated Fat: 0.1g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.2g | Monounsaturated Fat: 0.03g | Sodium: 325mg | Potassium: 42mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 0.1g | Calcium: 7mg | Iron: 2mg

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

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1,819 Comments

  1. Anonymous says:

    I tried this recipe, and it turned out better than expected as a first-time experience! I am making it again today and hope to see the same results. Thank you!

    1. Lisa says:

      So glad to hear!!

  2. Leighanne Lamach says:

    Hello! I love your website! This was my first attempt and my dough never doubled in size. I used a scale and measured the exact measurements but my dough seems wet and kind of soupy. When I was doing my stretch and folds the dough was manageable but this is just sticking everywhere and is not possible to shape. I was waiting for it to double in size so I wait almost 24 hours because I was thinking my environment would make it take longer. Maybe I didnโ€™t have a strong starter in the first place? Iโ€™m not sure

    1. Lisa says:

      Such a bummer. Sorry. Was your starter really active and bubbly when starting the recipe? It should definitely not be soupy. Depending on the hydration of your starter, the weather, and the warmth of your house can all have factors on the dough. Also, the maturity of the starter does make a difference. If it is only a week or so old, it may not be strong enough to bake a loaf of bread.

      1. Gabriella says:

        I am having a similar experience. I will try to bake my loaf anyway, but I don’t see it doubling in size any time soon. It is on the wetter side and just seems too heavy to rise. However I just made your sandwich bread recipe with the same starter, and those loaves rose like crazy! Will be interestjng to see how this turns out!

        When making the dough, I did notice that the grams measurement for water seems to be more than the 1 1/3 cups. I went ahead and followed the measurement for grams, maybe that’s why?

        1. Lisa says:

          Are you giving it the same warm environment when you are proofing it? I will double check the recipe to ensure they are the same.

  3. Anna Dunatchik says:

    Can I leave in the fridge for 16 hours? I will be gone this morning during the 12-15 hour mark but will be home at 16 hours. By the time my Dutch oven heats that means the bread wonโ€™t come out of the fridge until the 17 hour mark. Will this ruin it?

    1. Lisa says:

      Yes that is totally fine!

      1. Katie B says:

        I followed your recipe to the closest degreeโ€ฆ. My sourdough was ripe and passed the float test. After 6 hours on the counter per the instructions my dough was a disastrous mess. Sticking to everything. Stuck all over the counter. All over my hands. A complete fail.

        1. Lisa says:

          Oh no. Was your dough doubled at 6 hours? If the dough is sticky, you may want to add more flour during the shaping process. There are many factors regarding making bread and the moisture level of the dough. The environment you live (say Florida vs Arizona), how you feed your starter, etc. So adjustments may need to be made.

          1. Amy says:

            I find that if my dough is sticky I do a modified slap and fold a few extra times. The more you work with the sticky dough, the less sticky it becomes. Youโ€™re forming gluten when you handle the dough. The more gluten, the less sticky it becomes. I just pick up the ball of dough and stretch it, make a 1/4 turn and stretch it again. I do this maybe 6 times, put the dough back in the bowl, wait about 20 minutes and do it again. Trust me. The sticky will go away.

          2. Lisa says:

            Thanks for sharing that tip!

        2. Chelsea Light says:

          I just came here to say the same thing!!!! I live in a cold environment so I had it โ€œproofingโ€ for 12 hours, zero progress. I put it in the oven with the light on and it started to double and get some bubbles. But it was a sticky gluten mess. I couldnโ€™t touch it without the dough just spider webbing all over the place. I even tried adding a half cup of flower and it did not work. Idk what to do

          1. Lisa says:

            This is a sign that it might need more stretch and folds.

  4. Rachel says:

    Hi Lisa! This recipe has been great but I am having issues with the bottom of the loaf. It’s burnt yet gummy. Do you have any tips? Thank you for sharing your wealth of knowledge!

    1. Lisa says:

      Is just the bottom gummy or is it burnt at the bottom and then gummy in the middle? You may need to bake it longer. But if it is getting burnt I would suggest bringing down the temperature a bit. Say 450 then 425 and then bake it longer. To tell if it is done, you could take the internal temp. It should be between 195-210

  5. Rachel says:

    My starter will double in size , then when it is stirred, it like sinks back down. The same is happening when I let the dough rise. In the bowl it looked like it doubled, then I take it out and it like shrinks back up- what am I doing wrong

    1. Lisa says:

      That is totally normally. When you stir the starter you are breaking all those bubbles so it flattens out. Same with the bread. It should double in size, then when you go to shape, it will flatten out, then you shape it, and let it rise again before baking.

  6. Anonymous says:

    If I take out of the fridge too early and score before I heated up my Dutch oven, will it hurt the dough to sit out while I heat up the oven??? ๐Ÿคฆ๐Ÿปโ€โ™€๏ธ

    1. Lisa says:

      It will probably be fine!

    2. Josie says:

      Could I kneed the dough in a stand mixer instead of stretch and fold? Like maybe use the paddle attachment before the autolyse step, and then switch to the dough hook and kneed on low? If so.. how many minutes? Thanks! Loving your recipes so far. I’ve made your brownies, English muffins, tortillas, this bread recipe and the whole wheat bread and they’ve all turned out great!

      1. Lisa says:

        You could, although the texture is slightly different using the dough hook vs the stand mixer. I would just use a dough hook. Mix until the window pane test is reached. About 10-15 minutes total. You wouldn’t need to do 3 times like the recipe says if that makes sense.

  7. Tamara says:

    I used your recipe to make my very first loaf of sourdough bread from a 10 day old starterโ€ฆ. It was perfect! Currently working on my second loaf the see if I can replicate the results!

    1. Lisa says:

      Yay! That is wonderful to hear!

  8. Gloria says:

    Do you replenish your starter after you take out enough for your recipe or do you wait till your ready to bake again?

  9. Jesika says:

    If I want to make 2 loaves can I just double the recipe?

    1. Lisa says:

      Yes!

  10. Brittany says:

    I would really love a timeline for this recipe! If Iโ€™m wanting to make a loaf for dinner time, how can avoid waking up at 4am for one or multiple steps? I know it depends on a lot of factors but just a generic timeline would be so helpful!

    1. Lisa says:

      There is an example timeline within the blog post. Hopefully that helps!