Learn how to make this delicious same day sourdough bread recipe. From feeding the starter to baking fresh bread, all done in one day. With a delightful chewy interior and crusty exterior you’ve come to expect in a sourdough boule.
The key to having your sourdough bread ready the same day you start it is starting the whole process with an active sourdough starter. Now, technically, it can actually be made the same day even if you start the morning with the starter in the refrigerator, but it wonโt be ready by dinnertime.
A few weeks ago one of my children, who is particularly like her mother, requested kombucha and sourdough bread in her Easter morning basket.
I noted her request, but then failed to think about it again until Saturday morning. Pulling the starter out of the fridge around 8 am (when I finally realized that I better get going if she was going to have pretty loaves in her basket the next day) and fed it.
I put it in a really warm place to accelerate the bubble/yeast action (on top of my vintage stove with a standing pilot light) and it looked ready enough by noon to start.
I mixed up the ingredients all at once, skipping the normal first autolyse with flour and water. Next, I did 3 stretch and folds 20 minutes apart. This meant I was ready for the bulk ferment in a little over an hour.
By about 1:30 it was sitting on the back of the stove doing its thing.
Around 6:00 I divided it, shaped it, and put it in the banneton basket.
Instead of putting it in the fridge like I usually would for the final rise, I put it in the same warm place. It was ready to score and bake by 8:00 pm. There was bread put in her basket by 9:00. I only have a phone pic of my cute loaf, (it is half size to make it fit in her basket), but I had one happy girl on Easter morning.
I realize no one cares to have bread that late at night, but I thought this post would be a good one, just to let you know that it IS possible to have same day sourdough!
By feeding the starter the night before, you can have the same day sourdough recipe at a reasonable hour. So, letโs proceed with that recipe!
Why you will love this recipe:
Quicker than most sourdough recipes: Most of the sourdough breads I make usually take around 2 days or more. Where this recipe can be made in one.
Delicious: There is nothing like a delightfully chewy and crusty loaf of bread made with natural yeast.
Easy Recipe: Perfect if you are a beginner baker. This recipe is really easy.
Tips For Making This Easy Sourdough Bread Recipe:
- To make it a little faster so you have homemade bread earlier in the day, you can feed your sourdough starter the night before. This way as soon as you wake up the next morning the starter is ready to be mixed up with the remaining ingredients rather than having to wait for the starter to double.
- Dust the top of the dough with flour so the scoring pattern stands out.
- If the dough is a little sticky during the stretch and fold process, dip your fingers in water.
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Ingredients:
All-purpose flour or bread flour
Active sourdough starter – This needs to be a mature starter that has been fed and is nice and bubbly. Should pass the float test.
Water – Preferably filtered water. Tap water may contain chlorine which can inhibit the wild yeast in the sourdough starter.
Salt – I like using sea salt or pink Himalayan salt.
Tools you may need:
Proofing basket or banneton basket
Lame, razor blade, or sharp knife
Kitchen scale
FAQ:
If you are creating a sourdough starter from scratch it will take at least 7 days (or more) before it is ready to bake with. The easiest way to have a sourdough starter ready in one day is to purchase a starter from a local bakery or get one from a friend.
Place it in a warm spot like on top of a stove with a pilot light, near a fireplace, or in the oven with a light on.
Some specialty grocery stores may have sourdough starters to buy. Another option would be a local bakery or a sourdough bread stand at a local farmers market.
Usually about 4-12 hours depending on how mature your starter is and how warm your kitchen is.
How To Make Same Day Sourdough Bread
First thing in the morning, feed your starter and place it in a warm spot. This could be in the oven with just the light on, near a fireplace, or on top of the stove with a pilot light. Placing it in a warm spot will encourage the wild yeast to get nice and bubbly.
Allow the starter to about double. About four hours. It should pass the float test. This is when you take a small amount of starter and place it in a small glass of water. If it floats it is ready to make bread. If it sinks, it is not quite ready yet.
Add warm water, active starter, salt, and flour to a large bowl. Mix together and allow to rest for 20 minutes. This is the autolyse process where the flour is being hydrated with the water. Typically, you would just add the water and flour together. But to save time we are skipping this and completing the autolyse with the starter and the salt.
Complete the first stretch and fold.
Grab the edge of the dough and pull up stretching it out as you pull upwards.
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 set of stretch and folds.
Cover with plastic wrap, damp towel, shower cap or a lid. Let the dough rest for 20 minutes and complete two more rounds 20 minutes apart.
Bulk Fermentation
Let the dough bulk ferment in a warm place until it has doubled in size. This could be anywhere from 5-8 hours (or longer) depending on the temperature of your kitchen, maturity of your starter, etc.
Shape
Place the bread dough on a lightly floured surface.
Fold the sides of the dough onto itself and roll up. Then shape into a tight smooth ball by gently spinning it toward you.
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 a good rise and oven spring.
Transfer to a floured banneton or bowl with a floured tea towel (typically floured with rice flour, this is not necessary and all-purpose, einkorn, bread flour, etc. will work just fine) seam side up. You want the smooth side or pretty side facing down in the banneton.
Let the dough rise one more time at room temperature for 1-2 hours (depending on how warm your kitchen is) covered with a plastic bag, damp kitchen towel. Preheat the dutch oven during the final proof to speed up the process. This will also give the dough a warm place to rise.
Bake
Preheat a dutch oven to 500 degrees f for 1 hour.
Place dough on a piece of parchment paper.
Dust the top of the dough with flour, if desired, and score with lame or razor blade. I like to do one large score (also known as 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.
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.
Baking Schedule:
8:00 am: Feed sourdough starter. Could also be done the night before. If fed the night before, start the dough right away in the morning. This will speed up the process and allow you to bake much sooner.
12:00 pm: Mix ingredients. Autolyse for 20 minutes. Next, complete 3 stretch and fold rounds 20 minutes apart.
1:30ish pm: Bulk fermentation
6:00 pm: Shape and allow rise for 1-2 hours. Preheat the oven with the dutch oven for an hour.
7-8:00 pm: Bake
Find More Sourdough Bread Recipes:
- Sourdough Sandwich Bread
- Whole Wheat Sourdough bread
- Sourdough Discard Bread: This one contains commercial yeast
- Sourdough Beer Bread
- No-Knead Sourdough Bread
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.
Same Day Sourdough Bread
Ingredients
- 475 grams all-purpose flour, 3 1/2 cups
- 100 grams active sourdough starter, 1/2 cup
- 325 grams water, 1 1/4 cups
- 10 grams salt, 1 1/2 teaspoons
Instructions
- First thing in the morning, feed your starter and place it in a warm spot.
- Allowed the starter to about double. About four hours. It should pass the float test.
- Add warm water, active starter, salt, and flour to a large bowl. Mix together and allow to rest for 20 minutes covered.
- Grab the edge of the dough and pull up stretching it out as you pull upwards. 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 set of stretch and folds.
- Cover with plastic wrap, damp towel, shower cap or a lid. Let the dough rest for 20 minutes and complete two more rounds 20 minutes apart.
- Let the dough bulk ferment in a warm place until it has doubled in size. This could be anywhere from 5-8 hours (or longer) depending on the temperature of your kitchen, maturity of your starter, etc.
- Place the bread dough on a lightly floured surface.
- Fold the sides of the dough onto itself and roll up. Then shape into a tight smooth ball by gently spinning it toward you.
- 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.
- Transfer to a floured banneton or bowl with a floured tea towel (typically floured with rice flour, this is not necessary and all-purpose, einkorn, bread flour, etc. will work just fine) seam side up. You want the smooth side or pretty side facing down in the banneton.
- Let the dough rise one more time at room temperature for 1-2 hours (depending on how warm your kitchen is) covered with a plastic bag, plastic wrap or a damp kitchen towel. Preheat the dutch oven during the final proof to speed up the process.
- Preheat a dutch oven to 500ยฐF for 1 hour.
- Place dough on a piece of parchment paper.
- Dust the top of the dough with flour, if desired, and score with lame or razor blade.
- 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.
- Carefully remove the lid with oven mitts, turn the oven temperature down to 475ยฐF, and bake an additional 15-25 minutes or until golden brown.
Notes
- To make it a little faster so you have homemade bread earlier in the day, you can feed your sourdough starter the night before. This way as soon as you wake up the next morning the starter is ready to be mixed up with the remaining ingredients rather than having to wait for the starter to double.
- Dust the top of the dough with flour so the scoring pattern stands out.
- If the dough is a little sticky during the stretch and fold process, dip your fingers in water.
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
How did you get the bunny on there? so cute
Thanks for this post! I’ve been wanting to start making sourdough more consistently but struggled with timing my days out. This process worked great and it tasted delicious.
This is the recipe I go to everytime and every time it is a huge success! This was literally the first recipe I went to when I start doing sour dough and it’s the reason I’m still doing it! Thanks for the confidence boost and delicious, easy recipe.
Hello Lisa,
I have tried your sourdough bread recipe a couple of times now and I never seem to get a dough that is shapeable, it always flows apart. My starter passes the float test perfectly and I also did one more round of stretch and folds this time, because I felt like it wasn’t stretchy enough. Then when I got it out of the bowl to shape, it just sticked to everything but itself and I tried to work it together before I put it in the banneton. After the second rise I couldn’t get it out nicely and so it flopped into the dutch oven and I couldn’t even score it properly.
The loaves turn out tasty nontheless, just not as pretty.
Were you able to form it at all? It sounds like it may have over fermented a bit. That causes it to lose its shape and become a sticky mess.
My sourdough journey almost came to a halt after 2 failed attempts at making boule’s. I came across this recipe, and I have made 2 successful, beautiful boule’s. I am in love with baking sourdough. Thank you for this recipe. It is fantastic. BF was the thing I struggled with the most, and i’m slowly learning how to “read” my dough, how it should look and such, and not worry so much about the hours. I have found my sweet spot to be about 4 1/2 hours in BF. Again, thank you for this great recipe. I thoroughly enjoy watching you go through your day on your Youtube videos. Everything you make looks amazing.
I have had my sourdough starter for 20 years now. I used to use a recipe that took 3-4 full days for me to actually make the loaf of bread (it included a retard period in the fridge that was 18-24 hours). I found myself only making bread in the summer and at Christmas (Iโm a teacher so those are longer vacation time). Today is the second time I have tried your recipe. I can now make sourdough bread weekly because of the shortened time frame you have come up withโฆnot only is it a shorter time, but I have found I had such better loaves with more consistent results! Thank you so much for this recipe!!!
My new favorite sourdough recipeโฆ even when I have more than a day to make it. Easy and delicious!
Sourdough has felt like too much with three day recipes, but this one has been totally doable! I have four very little kids, and now we’re doing sourdough at least once a week using this recipe. Thank you!!
Oh I forgot to add that I did not use my mixer. I actually mixed every up using my dough whisk. Then I let it sit about 1 hour or so because we had to go a couple places. When we got home thats when I did the folds and let it sit. It was very jiggly after the rise. So, I dumped it out and best I could folded it into a loaf for second rise. As I said, best sandwich loaf. ๐
Lisa, I made this just yesterday. Instead of a boule I put it in a 9×5 bread pan. It was hard to get out so will put parchment all around the pan next time.
Let me say this made the BEST loaf of bread we have ever tasted. It was moist, fluffy, and chewy. A little crispy on the outside, which we loved. This will most likely be the recipe I use for sandwich loaf. Great job on recipe ๐๐ป๐๐ป