Learn how to make a sourdough starter recipe from scratch with just flour and water. This versatile ingredient can be used to make breads, cakes, cookies, and so much more.

If you hang around the traditional foods community, chances are you have heard of making homemade sourdough starter from scratch.

I have had my homemade starter for over six years now. It is vital in my traditional food kitchen.

What Is A Sourdough Starter?

A sourdough starter is a live active culture made of fermented flour and water that is full of beneficial bacteria and yeasts.

It is used as a way to ferment recipes and naturally rise bread.

Why You Will Love Sourdough:

If you are unfamiliar, let me fill you in on all the reasons why crazy folks, like me, go through the effort of handcrafting, and maintaining, a beneficial colony of yeasts and bacteria in their kitchens.

Before yeast was isolated and sold in little packets, sourdough starter was a valuable commodity in homes and families, passed down for generations.

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Health Benefits

Have you ever heard of phytic acid? Basically, it’s an antinutrient 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 weren’t 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, we’ve lost that art. And what have we found? People can’t handle grains anymore.

Instead of using instant yeast packets, people in traditional cultures leavened their bread with a fermented starter that captured all the yeasts in the environment.

AKA Sourdough starter

How on earth do we capture native yeasts? Read on, because I explain how to make your very own starter.

Because I love good food

I already confessed my foodie tendencies with you all. I reckon it’s the same inclination that led me into the world of homemade sourdough.

Locally made sourdough starter, with the native yeasts of the area present, is certainly the thing a foodie’s dreams are made of. A jar of healthy, productive starter is teaming with life, as evidenced by all the bubbles you will see rising to the surface.

Once you’ve experienced homemade sourdough baked goods, store-bought breads and pancakes simply don’t cut it. Sourdough has a depth of flavor that just can’t be found in something made quickly with a packet of instant yeast.

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

FAQ:

hand holding a wooden spoon in a bowl of sourdough starter with a blue and white towel to the left

How long does it take to make sourdough starter?

It takes about a week to create an active sourdough starter, but sometimes it can take about two weeks to make a starter ready to bake bread.

Do you have to discard sourdough starter every time you feed it?

When you are first creating your sourdough starter, yes. If you donโ€™t discard you will have so much starter that it will be hard to keep healthy. This is because the more starter you have the more flour and water you will need to add for the yeasts and bacteria to feed on.

After having a starter for a while rather than discarding you can just use it in discard recipes. This is a much more useful way of removing some of the starter rather than throwing it in the trash.

How do you know your sourdough starter is ready to use?

You will know your sourdough starter is read to use when you feed it and after 4-12 hours it doubles in size and is super bubbly. A good way to be able to determine this, is to place a rubber band where the top of the starter is after you feed it. Then after a few hours have passed you can see just how high it has grown.

Another way is to perform the float test. Take a small glass of room temperature water. Add a quarter sized dollop of active starter. If it floats, it is ready to bake with. If it doesnโ€™t it is not active enough.

Sourdough Starter Recipe:

By now, you know why you want to have a bowl of sourdough starter bubbling away in your kitchen, but how the heck do you make one?

Ingredients

Flour (Whole grain wheat, unbleached all-purpose, and einkorn are all great choices.)

Filtered water (I use a Berkey water filter. We have the Royal size for our family of 7. You can find my full Berkey review HERE.)

Tools

Glass bowl (Metal can react with beneficial bacteria and yeasts.)

Wooden spoon

Tea towel

How To Make Sourdough Starter

Day 1:

On day one, mix one cup of flour and one cup filtered water. Stir vigorously, making sure to scrape down the sides and incorporate everything. Place a clean tea towel over the bowl and set aside. Allow it to sit for 24 hours.

Day 2:

On day two, discard half of the mixture and repeat the process. Add one cup flour, one cup water, stir vigorously, and cover.

Why do you have to remove half the mixture? By day four, you would have sourdough starter overflowing from your bowl. Also, removing half ensures that the right amount of flour and water is feeding the growing colony of beneficial yeast. If you weren’t discarding half, the cup of flour wouldn’t be enough to feed them on days three and four. Basically, you would end up with a lot of extra starter by the end of the process, and none of it would be mature.

Day 3-5

Repeat the day two instructions for days three, four, and five.

Day 6-7

On days six and seven, do the same but feed it every 12 hours, instead of every 24.

By day seven, there should be enough beneficial bacteria and yeast present to bake sourdough bread and other fermented sourdough goodies, like pancakes and english muffins.

You will know it’s working if it bubbles, and doubles in size.

Sourdough Starter Maintenance

Once your sourdough starter is alive and active, there will be some maintenance to keep it going for years and years.

In the refrigerator for occasional use

Storing it in the refrigerator slows down the fermentation process, so one feeding per week, or every other week, is sufficient.

I usually use my starter a couple times per week. If I plan to make pancakes Saturday morning, for example, I will pull my starter out of the fridge Friday morning and add flour and water. By Saturday morning it is bubbly and ready to go.

I remove the two cups of starter needed for my pancake recipe, and put the “master starter” back in the fridge. Since it was fed the day before, it is good to go for another week, or whenever I need it next.

On the counter for daily use

Since the “little guys”, as my kids like to call the bacteria in the starter, are active at room temperature, they will have to be fed more often if keep it in this state.

If you leave your starter out on the counter, you will need to add flour and water every day. You will also have to be baking every day to use up all that starter.

Most people probably won’t use the starter quite so much, unless you own and operate a bakery. I would recommend storing it in the refrigerator between uses.

Video tutorial on how to make a sourdough starter from scratch

Helpful Resources

Every day I get loads of questions about sourdough starter, so I devoted a whole post called, How to Care for Sourdough Starter filled with your questions and my answers. You can use this post a reference guide.

Thank you so much for stopping by the farmhouse! I hope this is just the beginning of our sourdough journey.

Check out my other sourdough recipes and posts

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

Sourdough Starter

4.53 from 1052 votes
Learn how to make a homemade sourdough starter from scratch. Video tutorial also includes sourdough health benefits and our favorite ways to use sourdough starter in the farmhouse.
Additional Time: 7 days
Total: 7 days
Servings: 1 sourdough starter
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Just enter your email and get it sent to your inbox! Plus you’ll get new recipes from us every week!
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Ingredients 

  • Flour, Whole grain wheat, unbleached all purpose, and einkorn are all great choices.
  • Filtered water

Instructions 

  • On day one, mix one cup of flour and one cup filtered water. Stir vigorously, making sure to scrape down the sides and incorporate everything. Place a clean tea towel over the bowl and set aside. Allow it to sit for 24 hours.
  • On day two, discard half of the mixture and repeat the process. Add one cup flour, one cup water, stir vigorously, and cover.
  • Repeat the day two instructions for days three, four, and five.
  • On days six and seven, do the same but feed it every 12 hours, instead of every 24.
  • By day seven, there should be enough beneficial bacteria and yeast present to bake sourdough bread and other fermented sourdough goodies, like pancakes and english muffins. You will know itโ€™s working if it bubbles, and doubles in size.

Notes

Sourdough Starter Maintenance

  • Once your sourdough starter is alive and active, there will be some maintenance to keep it going for years and years.

In The Refrigerator For Occasional Use

  • Storing it in the refrigerator slows down the fermentation process, so one feeding every week, or every other week, is sufficient.
  • I usually use my starter a couple times per week. If I plan to make pancakes Saturday morning, for example, I pull my starter out of the fridge Friday morning and add flour and water. By Saturday morning it is bubbly and ready to go. I remove the two cups of starter needed for my pancake recipe and put the โ€œmaster starterโ€ back in the fridge. Since it was fed the day before, it is good to go for another week, or whenever I need it next.

On The Counter For Daily Use

  • Since the โ€œlittle guysโ€, as my kids like to call the bacteria in the starter, are active at room temperature, they will have to be fed more often if kept in this state.
  • If you leave your starter out on the counter, you will need to add flour and water every day. You will also have to be baking daily to use up all that starter.
  • Most people probably wonโ€™t use the starter quite so much, unless you own and operate a bakery. I would recommend storing it in the refrigerator between uses.

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

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2,073 Comments

  1. Wanda Rowland says:

    Okโ€ฆ.. the process beginsโ€ฆI so want this to work!
    Will this eventually end up in making the old fashion school house rolls ?

  2. Rebecca says:

    Iโ€™m new to sourdough baking. Can a starter be made with a SPROUTED whole wheat flour?

    1. Lisa says:

      That should work just fine.

  3. Tasha says:

    Hi Lisa! I love your channel and the handmade, homemade lifestyle. I try to incorporate as much of that in my own home with my big family as possible. I’m still learning everyday. I am going to try my hand at the sourdough starter today. I wanted to ask where do you find your Einkorn flour and date sugar? I wasn’t sure about the quality of the ones I have found online. Thanks so much!

    1. Lisa says:

      Thrive market is a great place to find things like that! (affiliate link): http://thrv.me/M2qprD

  4. Sandra says:

    I would appreciate any suggestion you might have for my situation.
    My husband and I travel frequently and I can be gone for 2-6 weeks at a time. Do you think there is anyway for me to maintain my sourdough starter?

    1. Lisa says:

      Hi Sandra! Once you get it established, you can leave your starter in the fridge for a month. In fact, my sister left hers unfed in the fridge for the entire first trimester of one of her pregnancies because she was so sick. And it was just fine. I talk about it more in this video: https://youtu.be/Yf6t6GcjH8E Hope that helps!

  5. Rose says:

    Im only on day 2 but my starter is overflowing out of my container. Is this an issue? How do I fix this?

    Thanks!

    1. Lisa says:

      What size of container are you using? I would move it to a larger container if needed.

  6. Allison says:

    So Iโ€™ve been feeding my starter now twice a day for about 5 days and it is bubbly but not doubling in sizeโ€ฆ? Any ideas what I could be doing wrong?

    1. Lisa says:

      It’s still pretty new, it may take a few more days (or even longer) to double in size.

  7. Darlene Joecks says:

    I’ve been baking with my Sourdough starter for 3 months and everything has been going great. we were gone for 5 days and when I returned my starter was watery and flat. had a sweet smell… I went ahead and fedd it but it didn’t double in size maybe 1/4… the next day I discarded and made pancakes , which turned out great. fed the starter but had the same results. I made bread but it didn’t turn out the same… did’t raise as well… still had holes in it though… I am now in the process of making a new starter. my friend who gave me my first starter is away.
    has that ever happened to you?

    1. Lisa says:

      Did you store it in the fridge for those 5 days? The liquid that gathers on top is hooch, and is normal. It is a sign that your starter needs to be fed more. Sometimes a new starter that has not been fed in a few days, will need to be fed a few times again before it is ready to use. I always recommend doing the float test before making bread if you are unsure.

  8. Tabitha says:

    Iโ€™m on day 5 of the starter and have been compensating with whole wheat pastry flour since day 4 (ran out of all purpose). The starter has not been bubbling as with the all purpose and Itโ€™s liquidity, is the starter still good? It smells sour? Just lacks the bubbles as it was doing with the all purpose? When I add the pastry flour it thickens itโ€™s when I add the water it becomes liquidity. I tried adding less water – still the same.

    1. Lisa says:

      Yes. It should totally still work as long as its a glutenous flour. It’s not very mature yet so it may not have many or any bubbles. Give it some time and it should be ok.

      1. Tabitha says:

        Thanks for the reply. I just saw this (had submitted another comment minutes ago, wasnโ€™t sure the previous one went through) Iโ€™m on day 8 now, the bubbles form on top but it doesnโ€™t double in size or pass the float test. I feed it after taking out discard. Still not floating. Iโ€™ve tested both the starter and discard and none float. The discard is bubbly. Can I add back to starter. Does the starter need more time to establish?

        1. Lisa says:

          It may just need more time. It can take up to two weeks. Temperature may be a factor as well if it is really cool in your home.

  9. Katherine says:

    I have a sourdough starter that I made with unbleached AP flour. I just recently found a dry goods store that sells whole wheat spelt and I bought some. Would it be an issue if I fed my AP starter with the whole wheat spelt?

    1. Lisa says:

      Nope. Should be totally fine.

  10. Daniella says:

    Iโ€™m on day 7 and my started hasnโ€™t grown. Please help!!!!

    1. Lisa says:

      Has it bubbled at all? It sounds like it may need to be in a warmer spot. It sometimes can take 2 weeks for a starter to be ready.