Learn how to make sourdough tortillas with five basic ingredients: sourdough starter, flour, water, oil, and salt. They are perfect for a quick summer wrap or your favorite tacos.
After sharing “What We Eat in a Week” videos with healthy meal ideas for breakfast and dinner, I had soooo many requests for healthy lunch ideas.
Truth is, since we are all together as a family for lunch, I usually just make more of the same. Itโs something along the lines of meat and veggies, eggs, salmon, avocados, and sauerkraut.
Last week was a craaazy week, with the magazine crew here for four out of five days. I sent my husband and kids out of the house a lot, and had to think of something to send with them to eat on-the-go.
It made me think of the sourdough tortillas I used to make all the time. After whipping up a couple batches, I wondered why I ever forgot about them.
They are so easy and convenient!
We had cilantro chicken wraps with purple cabbage and honey mustard for lunch today, and I just got some more dough going tonight.
I already have a bunch of leftover chicken in the fridge, so tomorrow’s lunch is going to be as simple as rolling out a couple tortillas and packing them with meat, veggies, and herbs.
Sourdough tortillas may be vying for the top spot in my favorite sourdough creations. Right next to English muffins…or pancakes, maybe pizza crusts.
Ok, I really love all things sourdough, but these tortillas are going to be a staple in lunches this summer. Quick. Easy. Not hot. They make the best sourdough wraps.
Who wants hot meals on a 90 degree summer day?!
Why I Love This Recipe:
These can be made with any wheat flour: all purpose, whole grain, or freshly milled. I often use hard white wheat berries that I grind fresh in my Mockmill.
Long fermentation is the traditional way to prepare grains. The bacteria present in the sourdough starter pre-digest the grains and make them easier for the body to process.
Many people who are very sensitive to gluten have told me that they can actually tolerate it when fermented for 24 hours or more!
Isn’t that amazing?!
It makes sense why so many people can’t have gluten today. Grains are no longer prepared traditionally. Also, many species of wheat have been hybridized and modified, so that they are no longer in a form that our body is prepared to handle.
If you are super sensitive to wheat, I suggest letting your sourdough goodies ferment for at least 24 hours before cooking/baking. Also, itโs better to use ancient einkorn wheat flour, which hasn’t been hybridized. You can find my einkorn tortillas recipe here.
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Tips For Making Sourdough Tortillas:
- To make cooking super fast and easy, I love getting four cast iron skillets going at one time. This makes this process so much easier. A serious game changer rather than sitting in front of one skillet flipping tortillas one at a time.
- All-purpose and whole wheat flour will work well for this recipe. For lighter and fluffier tortillas, use unbleached all-purpose.
- You can use active sourdough starter or discard.
- No need for a tortilla press, you can easily just roll these out with a rolling pin.
Tools you may need:
Measuring cups and spoons
Rolling pin
I use the professional Kitchenaid Stand Mixer, because it has dough hooks that do the kneading for me. If you plan to make a lot of sourdough bread and tortillas, this thing just makes life so much easier.
You can turn on the kneading hooks and walk away to tend to the children who are pulling blueberries out of the freezer and dumping your good Castile soap down the drain. Anyone else have a two year old?
I also like that it holds a higher quantity than the original KitchenAid. It can knead more loaves of bread at one time. #largefamilymom
Ingredients
- Unbleached all-purpose flour or whole grain – Both will work, but all-purpose flour makes these tortillas lighter.
- Sourdough starter – You will want to use sourdough starter that is active. It should be fed 4-12 hours before starting the recipe, and be nice and bubbly.
- Water
- Extra virgin olive oil – you can also substitute another healthy oil like avocado oil or melted coconut oil.
- Salt – I love Himalayan salt.
How To Make Sourdough Tortillas
Add the sourdough starter, water, oil, salt, and flour to a mixer with a dough hook.
Knead for 2-3 minutes in a mixer, or 5 minutes by hand. The ingredients should be fully incorporated, and the dough slightly elastic.
Place the dough in a greased bowl, cover with a tea towel, and allow to sit at room temperature for 12-24 hours. (If you are gluten intolerant, 24 hours is better.)
The next day, divide the dough into 12 equal parts.
On a lightly floured work surface, roll each ball of dough out to about a 1/4 inch thickness. Get them as thin as you can, without them falling apart.
Cook them in a preheated cast iron skillet in a little coconut oil. One minute on each side is sufficient.
FAQ:
Is sourdough bread better for you?
For sure. Due to the fermentation process, not only is sourdough easier to digest, but also the nutrients that are naturally occurring in the grains are more bioavailable for your body to absorb; thus sourdough is a better choice than typical grain products.
How do you heat up sourdough tortillas?
If you want to heat up a bunch at one time you can set your oven to 350 degrees. While the oven is heating up add your tortillas for about 5 minutes. Remove from oven and they should be perfectly heated up without being hard.
Microwave: place them on a microwave safe dish, and add a damp towel. Heat for 30 seconds to one minute until warm.
Can you freeze sourdough tortillas?
Yes! Freeze the tortillas on a cookie sheet without overlapping the tortillas. Once frozen, you can stack them and then place them in an air-tight container. Or freeze with parchment paper between each tortilla so they don’t stick together, and place in an air-tight container.
What can you use sourdough starter for?
Sourdough starter can be used to make so many recipes. From pizza, to muffins, to biscuits, pancakes and so much more. Check out my sourdough page to see all my favorite recipes.
What is the best flour for sourdough?
Really any flour will work for sourdough since the starter needs a starch to feed on. All-purpose, einkorn, spelt, whole wheat will all work.
I have multiple times changed up the flour I’ve used to feed my starter.
If you are gluten free, you can create a gluten free sourdough starter. Find the recipe here.
Check out my other sourdough recipes:
- Sourdough English Muffins
- How to Make a Sourdough Starter from Scratch
- Sourdough Pizza Crust
- Our Favorite Sourdough Pancake Recipe
- Healthy One Pot Meal- Sourdough Skillet
- Sourdough Cinnamon Rolls
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Sourdough Tortillas
Video
Ingredients
- 1 cup sourdough starter, 210 g
- 3/4 cup water, 160 g
- 1/4 cup olive oil, extra virgin (60 g)
- 1.5 tsp salt, 11 g
- 3 cups unbleached all-purpose or whole wheat, 420 g
Instructions
- Add the sourdough starter, water, oil, salt, and flour to a mixer with a dough hook.ย
- Knead for 2-3 minutes in a mixer, or 5 minutes by hand. The ingredients should be fully incorporated, and the dough slightly elastic.ย
- Place the dough in a greased bowl, cover with a tea towel or plastic wrap, and allow to sit at room temperature for 12-24 hours. (If you are gluten intolerant, 24 hours is better.)
- The next day, divide the dough into 12 equal parts.ย
- On a lightly floured work surface, roll each ball of dough out to about a 1/4 inch thickness. Get them as thin as you can, without them falling apart.ย
- Cook them in a preheated cast iron skillet in a little coconut oil. One minute on each side is sufficient.ย
Notes
- To make cooking super fast and easy, I love getting four cast iron skillets going at one time. This makes this process so much easier.
- All-purpose and whole wheat flour will work well for this recipe. For lighter and fluffier tortillas, use unbleached all-purpose.
- You can use active sourdough starter or discard.
- No need for a tortilla press, you can easily just roll these out with a rolling pin.
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
Great tortillas recipe. Second time I made them and they turned up perfectly. Thank you. Greatings from UK.
Absolutely love these! I make them often now
These are fantastic!!! Great way to use my discard and freeze wonderfully. Will definitely make again.
How can you store these instead of freezing?
I like to keep them in an air tight bag in the fridge.
Hey!
I have made those, it was super easy to make a dough but when I rolled them and tried to transfer to the frying pan they were falling apart ๐ What could I do wrong?
I used 13g protein flour and butter instead of olive oil
Those I managed to transfer came out pretty thick
It could be the flour type that you used.
Hello,
Iโm running into a problem. They are good sized and shape now but once they hit the heat they shrink considerably. Any idea why and how to fix?
Thanks so much!!
Shauna
I typically like to roll them out larger than I need due to them shrinking.
Hi Lisa,
I started my sourdough journey because of you and I’m so excited.
I’m from Germany and so I’m more used to working with a scale and grams. I’ve been having trouble with some of your recipes as some of the doughs turned out way stickier than yours seemed to be and so I added more flour. Unfortunately the end products were to dense or dry.
Especially the chocolate chip cookie dough was sooo sticky that there was no way of shaping a ball. So I added way more flour, but in the end the cookies were so dry…
I’m not sure which conversion to use: your conversion chart (for example 1 cup of water=236g) or the conversion in your recipes (here 1 cup of water = 213g). Here one cup of your starter are 210 g. I your conversion chart it’s 227g or the discard 250g… I think my problems with the recipes might stem from that…
I hope you can help me. Thank you so much and my God bless you!
If my recipes have the grams already included, use those! If not, refer to the chart. Hope this helps!
Iโve made these twice and they are very tasty. However, I have the hardest time getting a nice round shape. Can I use a tortilla press? They tend to shrink back when I pick them up after rolling and end up about a third smaller than I want. And Iโve never been able to finish them round.
I have made it they come out delicious and easy to roll out not sticky at all, after I mix and knead I bulk ferment on counter for no more than 2 hours then I put dough in the fridge and take it out let them sit for about hour/hour and a half especially since it is warmer these days within a few days longer as I left if for a week they were sour ๐ no one ate them ๐คทโโ๏ธ
Should the dough not be left on the countertop for so many hours? maybe that should be a part of the recipe instead of saying sit out at room temp 12-24 hours?
Yes, it can sit on the counter for up to 24 hours.
I done mind for 16hrs and they became sour so next time I may do a 24hr cold ferment in the fridge.