This easy sourdough flatbread recipe is made with only a few simple ingredients. This is the perfect recipe to use for pizza, sandwiches, or for dipping into hummus.
When I first started my sourdough starter back in 2010, I was super excited to start making sourdough bread. Who wouldn’t be?! It makes the grains more gut healthy, and fermenting creates a depth of flavor that you just can’t find in store-bought baked goods.
The process of slow fermenting with the native yeasts just has an artisanal flavor that you can’t buy. Unless, of course, you live in a super cool area where people are selling homemade sourdough bread!
If you are a real-food foodie like myself, you probably know that sourdough bread takes a lot of pre-planning. Do you want to have fresh-from-the-oven homemade bread this Saturday? Well, I hope you started thinking about that desire on Thursday!
Me, personally? I’m not much of a planner. I love sourdough bread as much as the next traditional foods gal, but guess how often we actually have it??
It wasn’t long into my sourdough journey that I discovered there is such a thing as no-wait or quick sourdough recipes. This recipe is super flexible; you can allow it to ferment for 2-4 hours or even 24 hours. Hallelujah. If we are going to use it to make sandwiches for lunch, I’ll just prep the dough the night before or that morning.
What is long-fermented sourdough?
Have you ever heard of phytic acid? Basically, itโs an anti-nutrient found in grains, beans, and nuts that interferes with the absorption of certain nutrients. They are present on grains to keep them from spoiling.
There is a reason they are there, but there is also good evidence that our bodies werenโt meant to handle them. Proper preparation of grains eliminates most, if not all, of the phytic acid in offending foods.
This is the very reason traditional cultures soaked and fermented their grains, seeds, and beans. These days weโve lost that art. And, what have we found? People canโt handle grains anymore.
Long fermented sourdough is a process of giving grains time to ferment and sour. This helps to remove the anti-nutrients. Also, a healthy starter is comprised of native yeasts, so the long fermentation gives the baked good a chance to rise, without adding any additional yeast. No little packet of instant yeast needed!
Most recipes on the internet claim to be “sourdough” but actually only call for a cup or two of fresh starter and then make up the rest of the recipe with flour. If the gut healthy benefits come from long fermenting grains, this doesn’t do you any good. Sure, a tiny portion of the recipe is comprised of fermented grains (the sourdough starter), but the majority is just milled wheat (the flour) that has had zero time to ferment and sour.
For this recipe, you can do it either way. Allow it to ferment for a shorter period like 2-4 hours or it can be fermented as long as 12-24 hours to really get the most benefits from the fermentation.
Tips:
- To make a dairy-free flatbread, substitute the milk for a dairy-free milk or just use water.
- For this recipe, you can use active sourdough starter or discard, either will work.
- This is a quicker type of sourdough recipe. You can allow it to ferment for 2-4 hours, or up to 24 hours. Whichever you prefer and can tolerate.
- You can use it as bread to make sandwiches, or serve them as a healthy, whole grain, long fermented appetizer. You could even cut them in large chunks and use them as croutons for a salad.
- They are a perfect little afternoon snack for kids, or late night salt-craving-satisfier for adults.
Easy Sourdough Flatbread Ingredients
- Flour – I used freshly ground hard wheat berries. You can just use all-purpose flour.
- Sourdough starter – activated starter or discard will work.
- Salt – don’t skip this crucial ingredient. It adds so much flavor, and the flatbread will taste just bland without it.
- Milk – Whole milk is preferred because it contains healthy fats and lends itself to a better feel.
How To Make Sourdough Flatbread:
Mix sourdough starter, flour, milk, and salt together. Knead for a few minutes.
Cover and allow to rise for for 2-4 hours (or overnight for long fermentation).
Divide into 8 equal pieces.
Roll flat (about 1/4โ thick) on a lightly floured work surface.
Add a small amount of olive oil to a cast iron skillet and preheat over medium.
Cook each flatbread for a minute or two on each side until it starts to brown a bit.
Serve as-is, or use them in a variety of ways. See below for just a few ideas.
How To Eat Sourdough Flatbread
- Side with soup or salad.
- As a quick and easy homemade pizza crust.
- Yummy sandwich- add your favorite sandwich toppings (i.e: turkey, ham, cheese, lettuce, tomatoes, fermented jalapeรฑos etc), fold it in half and enjoy.
- A delicious breakfast: add spinach, eggs, sausage or bacon, caramelized onions, and cheese.
- As an appetizer with hummus, roasted red peppers, fermented carrots, olives, cheese, etc.
Other Farmhouse On Boone Sourdough Recipes
- How to Make a Sourdough Starter from Scratch
- Sourdough Pancakes (no wait)
- Sourdough French Toast Casserole
- Easy Sourdough Pizza Crust (no wait)
- Sourdough Skillet (no wait)
- Cinnamon Maple Sourdough Apple Pie (no wait)
- Whole Wheat Sourdough Bread
- Sourdough Tortillas
- Sourdough English Muffins
Easy Sourdough Flatbread
Ingredients
- 2 cups flour
- 1 cup starter
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 1/2 cup milk
- Olive oil for cooking
Instructions
- Mix sourdough starter, flour, milk, and salt together. Knead for a few minutes.
- Cover and allow to rise for for 2-4 hours (or overnight for long fermentation).
- Divide into 8 equal pieces.
- Roll flat (about 1/4โ thick) on a lightly floured work surface.
- Add a small amount of olive oil to a cast iron skillet and preheat over medium.
- Cook each flatbread for a minute or two on each side until it starts to brown a bit.
Notes
- To make a dairy-free flatbread, substitute the milk for a dairy-free milk or just use water.
- For this recipe, you can use active sourdough starter or discard, either will work.
- This is a quicker type of sourdough recipe. You can allow it to ferment for 2-4 hours, or up to 24 hours. Whichever you prefer and can tolerate.
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
Go grab some other delicious appetizer recipes for the holiday season:
Veggie Dip by Julie Blanner | Meatballs with Cranberry Chili Sauce by Our Oily House |
Garlic Herb Sourdough Flatbread by Farmhouse on Boone | Baked Chicken Wings by The Cookie Rookie
Please update the step by step instructions. I made this via the print instruction without watching the video. It doesnโt say to mix the garlic powder, salt, Italian seasoning into starter and I just messed that up by sprinkling all on top. The video covers it though.
Worst recipe ever!
You didnโt explain where the garlic powder goes and you say to put the oil on top of the bread? None in the lab first. Really looking forward to spending the next hour scrubbing that pan instead of enjoying my dinner. Complete waste of time….
Did you use a pizza stone or cast iron skillet. Preheating is very important, or you will have a mess on your hands.
Don’t listen to him, he’s just being rude. I tried it and it was AWESOME, none of your recipes have ever failed me. People just try to use the internet to say things that they won’t say in person. Don’t let his rude, UNTRUE comment get you down. You teach SO MANY people new things every day. I’m so thankful for all the work you put in to the blog, the channel, the courses, the book, the ebooks, AND the podcast. You have inspired so people. Thank you for everything you’ve done.
Well thank you so much for this sweet encouragement Natalie!
Also, when preheating your oven, give it some more time after the oven reaches temp before cooking as the stone may not be as hot yet. Give the stone some extra time to reach temperature.
Don listen to rude peeps Lisa , your site is very user friendly and everyone likes different things!
Great job!
Michelle
What a rude person. She did not say there was any garlic powder in the recipe and it clearly states to put olive oil in the pan. Maybe try reading the recipe. And try being nicer.
Hello! I’m new to your page and came across this recipe while looking for something to do with my discarded starter.
I just tried making these today and my husband loved them! They were a little doughy in the middle for my taste and not crispy looking like yours. Not sure if I slightly under cooked them, or if my dough was too thick, but I was overall very pleased with the results and I will definitely be trying again! ๐
Hi! This recipe was delicious but I had trouble with the bread sticking to my pizza stone? The stone was already hot when I poured the starter. Any tips? Thanks!
Hey Sarah! The key is it has to be super hot.
Hi, when you say you cane substitute with discard…do we substitute it for the flour or the starter or both?
You can use discard instead of using an active starter. Either will work! You’ll need flour regardless of which one you choose.
Hi there! Iโm so excited to have found this! Iโm wondering how you maintain such a large amount of starter for your more instant recipes? Iโm used to keeping 100-200 grams on hand after small feedings.
Just add more flour and water when you feed it, don’t discard much and it will build up really fast. I went from around 200 grams to 600-800 in a week.
So perfect alongside a bowl of hot soup!
These were absolutely delicious! The whole family loved it.
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Oh. My. Goodness! This was so delicious. I made it in my cast iron skillet, topped it with a little cheese, and we had it as a side for lunch. I’ve had a hard time finding sourdough recipes my family likes and this one was a hit. Thanks for sharing!
I absolutely love all your recipes! I watch your videos and then try them in my kitchen. You make every meals seem so simple to prepare and they are healthy and delicious as well. I love your channel!
Can I use sourdough discard for this recipe? Thanks!
I used my fridge sourdough discard (last feeding two weeks ago) and it worked great. I have a very strong starter that gets activity from my discard thats I let accumulate and the end result was still light with a nice crunchy crust.