Spelt sourdough bread has a wonderful crusty exterior and chewy crumb. This no-knead bread starts with ancient grains and is super easy to make. You can easily prepare multiple loaves and store in the fridge to bake hot bread for dinner throughout the week.
This recipe is a great way to incorporate whole grains and ancient grains into your diet. It is a lot like my no-knead sourdough bread, but I wanted to use mostly spelt rather than all-purpose flour.
It is also much easier to work with than einkorn flour and can be substituted one for one (may have to reduce the liquid a tad bit) in most recipes calling for all-purpose flour.
Sourdough bread with spelt flour has a lovely flavor and texture that is pretty similar to regular bread. The crusty exterior makes it ideal for bruschetta, dipping in soup, hot sandwiches, etc.
What Is Spelt Flour?
Spelt an ancient whole grain wheat that acts most similarly to all-purpose flour, but has a slightly lower gluten content. Spelt is milled with the bran on, making it a whole wheat flour. It has a wonderful, slightly nutty flavor that lends itself well to breads, muffins, cookies, and more.
Spelt is a healthy flour, packed with fiber, iron, B vitamins, magnesium, zinc, and phosphorus. It also has a higher protein content compared to wheat flour.
Tips:
I like the mix of whole spelt and white spelt, but you can sub one or the other for all of the spelt component if that is all you have.
Dip your hands in water if the dough is too sticky while doing the stretch and folds.
This post contains affiliate links, which means I make a small commission at no extra cost to you. See my full disclosure here.
FAQ:
Is spelt good for making sourdough?
Yes. It adds a wonderful flavor and it produces a moister loaf. It also acts really similarly to all-purpose flour.
What does spelt sourdough mean?
It is sourdough bread made with spelt flour.
Can I use spelt flour in my sourdough starter?
Yes. You can easily feed your starter spelt flour without any issue.
Does Spelt sourdough bread have gluten?
Spelt sourdough bread does have gluten, but the gluten is more broken down compared to regular bread, which may help with digestion. Those that are gluten sensitive may be able to tolerate sourdough bread.
If you have celiac disease, you will still not be able to consume any sourdough unless it is gluten free sourdough.
Spelt Sourdough Bread Ingredients:
Bread flour โ This helps keep the structure of the bread, since spelt has less gluten content than regular wheat.
White spelt โ Spelt flour that has had the germ and bran removed, leaving it with a finer flour.
Whole spelt โ Typically what you will find in the store, containing the germ and the bran.
Sourdough Starter โ This is sourdough starter that is super active and bubbly. This will ensure you will get the best rise.
Water
Salt
Tools You Make Need:
Parchment paper
Banneton basket, basket with a tea towel, or a bowl with a tea towel.
How To Make Spelt Sourdough Bread:
Feed a sourdough starter 4-12 hours before starting the bread, ensuring it is active and bubbly.
To a large bowl, add warm water, flours, sourdough starter, and salt.
Stir until well combined.
Cover with damp towel, lid, or plastic wrap while resting. Allow to rest for 30 minutes for the water to hydrate the flour. This process is called autolyse. It allows all the flours to become hydrated.
Stretch And Fold
This is a no-knead recipe. Instead of kneading the dough, stretch and fold is performed.
Stretch and folds are accomplished by grabbing the edge of the dough firmly and pulling up, stretching it upwards. Then push the dough that is in your hands back into the center. Turn the bowl about a quarter turn and do this stretch and fold for a total of 3-4 times. This is considered one round of stretch and folding. Repeat for a total of 6 rounds.
First 3 stretch and folds โ every 15 minutes.
Last 3 stretch and folds โ every 30 minutes.
Cover with a wet towel or plastic wrap and allow the dough to bulk-ferment until doubled. This could be anywhere from 3-8 hours depending on the temperature and maturity of your sourdough starter.
Be careful not to over ferment the dough. Over fermentation leads to a sticky dough that doesnโt rise. You lose all the shape and structure of the bread.
Shape The Dough
Shape the dough into a ball by gently spinning it toward you.
Set out 20-30 minutes uncovered on the counter. This allows the surface to develop a skin, so that it doesnโt stick to the tea towel or banneton basket during the overnight rise.
Turn over the dough (the skin that just developed down) onto a lightly floured surface and shape. I pull each side and fold into the dough, then pull the dough into a shoelace pattern (see video) and roll up.
Gently pull the dough against the countertop towards you.
This is the part where you can really get a lot of structure in your final product. Itโs easy to get those bubbles and big โearโ when youโre baking it, so you donโt want to skimp on this step.
Transfer to a floured banneton or bowl with tea towel, seam side up. Cover with plastic (I usually use a plastic grocery bag) and proof 12-15 hours (or overnight) in refrigerator. You can actually leave the dough for a couple of days.
Bake
Preheat dutch oven to 500 degrees for 1 hour.
Remove dough from the fridge immediately before scoring and baking.
Turn over on parchment paper.
Dust with flour on top to make the scoring pattern stand out more. Optional.
Score with a razor.
Place the parchment paper and dough into the preheated dutch oven and add lid
Place the dutch oven into the oven and turn down the heat to 475.
Bake for 20 minutes with lid on.
Take lid off and bake for another 20 minutes or until golden brown.
Storage:
Uncut bread can be stored in a paper or linen bag. Once cut, store cut side down on a cutting board lightly covered or in a storage bag.
Bakerโs Schedule:
8 am: Feed sourdough starter with flour and water.
12 pm: If sourdough starter is mature, then proceed to creating the dough.
Combine the ingredients. Cover and rest for 30 minutes.
12:30 pm: Stretch and folds
First 3 stretch and folds โ every 15 minutes
Last 3 stretch and folds โ every 30 minutes
Cover with a wet towel or plastic wrap and allow the dough to bulk ferment until doubled.
8:00pm (may be much sooner or later depending): Shape dough.
Sit out 20-30 minutes, uncovered.
Turn over and shape.
8:30pm: Transfer to flour banneton or bowl with tea towel and cover with plastic. Place in the refrigerator for 12-15 hours.
The Next Day
9:00am: Preheat dutch oven on 500 for 1 hour.
10:00am: Take dough out of fridge, dust with flour, and score. Turn the oven down to 475, and bake for 20 minutes with the lid on, then 20 minutes without the lid.
Allow the bread to cool.
Find More Sourdough Favorites:
- Sourdough Oatmeal Cookies
- Best Sourdough Banana Muffins
- Sourdough Rye Bread
- Sourdough Pizza Dough
- Easy Sourdough Dinner Rolls
If you try this recipe and love it, I would love if you could come back and give it 5 stars!
Spelt Sourdough Bread
Ingredients
- 250 grams bread flour
- 175 grams white spelt
- 100 grams whole spelt
- 100 grams starter
- 325 grams water
- 10 grams salt
Instructions
- Feed a sourdough starter 4-12 hours before starting the bread, ensuring it is active and bubbly.
- To a large bowl, add warm water, flours, sourdough starter, and salt. Stir until well combined.
- Cover with damp towel, lid, or plastic wrap while resting. Allow to rest for 30 minutes for the water to hydrate the flour.
- Grab the edge of the dough firmly and pull up, stretching it upwards. Then push the dough that is in your hands back into the center. Turn the bowl about a quarter turn and do this stretch and fold for a total of 3-4 times. This is considered one round of stretch and folding. Repeat for a total of 6 rounds. * First 3 stretch and folds โ every 15 minutes.
Last 3 stretch and folds โ every 30 minutes. - Cover with a wet towel or plastic wrap and allow the dough to bulk-ferment until doubled. This could be anywhere from 3-8 hours depending on the temperature and maturity of your sourdough starter.
- Shape the dough into a ball by gently spinning it toward you.
- Set out 20-30 minutes uncovered on the counter.
- Turn over the dough (the skin that just developed down) onto a lightly floured surface and shape. I pull each side and fold into the dough, then pull the dough into a shoelace pattern and roll up.
- Gently pull the dough against the countertop towards you.
- Transfer to a floured banneton or bowl with tea towel, seam side up. Cover with plastic and proof 12-15 hours (or overnight) in refrigerator.
- The next day, preheat dutch oven to 500 degrees for 1 hour.
- Remove dough from the fridge immediately before scoring and baking.
- Turn over on parchment paper.
- Dust with flour on top to make the scoring pattern stand out more. Optional.
- Score with a razor.
- Place the parchment paper and dough into the preheated dutch oven and add lid
- Place the dutch oven into the oven and turn down the heat to 475.
- Bake for 20 minutes with lid on.
- Take lid off and bake for another 20 minutes or until golden brown.
- Allow to cool before slicing.
Notes
- I like the mix of whole spelt and white spelt, but you can sub one or the other for all of the spelt component if that is all you have.
- Dip your hands in water if the dough is too sticky while doing the stretch and folds.
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
Can you use the sprouted whole spelt flour
I haven’t used it before! I think you can though.
This recipe made great spelt bread for me.
I found this recipe to work well substituting with Einkorn flour, as well!
Wonderful!
I used spelt flour to feed my sourdough that I normally use white flour in and which normally gives me phenomenal results in rise. My bread did not rise and my starter formed a hooch within hours of feeding. I used spelt flour that I had ground myself. Does anyone have any ideas as to why the spelt had such negative results? I used the dough that didn’t rise to make biscuits and they tasted great and rose slightly in the oven. I was hoping to switch to spelt from white flour, but it looks like I’ll have to trouble shoot first. Any ideas as to what I might need to do?
It’s possible you need to change your water to flour ratio to make sure you are getting the right consistency. Every flour is going to absorb water differently.
***** (that’s 5 stars) Received some spelt flour as a gift from a local mill, so had to give it a try. A long process, but not much hands-on time. Turned out great! Thanks for the recipe:-)
So glad you enjoyed the recipe! Have a great day!
I only have ground spelt, what can I do instead using of whole spelt?
Thank you so much for the recipe. I canโt seem to find a spelt sourdough bread recipe anywhere. I want to create a spelt sourdough starter but I cant find anything about it, could you write one??!
I personally just use my regular starter, but you could easily take a tiny bit of your regular starter, put it in a separate bowl and feed it with spelt flour and water, so that it is almost completely a spelt starter. It would only have trace amounts of the original flour you used to start your starter, whether thatโs all purpose or einkorn. The other option is to start a spelt starter from scratch, which is the exact same instructions as any starter.
I just got this loaf out of the oven and it is absolutely perfect! I can’t thank you enough – I have struggled through sourdough recipes for years. Some of my efforts have been better than others, but none has ever come out as picture perfect as this loaf. I appreciate your video, photos, and clear recipe directions. The stretching and folding technique was great for me as I have difficulty kneading. I used sprouted whole spelt flour and white bread flour. Can’t wait to cut into this beauty! Thank you!
I baked this loaf today – great tasting results! I did use only whole grain spelt instead of part white spelt to keep it simpler for me. I will return to this recipe for sure. Great job and thank you!
Wonderful! Thank you for sharing. Glad you enjoyed it.
Hello from Portugal!!!! ๐ Thank you so much for your recipe! I like my bread 100% spelt, and this was the 1st recipe that really worked and that allowed my bread to grow! The previous recipes I’ve followed really didn’t work… So, thank you! I’m actually right now on stretch and fold my 2nd bread! Yeah!
Yay! That is wonderful.
Could you please give alternative to stretch and fold method, perhaps kneading using KitchenAid? My arthritis keeps me from doing this well. Thank you
Yes! You can knead it in the mixer, just like in this recipe: https://www.farmhouseonboone.com/easy-artisan-sourdough-bread Hope that helps!