Tuesday 20 August 2013

Sourdough Basics 102 - Maintaining a Starter and a Toss-Off Flatbread Recipe


Update: I have written a more recent post on sourdough maintenance in March 2017.

"What the heck. This is bread, not birth control."
Susan of Wild Yeast

Creating a sourdough starter is a great achievement but unlike most baking endeavours, it doesn't end there.  In fact, it need never end if you nurture it with love and attention.  I wrote about making a sourdough starter recently and one of the challenges was working out how to maintain it.  Here are my beginners notes.

Rules of thumb
If the starter is warm, the yeast grows faster and needs more feeding.
If the starter is cold, the yeast grows more slowly and needs less food.
If the starter is too sour, feed it more regularly.

At first....
When I made my sourdough starter a few weeks ago, I got to the stage where I had a mature bubbly starter.  It felt like the moment when I brought Sylvia home from hospital and thought, it's a baby, now what do we do.  Fortunately as the top quote from Susan suggests, a starter is far easier than a baby.

In a panic about what to do with my starter I searched online for advice.  Wild Yeast and King Arthur Flour gave me useful advice.  Then I invited my friend Kathleen over for coffee and advice because she had been a regular baker of sourdough bread at one stage.  Books, blogs and forums have all be useful in gathering information, but best of all is chatting with an old friend.

My jug in which I keep my sourdough starter.
Keeping a starter at room temperature
There is the option to keep the starter out on the bench (with a lid) and feed it twice daily.  Though in Bourke Street Bakery: the Ultimate Baking Companion they advise against this in warm weather when it might grow too fast.  It seems practical for those who bake bread every few days.  That is not me.

Keeping a starter in the fridge
I chose the second option to keep the starter in the fridge (with a lid).  A cold starter grows at a much slower pace with a far smaller appetite than a warm starter.  Most of the online information I read said you need to feed a starter in a fridge about once a week but Kathleen said she did it about every couple of days.  The fridge is the more forgiving option.  If you forget to feed your starter it is less likely to die but may need pampering, depending on how it looks.

How much to feed it
Like most things with sourdough, there are bazillions of ways of feeding a starter.  I have seen all sorts of ratios.  I keep about 100g of starter (toss off the rest - see below) and then I add 100g white flour and 100g water (often cooled water from the kettle).  This is a good rule of thumb for me though I often have a bit more than 100g of the starter.  This means it is about 100% hydration because it is equal amounts by weight of water and flour. 

I've started buying flour in larger bags since starting to bake sourdough.
How to feed the starter
If you are just refreshing the starter that you have on the benchtop or in the fridge, take out as much starter as needed to reduce the starter weight to 100g.  (The discarded starter is the Toss-Off - see below.)  Gently stir in the flour and water.  I have read that you don't mix it all in really well.  If you are keeping it in the fridge leave it out for a couple of hours to allow the starter some playtime in fresh air.  (However I find my starter gets bubbly in the fridge so I am not sure this is essential.)

When starters linger in the fridge:
I haven't had my starter long enough to have problems with neglect.  I add these notes in anticipation of needing them one day.  I was impressed to see a photo of a starter that had been in the fridge untouched for 2 months in Dan Lepard's The Handmade Loaf.  It looked ok.  It had a coloured liquid on top, known as the hooch.  Apparently if the hooch is grey that is fine and it can be stirred in or tipped off, depending on if you want it more sour (stir in) or less (tip off).  If it is pink or red or mouldy you need to throw out the whole starter and throw out.  (Update: this sourdough starter recovery advice seems useful too.)

Update - the nail polish smell
(29 August 2013) Since writing this post, I had my starter smelling of nail polish about a week ago.  Fortunately I had reassuring advice from friends Kathleen and Yaz to say that starters can be rescued.  I read forums and followed advice.  It seemed that my starter was hungry (I had returned it to the fridge after feeding and leaving for baking bread and perhaps should have fed it before storing).  I read that feeding it frequently helped so I did that - even three times on one day, keeping it out of the fridge and watching it so that I fed it every time it doubled in size.  I also made sure I was reducing it to quite a small amount (between 50-100g).  After 5 days I started a new loaf which was quite sour but very edible. 

To the right is a sourdough flatbread ballooning up on the frypan.  I tried baking these as pizzas which were good but not great.
Using the Toss-Off
It is ok to throw out the toss-off but it can be incorporated into baking.  I have managed to use quite a bit of mine in making these sourdough flatbreads with starter straight from the fridge that has not been fed.  We all love them.  I tried making them as pizza - both by cooking on the stovetop or prebaking in the oven before adding toppings but they seemed a bit stodgy this way.  I really like this recipe because unlike so many other sourdough recipes, it gives instant results.  Be warned though, I managed to set off the fire alarm while frying these!

Sourdough flatbreads.  Great with a curry, a dip or a stew.
Quick sourdough flatbread
From Mum's cookbook
Makes 4
  • *250g sourdough starter (100% hydration - straight from fridge without feeding)
  • *200g bread flour
  • 50g filtered water
  • pinch salt (optional)
Mix all ingredients.  It looks quite too shaggy and dry.  Knead and it should come together into a smooth - albeit fairly firm - ball of dough.  Cut into four.  Roll out each portion into about a 0.5cm thick oval on a lightly floured board .

Heat a heavy based non-stick frypan over a high heat.  Place a disc of dough onto the pan.  Heat for a few minutes or until it balloons up and brown spots appear on the other side.  Flip over, flatten with an eggflip or spatula and fry another minute or two until you have some brown spots on the other side.  I tend to brush out the flour from the pan (with a kitchen towel) before frying the next one so it isn't covered in burnt flour.  Best eaten on day of frying. 

*Note: I have also reduced the amount to 200g of starter and 180g of flour when I don't quite have enough starter and it works fine.

I am still baking sourdough loaves.  To see how I am doing this go to Sourdough Basics 103: Baking a loaf of bread.  For more information, check out my updated post on sourdough maintenance in March 2017.

Do you maintain a sourdough starter?  Any feedback or other advice on maintenance is welcome.

On the Stereo
Raising the Gospel - James Yorkston

22 comments:

  1. I am so scared of sourdough starters! But you makd it seem so doable...

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    1. Thanks Joanne - it is doable - and I am sure you might enjoy it but it is a learning curve at the start - fortunately there is lots of helpful online info

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  2. I started a starter last month, but then we went away for a few days before it was really ready, so I had to throw it out. I should get around to doing it again when I have a clearer calendar, because I do love sourdough bread.

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    1. Thanks Rachel - you do need some time for the starter especially in the beginning - I am still not in a routine as others I read about seem to be

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  3. We have a starter that the boyfriend uses for almost everything. My favorite would be when he makes pizza. It's super delicious and the bread has that sourdough crust which is to die for.

    I have never been much of a baker but I enjoy watching my boyfriend make loaves of bread and pizza!

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    1. Thanks Abby - lucky you to have someone at home to make you sourdough pizza. I have experimented a bit with sourdough pizza but only in throwing a bit of toss-off into the pizza dough - hope to actually do a proper sourdough pizza sometime

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  4. This is the part about sourdough baking that scares me the most. I'm sure I would forget about feeding the starter given I couldn't remember to change the water in my soaking olives on an ongoing basis. The feeding process sounds similar to how I made Ethiopian sourdough injera flatbreads with teff flour a few years ago. Thanks for the handy tips as I would like to try this at some stage!

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    1. Thanks Mel - it is scary - mine has been a bit neglected this week so hopefully it will be ok. Goodness knows how it will be next month that is even crazier but hopefully it will cope with my lifestyle - that is what I am still testing!

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  5. I have two starters-one from Bourke Street Bakery and one from Celia from Figjamandlimecordial. They're both so different, Celia's is lovely and active while the BSB is more sour. Definitely have their own personalities! :P

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    1. Thanks Lorraine - two starters sounds like serious stuff - must be interesting to compare them - and nice to have different styles of breads from each I guess

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  6. I can see why bread making is an art as well as a science! Having neither a baby nor a sourdough starter I confess to finding them equally overwhelming (well, maybe the baby a little more so), but I am loving reading about your discoveries. The flat bread looks excellent too.

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    1. Thanks Kari - for you perhaps, think of the moment you get a grant for a project you have put a lot into applications etc and you finally have to start the project :-) The flatbread is really lovely

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  7. I love the top picture! And the others are very instructive. :-)

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    1. Thanks Cindy - I had fun with the top picture - sourdough is not very photogenic but glad the other pics are instructive

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  8. The flatbread looks delicious! I might have to give that a go sometime (and will remember to take the battery out of the smoke alarm).

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    1. Thanks Kathleen - fortunately I have only set off the smoke alarm once with the flatbread - so be alert but not alarmed (no pun intended but just noticed it!)

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  9. Huhu Drusilla, you look quite amused! :P And you yield nice flatbreads! :D

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  10. I love sourdough bread. But I have gone to making mine in loaf pans. For myself, I eat less, and it makes for better sandwiches and toast.
    The main difference is that I add 1 gram of instant yeast to a 1200 gram batch. This helps with the rise in the loaf pan.

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    1. Thanks for your suggestion Anon - I have a favourite pizza recipe that is party sourdough and part instant yeast - I have bee wondering about using yeast in a sourdough recipe to speed it up but make a no knead sourdough bread recipe a lot and am really out of the kneading habit! So maybe I will try this

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  11. excellent Johanna , thank you for tips, recipe and starter

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