This post will walk you through the steps to creating a whole wheat sourdough starter from scratch. A simple combination of flour, water, and time will set you up to begin baking all kinds of delicious, nutritious loaves, bagels, muffins, and more – all from your very own sourdough starter.
Sourdough Starter Recap
The art of sourdough baking is nothing new. A long time before commercial yeast, bread found its rise with the help of a living culture of natural yeasts and good bacteria – sourdough starter. These living organisms are found everywhere in our environment.
When we leave a little bit of flour and water in a warm spot for a length of time, wild yeast and good bacteria get to work consuming the sugars in the flour and water mixture, giving off small bubbles of carbon dioxide. These bubbles give rise to our recipes when we let the dough rest.
This process of fermentation makes the grains more digestible, and the nutrients become more bioavailable.
These natural benefits have been largely replaced by the convenience of instant yeast and quicker rise times.
While we save time, we have also been losing the nutritional benefits and delicious flavors.
But sourdough starter has been making a comeback. It is finding its way back into the kitchens of average folks, its popularity rising because of the many benefits, and maybe also because of the extreme satisfaction that comes with learning to master this lost art.
I use my starter constantly, and I’ve been caring for it for years now. It’s practically a member of our family.
Sourdough starter is a living thing, incredibly resilient, and much simpler than most think.
So where do you begin?
Sure, you can buy a starter and get going from there.
Or you can ask a sourdough friend for some of theirs, and I’ve found they’re always excited to share.
But I think the easiest way starts in your very own kitchen. Did you know you can grow your own starter from scratch with a little whole grain flour and some water?
I have a post for How to Make a Sourdough Starter already, and while the process is pretty much the same, that post is aimed at using all-purpose flour, and whole wheat is different.
For those wanting to use whole wheat flour in a starter, keep on reading!
Some Differences of Whole Wheat Flour
The choice of flour in a sourdough starter is completely up to you. Whole wheat is one of many great options, so let’s discuss why we might choose whole wheat.
Whole grains are made up of three main components: the bran, the endosperm, and the germ.
Each component offers some nutrition, though some more than others.
Bran is an excellent source of fiber, while the germ contains healthy fats and vitamins like B and E, and the endosperm contributes primarily starch.
Wheat flour is a whole grain – bran, endosperm, and germ – processed using commercial equipment or your own little grain mill at home. Each component is present, contributing to the darker color of the flour.
White flour is the result of separating the endosperm, the starchiest component, from the bran and germ. Flour composed of just the endosperm of the wheat berry results in white flour being white, as the brown outer layer of bran has been removed.
Wheat flour, therefore, boasts a much higher level of nutrition.
Also, because all parts of the wheat berry are present in unprocessed whole wheat, this type of flour uses more liquid. As such, a whole wheat sourdough recipe will typically require more hydration than others.
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What’s To Love About Whole Wheat
Quicker rise
Sourdough starter made with whole wheat flour ferments much more rapidly than white flour. This is because the wild yeasts respond more vigorously to having all the parts of the wheat berry present, happily consuming the flour and water much more quickly.
Wheat flour is great for jumpstarting your sourdough starter or for using it all the time as your primary flour.
Deeper flavor
Whole wheat flour has a very deep, complex taste, with slight but noticeably sweeter notes than all-purpose or white. Many people prefer whole wheat flour for its heartiness.
This flavor boost comes from maintaining the bran and germ and often influences the tanginess from the fermentation. This results in a more sour flavor.
A sourdough starter made with whole wheat flour will contribute to a more richly flavored bread, especially when used in combination with whole wheat flour in a recipe.
Hearty Texture
Whole wheat flour recipes produce a denser loaf of bread than more processed flour. This is due to a lower gluten content in whole wheat. This should be expected and isn’t really a downside.
This density works wonderfully for a sturdy crust, chewy texture, and a well-structured loaf that accompanies any meal very well.
Used in a sourdough starter, whole wheat flour will hold fewer bubbles and tends to not rise a bread as dramatically during the bulk fermentation, unless used with a more glutenous flour like bread flour or all-purpose.
Whole Wheat Sourdough Starter Maintenance
Daily Use on the Counter
A starter kept at room temperature requires a consistent feeding of flour and water every day.
Even though whole wheat is a higher hydration flour in recipes, you’ll still stick with equal parts flour and water for the starter.
Keep in mind that the warmer the conditions, the quicker the wild yeast and bacteria will use up the sugars and reach their peak.
You should plan on using your starter every day on this schedule, or at least several times a week while discarding on the off days.
I like to keep a jar of discard in the refrigerator to use specifically in discard recipes.
I don’t actually discard my discard, but use it up in recipes made specifically for this purpose. For ideas on how to do the same, check out my post 35+ Sourdough Discard Recipes!
Refrigerated Starter
For the average person, storing your starter in the refrigerator makes a lot of sense.
The cold slows down the fermentation process significantly, which is more accommodating for those baking weekly or every other week.
A refrigerated starter should be fed about every 7 days to keep it healthy. Depending on your starter and flour/water ratios, you may get by with feeding every other week.
Keep the container covered tightly when refrigerated.
This method requires a bit of planning when used as an active starter, as the starter won’t be ready to go right out of the fridge.
For best results, it will need to be placed on the counter and fed on the day before you plan to use it to rise a recipe.
For recipes that don’t require rise or use added leavening agents, such asย sourdough chocolate chip cookies,ย Dutch baby pancakes, orย discard crackers, simply bring your discard to room temperature before adding to a recipe.
When Is My Starter Ready?
The most accurate way to know if your starter is ready is by identifying visible signs of activity, such as bubbles or doubling in size.
The age of your starter matters as well, since a very young starter may perform much more weakly than an older one.
One method I would not recommend is called the float test, and it is already a somewhat inconsistent indicator of a sourdough starter’s readiness.
It works in this way: The activity of a starter will generate carbon dioxide bubbles within, causing a sample of the starter that is placed in a glass of water to float. This would indicate an active starter.
However, whole wheat flour has a lower gluten content than bread flour or all-purpose flour, which results in less elasticity and a weaker gluten network.
As such, this type of starter won’t hold lots of bubbles, which will cause the starter to sink. It will likely fail this specific test, though it very well could still be active and ready to bake.
Tips
- The temperature of your home plays a big role in the fermentation process. A warmer home will lead to a far quicker rise, whereas a cooler home slows the rise significantly.
- If you need a warm place to keep your starter, some common solutions are near a heat source like a hearth, near an operating oven or stove, on top of the refrigerator, or in a sunny window.
- Recipes made with whole wheat starter and flour work well with longer autolyse and rest periods, allowing this very thirsty whole grain flour to absorb the liquids more completely.
- A common method of measuring the growth of your starter is placing a rubber band around the jar level with your starter upon feeding. You can later check if the starter has risen past the marker, measuring the growth and timing of your starter’s peak activity. This typically happens anywhere between 4 and 12 hours after feeding.
- Starter consistency should be similar to that of pancake batter.
Tools You Will Need
Glass bowl – You will be keeping the starter in this bowl for several days, so a non-porous material like glass is best.
Wooden spoon – Metal can react with the acid in sourdough fermentations, so I generally use wooden utensils.
Measuring cups – You can use a food scale if you want to be very accurate, but I find measuring cups to be sufficient.
Tea towel –ย To keep foreign particles out of the bowl.
Ingredients
Whole wheat flour – I use fresh milled flour.
Water –ย Filtered water is helpful to avoid chlorine and other chemicals often found in tap water.
How to Make Whole Wheat Sourdough Starter
Day 1:
Combine one cup of whole wheat flour with one cup of filtered water in your glass bowl. Stir well, scraping down the sides of the bowl. Cover your bowl with a clean tea towel and let it sit at room temperature for 24 hours.
Day 2:
Pour out and discard half of the flour and water mixture, then repeat the steps of day one. One cup of flour, one cup of water, stir thoroughly, cover, and set aside.
Day 3-5:
For days 3, 4, and 5, repeat the instructions from day 2. Discard, feed, stir, cover, and wait 24 hours.
Day 6-7:
Continue the steps from days 2-5, but begin feeding every 12 hours now, rather than every 24 hours.
Day 7:
After one week, your new starter should be showing signs of activity. With the feeding schedule and elapsed time, enough wild yeast and good bacteria should be present to attempt your first rise. Look for bubble foam on top, bubbles throughout the starter, or doubling in size.
After day 7:
Start baking with your sourdough starter. Store in the fridge if not using daily. Feed once a week in the fridge or at least every 12-24 hours at room temperature equal portions starter, water, and whole wheat flour.
FAQ
A mature starter is difficult to ruin unless it is being severely neglected. Missing a feeding won’t kill your starter, and some smells may seem suspicious while being completely normal. The biggest warning would be signs of mold growth. If this happens, toss the starter. This is not a common issue, though, as mold spores don’t thrive in the acidity of a mature, fermenting culture of wild yeast. Pink tinges or dark liquid are all easily remedied, though.
Whole wheat bread, as a general rule, comes out dense. This is because the bran breaks up the gluten network in a way that weakens the elasticity and significantly reduces the capture of carbon dioxide bubbles. These bubbles are what give your bread rise, determining the fluffy, light, airy textures. Without the elasticity of the gluten, a whole wheat loaf is more closely knit and, therefore, dense.ย
If your loaf seems to be unbearably dense, try extending rise times and/or working the dough more whether by kneading or stretching and folding.
You certainly can. It’s as simple as feeding your starter whole wheat flour and water at room temperature every 12 hours, which is the basic schedule for countertop, frequently used sourdough starter. Discard and feed each day with the new flour, and after a few days, your starter will be successfully converted.
The main reason for a crumbly loaf is having too much flour. Whole wheat recipes can be tricky, trying to determine the correct hydration level for this flour that just generally needs more water than others. Adding more flour seems like the right solution to a sticky dough, while better results might actually be found by increasing fermentation time and handling (kneading, stretch and folds, etc) to increase the gluten structure.
Whole wheat sourdough starter can be used in any recipe calling for starter or discard, unless of course the recipe is aiming to be gluten-free.ย
Your container will build up sourdough residue pretty quickly, so I just scrape the sides down to keep the container as clean as possible. Extra starter on the top and rim are messy and potentially susceptible to mold, which is always problematic. Cleaning your jar thoroughly is a good idea to do now and then, just to keep surfaces tidy.
Check out some of my favorite sourdough recipes here:
- Seeded Sourdough
- 100% Whole Wheat Sourdough Bread
- The Best Sourdough Pancakes
- Sourdough Banana Bread
- Homemade Sourdough Bagels
If you try this recipe and love it, I would love if you could come back and give it 5 stars!ย Tag me on Instagram @farmhouseonboone
Whole Wheat Sourdough Starter
Equipment
- Jar or bowl
Ingredients
- Whole wheat flour
- Water
Instructions
- Day 1: Combine one cup of whole wheat flour with one cup of filtered water in your glass bowl. Stir well, scraping down the sides of the bowl. Cover your bowl with a clean tea towel and let it sit at room temperature for 24 hours.
- Day 2: Pour out and discard half of the flour and water mixture, then repeat the steps of day one. One cup of flour, one cup of water, stir thoroughly, cover, and set aside.
- Day 3-5: For days 3, 4, and 5, repeat the instructions from day 2. Discard, feed, stir, cover, and wait 24 hours.
- Day 6-7: Continue the steps from days 2-5, but begin feeding every 12 hours now, rather than every 24 hours.
- Day 7: After one week, your new starter should be showing signs of activity. With the feeding schedule and elapsed time, enough wild yeast and good bacteria should be present to attempt your first rise. Look for bubble foam on top, bubbles throughout the starter, or doubling in size.
- After day 7: Start baking with your sourdough starter. Store in the fridge if not using daily. Feed once a week in the fridge or at least every 12-24 hours at room temperature equal portions starter, water, and whole wheat flour.
Notes
- The temperature of your home plays a big role in the fermentation process. A warmer home will lead to a far quicker rise, whereas a cooler home slows the rise significantly.
- If you need a warm place to keep your starter, some common solutions are near a heat source like a hearth, near an operating oven or stove, on top of the refrigerator, or in a sunny window.
- Recipes made with whole wheat starter and flour work well with longer autolyse and rest periods, allowing this very thirsty whole grain flour to absorb the liquids more completely.
- A common method of measuring the growth of your starter is placing a rubber band around the jar level with your starter upon feeding. You can later check if the starter has risen past the marker, measuring the growth and timing of your starter’s peak activity. This typically happens anywhere between 4 and 12 hours after feeding.
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
Hi! It’s been 3 days and my sourdough starter from this recipe has bubbled over and passedd the “float” test. Should I continue following the directions and continue to feed for the week, or is it read to be used to make bread?
Yes, continue for the full 7 days. That is strengthening your starter.
Hi, thank you for this fantastic recipe. My starter is bubbly and active after just two days! I have a questionโwhite flour sourdough is known to be almost gluten free withi a 72 hour fermentation. Do you know how long this takes with whole wheat? I would think with the increased activity and reduced gluten it would be faster but I canโt find anything about it.
Around 72 hours, I would think!
I started mines 3 nights ago. Went to feed for the 4th night and she already spilling out. ๐ฅฐ๐ฅฐ๐ฅฐ
Ive been covering mines with a ziplock and letting it sit in the microwave overnight and she has been doing great.
Hi Lisa! For maintaining the whole wheat starter, do you use weight or measuring cups for the ratio? It seems to produce a pretty different consistency depending on which way you do it.
I personally use a measuring cup!
Hi Lisa! Should I have put it in the fridge after 24 hours? Iโve kept it in the counter. Iโm on day 3 and it had a clear layer of water on top and was runny when mixed. I did feed it again.
No, it needs to stay on the counter for the 7 days while you are feeding it. Be sure to feed it and discard daily. The clear layer of water on top is a sign that your starter is hungry and wants to be fed again.
I think my whole wheat starter, made using these easy instructions, is ready to be used. I’m not finding very many recipes though that use only whole wheat flour, especially discard recipes.
Does using whole wheat starter in recipes that are otherwise all-purpose flour still offer the significant level of nutritional value that comes with whole grains?
Iโm on day two with my baby sourdough starter. Overnight it separated into a layer of flour on the bottom and light-brown liquid on top. Is this normal? Should I just keep stirring it back together? Thanks!
Stir it back together, discard, then feed it again! That’s normal.
Hi,
Thanks for the recipe.
I am tmy first attempt to cultivate the starter. And I have some questions that I would like to seek your advice.
For the discard, do we put iin a jar to accumulate all the daily discard and store it? After using the starter, how do we determine how much flour and water to feed the remaining starter?
You can! I like to discard everything but 1/2 cup of starter and then feed it 1/2 cup flour and 1/2 cup water.
Omg thanks for this. I’ve been struggling for the last 15+ days, trying to figure out why my whole wheat starter wouldn’t “float”, and hence, not baking and wasting a ton of flour, feeding and discarding every day. I do have a question: does it ALWAYS double in size, though? Because mine doesn’t, even though there are signs of actual activity, like bubbles and some rising, but not doubling in size.
It could be due to your environment. I would try baking with it and see how that works!
Thank you so much, I’m now watching your recipe on YouTube! How didn’t I know about your channel? Goldmine!
Discard half each time ?
For days 6-7, are we discarding along with feeding? Or just feeding every 12 hours on days 6-7?
Yes, discard at both feeds.
Hi Lisa,
Thank you so much for all your amazing and wholesome content!
I wanted to ask about your starter recipes-I’m trying to get a starter going and am on day 5 of experimenting with it…
Both the all purpose and whole wheat sourdough starter recipes call for a 1 cup flour to a 1 cup water ratio. When reading up online I see many recipes call for a 1 cup flour to half cup water ratio. Does the ratio change based on flour type?
Also, I live in a warmer climate and my starter developes hooch within 12 hours. Should I be feeding it every 12 hours?
Thanks again,
Michal
Yes, or you can feed it more flour. Like 1 cup of flour to 3/4 cup water. That may help!