New to sourdough bread? Here’s an easy Sourdough Bread recipe with thousands of success stories! Includes easy step-by-step instructions, videos, expert tips, and everything you need to master sourdough bread baking!

New to sourdough bread? Here's the easiest recipe for no-fail, Sourdough Bread with step-by-step instructions that thousands of readers have had great success with! Includes 3 videos.

Are we free enough to open to the flow, no matter what it may contain?

Dorothy Hunt

This beginner’s guide to Sourdough Bread couldn’t be any easier. We’ve paired this sourdough recipe down to the simplest of techniques, showing you the basics while ensuring your first loaf of sourdough bread turns out amazing. Just read all our reviews! Once you understand the process, you can use it as a launching pad for your own creative sourdough journey.

But First, What is Sourdough?

Sourdough bread is made through a natural leavening process and does not rely on commercial yeast for rising. Instead, it harnesses the power of a “starter,” a mixture of flour and water that is fermented- home to wild yeast and beneficial bacteria, which work harmoniously to rise the dough. The fermentation process not only helps the dough rise but also imparts a delightful tangy flavor and a slightly chewy texture characteristic of sourdough bread. Because sourdough is fermented and contains no preservatives or additives, sourdough bread is easier to digest than store-bought yeasted bread-so much healthier!

I started my own sourdough journey over 12 years ago, when my lovely friend Bee (from H is for Love) showed me how easy it could be – and this simple process hasn’t failed me yet, all the while bringing so much joy over the years. This is my hope for you!

Why you’ll love Sourdough!

  • Easy Schedule: Make the dough the night before, proof it overnight on the counter (10-12 hours), and bake it in the morning. (Alternatively, the dough can be made in the morning and baked at night). It’s very flexible and can be placed in the fridge if something comes up, and you can’t bake in the morning, slowing the process down.
  • Our Simplified Process: We’ve removed all the fussy, complicated processes that intimidate beginners from even starting. It is simplified down as much as possible while still producing a beautiful loaf! This sourdough bread requires no kneading and no fussing- it couldn’t be any easier to make with several basic techniques that anyone can do- see all 3 videos!
  • It’s healthier than regular bread– sourdough contains no additives, preservatives or commercial yeast, and because it undergoes a fermentation process- it is easier to digest. Using organic flour ensures your bread is free of harmful herbicides often sprayed on wheat.
Bubbly sourdough starter in a jar.

Ingredients in Sourdough Bread

  • Sourdough starter – You can make sourdough starter at home (it takes 5-8 days) or purchase it here.  To maintain it, store it in a jar in the fridge and feed it, like a pet. 🙂 Yes, you can even name it. If properly fed and cared for it can live for hundreds of years! My starter is called Vita.
  • Bread flour – try to use organic bread flour, if possible. All-purpose flour works in a pinch, but bread flour produces a better loaf.
  • Water– use tap water, filtered water, or mineral water. Distilled water lacks minerals so don’t use that.
  • Salt– fine sea salt or Himalayan pink salt
  • Optional extras: rye flour, fennel seeds, caraway seeds, chia seeds,  rice flour
A beginner's guide to the best Sourdough Bread that turns out perfect every time!

Baking Tools

After leaving all my favorite bread “gear” at home, it was a fun challenge to see if I could make bread with just the basics. Here is what you absolutely need:

Here are some optional extras that make this more fun:

We offer this Sourdough-Making Kit at our Bowl and Pitcher Shop if you are interested. 


Sourdough Starter Tips

  1. Be sure your sourdough starter is active and happy! It should double in size within 6-8 hours of feeding. If it is not doubling isn size, it will not rise your bread. For sourdough starter troubleshooting, please visit our sourdough starter post.
  2. When making sourdough bread, use a starter either right at it’s peak, or after it has peaked.
  3. For a more “sour” taste, use a starter that is “hungry”, and hasn’t been recently been fed.

Baking Schedule

Keep in mind that rising time is affected by weather and seasons. In winter, cold kitchens will lengthen the rising time. In summer or warm weather, hot kitchens will shorten the rising time. So this is a rough estimate based on 70F weather

  1. Morning (6 am to 10 am) Feed the sourdough starter.  8-12 hours before you plan to mix up the dough, feed your starter, allowing time to peak before using. (Or feel free to use an unfed starter for a more “sour taste”, straight from the fridge at 8 pm)
  2.  Night (8 pm- 10 pmMix the dough. Do two sets of stretch and folds, 15 mins apart (see 1st video)
  3. Proof Overnight.  Cover the dough, let it proof (rise) overnight 8-14 hours at 65-70F on the kitchen counter.
  4.  Next Morning (6 am-10 am) Shape and Bake. Check your dough when you awake, and when it has almost doubled in size, stretch, fold, and shape. ( Watch 2ndVideo ). Place in a parchment-lined bowl seam side down. Place this in the fridge for 1 hour while you preheat the oven. 
  5. Bake 20-25 minutes (or until internal temp reaches 200F). Remove lid, and bake 10-15 more minutes, until very deeply golden and internal temp reaches 208F. Let it cool on a rack before cutting.

Sourdough Bread Instructions (Step-by-step)

***Scroll down to the recipe card for concise measurements & instructions. 

Step one: Feed the starter in the AM.

Feed your sourdough starter in the morning 8-12 hours before making your bread dough -leaving it out on the counter and using it slightly after it peaks. Always use a slightly “hungry” starter.  TIP: You know your starter is active and healthy if it doubles within 6 hours of feeding. In the evening, make the dough, after the starter has peaked.

Step Two: Weight the flour.

In a large bowl, weigh bread flour (520 grams) using a kitchen scale- being careful not to include the bowl’s weight. Here I’m using roughly 4 cups of flour, spooned and leveled. (3 1/2 cups of organic white bread flour plus a 1/2 cup rye flour.)

A beginner's recipe for sourdough bread that requires no kneading and rises overnight. Easy and simple!

THEN Add 2 teaspoons salt and seeds if you like- here I’ve added 1 tsp fennel seeds, 1/2 teaspoon caraway and 1 tablespoon chia seeds.- I love this combination. Yes, you can add other spices and seeds. Get creative, but for the first loaf, I suggest going easy.

flour,salt and seeds in a bowl

Step three: Mix the starter with water.

Stir down the starter, then mix 1/3 cup of sourdough starter (90 grams) with 1 3/4 cups water (385 grams) using a fork.

sourdough starter in a measuring cup

It will look like cloudy water.

sourdough starter mixed with water in a glass measuring cup

Step four: Mix The Dough (wet and dry).

Pour the starter/water mixture into the flour mixture and stir, using a fork, into a thick, sticky ball. Switch to a wooden spoon. Mix the dough for one minute to incorporate all the bread flour, using the wooden spoon.  Just try your best to incorporate all the flour.

It will be thick, shaggy, and hard to mix. If the flour absolutely won’t mix in, then add a tablespoon of water at a time to incorporate it.  Sometimes whole grain flour is “thirstier” than white flour, so you may need a little more water, a tablespoon at a time.

The dough will be heavy, thick and sticky (see photo below) to begin with, but will loosen up as it rests. Cover with a damp kitchen towel for 15 minutes, letting the dough rest.

A beginner's recipe for sourdough bread that requires no kneading and rises overnight. Easy and simple!

Step five: STRECH & Fold (video)

Do two “stretch and folds” sets to help build the gluten.  Do this twice, 15 minutes apart.  Watch the first video below.  With wet hands, stretch and fold.  Let dough rest 15 minutes covered, then repeat.

Stretch & Fold Video (Technique #1)

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STEP SIX: PROOF THE DOUGH overnight

Cover the bowl with a damp kitchen towel  (wet it thoroughly, then wring it out) and let the dough rise on the kitchen counter overnight 8-12 hours, at room temperature. This is called the bulk fermentation. Every environment is different, and seasons will affect the rising time. Warmer homes proof much faster, colder homes, much slower. In midwinter in the Northwest, I’ve even proofed for as long as 18 hours on the counter. Here in Santa Barbara, in summer, the dough was ready in 8 hours.

TIP: You can’t always look at the clock; you MUST look at the dough. It should be slightly domed, springy, slightly jiggly like a happy, full belly, almost doubled. Shake the bowl look for a bit of jiggle. 

Do the poke test: Carefully poke the dough with a floured finger, 1/2 inch deep. If it is easy to indent, and the dough springs back, this is a good sign it has risen enough. If the dough feels very firm and hard to indent, it probably needs to proof longer. If the dough doesn’t spring back, holding the indentation, or feels overly soft, liquidy or loose- it is probably over-proofed. Don’t toss it. You can still bake it but will not rise as much in the oven and will be harder to handle. Put it in the fridge to firm it up a bit before doing the stretch and fold. You may still get an OK loaf. Hard to tell.

PREPARE the SHAPING BOWl:  Place a piece of parchment in a bowl.  I like using a high-sided medium-sized bowl versus a flat or shallow bowl, to help shore up the sides.

NOTE on Parchment: I use this parchment brand. It doesn’t stick or burn. If unsure about yours, spray your parchment with a little oil to prevent sticking.

making bread using parchment

As you progress in your baking journey, you may want to use a Banneton (bread-proofing basket below). If using a Banneton, flour it well (rice flour works best here) and place any seeds on the bottom, placing dough seam-side up.

I will say- if starting out, it can be a bit tricky to flip the Banneton into the hot dutch oven, and have it land centered. I prefer to flip it onto parchment, score, then place the parchment and dough into the hot dutch oven. Up to you.

With using a piece of parchment paper in a regular bowl, there is no flipping, just lifting by the parchment and placing it in the dutch oven. Much easier!

floured Banneton

STEP 7: STRETCH and SHAPE (Video).

Watch the 2nd video below for a different “stretch and shape” technique to use AFTER the dough has been proofed.  Loosen the dough from the edges of a bowl with a wet spatula or wet plastic dough scraper, sliding it down the sides of the bowl.

With wet hands, carefully pull the dough up on each side, lift it up about 1-2 feet high, and place it back down, folding it on top of itself gently.

Wet your hands again and give the bowl a quarter turn and do this again. (You could repeat this 20 minutes later)  Then the 3rd time you lift and stretch, you will either lift it all the way up into your parchment-lined bowl seam side down. (EASIEST)  or into the floured proofing basket,  seam side up (pinching it closed). 

Stretch & Shape Video (Technique #2)

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An EASY recipe for No Knead Sourdough Bread that rises overnight and is baked in the morning. #sourdough

As you see above, after proofing the dough overnight, it will become much looser. The starter has metabolized the flour overnight. This can be tricky to handle. BUT, using wet hands and learning the 2nd stretch and shape technique in the second video above, will make the wet dough much easier to handle. Trust me here. 🙂

After the second set, lift the dough into the parchment-lined bowl. Many sourdough recipes call for placing the dough on a work surface to shape it, creating surface tension- we are skipping this step and using this stretch and shape technique instead- just to keep it simple.

rising sourdough in a bowl

Sprinkle the top of the dough with seeds and dust with flour or rice flour (which makes it easier to score)especially if using the banneton, get those sides sprinkled well- so it flips out without catching!

floured sourdough in a bowl

STEP 8: Second “RISE” and PREHEAT OVEN

Place the dough in the fridge for one hour (or up to 3 hours) while you heat up the oven to 500F with your Dutch oven inside (please see notes) for 60 minutes. Chilling the dough will make it easier to score and give it a little more “oven spring”.  It is not intended to rise here.

STEP 9:  SCORE & BAKE the sourdough

Score:  Grease your blade or lame,  and score the dough swiftly and deeply, at a 45-degree angle, 3/4 inch deep. Score where you want the dough to puff up. You can do one simple slash, a crescent, or a crisscross, or feel free to add other designs. (Just google sourdough scoring designs and be mesmerized for hours!)  Oiling the knife helps. The lame really does make this 100 times easier!

Carefully take out the dutch oven from the oven and close the oven door. Remove the lid. Gently lift your dough holding onto the parchment corners, and lift it into the dutch oven, and quickly cover.

Bake: Place in the middle of the oven for 18-22 mins. Remove the lid; it should be nicely puffed, lightly golden, and around 200F.  This is your goal. Continue baking 10- 15 minutes until deeply golden and internal temp reaches 208F. Please try to get your loaves crusty and deeply golden. Let them go a bit longer than you might think. 🙂

Baked sourdough bread in the oven

Pull it out, place it on a rack and let it cool before cutting. The HARDEST part!  😂

An EASY recipe for No Knead Sourdough Bread that rises overnight and is baked in the morning. #sourdough

It will smell heavenly and you will feel proud. Bask in it! It truly is an accomplishment!!


Sylvia’s Expert Tips

  1. STARTER: Using your starter slightly after its peak will ensure your bread rises sufficiently. Make sure your starter is healthy, strong and “hungry”, and doubles in size 6 hours after feeding. If you like a more “sour” taste, use an un-fed starter that has been stored in the fridge 5-6 days- and use without feeding it first.
  2. FLOUR: For your very first loaf, I highly suggest just using Organic White Bread Flour and be sure to weigh it. ***Please “zero out” the weight of the bowl.  Weigh the flour without salt, seeds, or other additions. Try substituting a 1/2 cup of flour for another kind. For example, 3 1/2 cups white bread flour, plus 1/2 cup rye or whole wheat. If you add more whole grain than that, your loaf will be quite heavy and dense. I really don’t want this for your first loaf and neither do you. You want it to be amazing so you feel inspired to make it again and again. So be patient. After several practice loaves- yes, fiddle with other flours as much as you like!
  3. WATER: (Hydration) A wet dough will produce a lot of beautiful air pockets but it is much harder to work with, in the beginning.  A dryer dough will yield a slightly denser,  less airy loaf but will be easier to work with, in the beginning. This one falls towards the later – at 75% hydration- but you can easily adjust this down the road, as you practice, by adding a little more water or less flour in the initial mixing stage. To calculate the hydration level, you divide the water grams by the flour grams. In this case 385 divided by 520 = .75 or 75% hydration. As you get more comfortable, try for 80%-85% hydration, adding in a few extra folds at both stages.
  4. ADDITIONS:  If you want to start adding things to your bread- nuts, olives, cheese, dried fruit, roasted garlic, etc., I recommend folding these in after it rises overnight. Use this recipe for Rosemary Olive Sourdough Bread as a guide.
  5. BAKING: Always preheat the oven. If you have convection, use it! Use a 4-6 quart dutch oven: Make sure your Dutch oven can handle a 500F oven. Plastic handles will melt. If not, 475F or 450F will suffice, but you’ll need to bake it longer (25-30-ish minutes) before removing the lid (remember the goal is for bread to be 200F when the lid comes off) then bake for 10-15 more minutes uncovered.  Always check bread with a thermometer.
  6. TAKE NOTES: Note your rising times and baking times and adjust accordingly the next time. All kitchen environments and oven temps are different.

Trouble Shooting Sourdough Bread 

  1. OVER-PROOFED: If your dough is flat, overly runny, loose, or breaks when shaping you have probably over-proofed it  Note the rising time and temperature in your home, and shorten this next time.  It’s easy to overproof in warm climates. You can tell if it is over-proofed, if the dough is flat and runny with lots of air bubbles at the top (it has probably peaked already and now is going down) or doesn’t spring back when you do the poke test, or breaks when stretched.  Even still you could try to bake it (might as well at this point, right? ) Do the 2nd video stretch and folds-it will be runny, so manage as best you can and put it in the fridge to firm it up a bit before baking.) Turn “imperfect loaves” into croutons,  bread crumbs, etc.
  2. UNDER-PROOFED: If your bread is gummy and dense with little rise, this can mean your bread didn’t proof (rise) long enough in the initial overnight rise or your sourdough starter wasn’t “strong/active” enough. Double-check that your starter is doubling in size within 6-8 hours of feeding (see our troubleshooting section in this Sourdough Starter Post. Note the time and temp in your house, and it let rise longer next time.  This can happen if you are used to baking in summer and now shifting into winter. The kitchen is colder, so the dough will require longer proofing. You can tell when you do your stretching and shaping. If it is not stretching like the video it probably has not proofed long enough. Just let it go longer -or leave it out to rise in the bowl after shaping (instead of putting it in the fridge) for an hour or two. Gummy bread can be turned into croutons.
  3. NO or LITTLE RISE: This is most likely an issue with your sourdough starter- please read through this troubleshooting section. Double-check that your starter is doubling in size within 6-8 hours of being fed. Also, sourdough may not puff up as much as yeasted dough. It may only rise by  1 1/2 or 1 3/4 (not actually doubling in size). Just look for that slight dome and jiggly belly feel,  and do the “poke test”.   It should feel like a full belly with a slight dome and a bouncy spring to the touch. Check the temp with a thermometer. If it is under 70 F it might just take a little longer to proof.  If it is warmer, it may have peaked without you noticing and now is going down. If you want to be very precise about the rise height and time, you can measure the overnight rise in a 2-quart measuring container with clear sides the first few times to get an idea of rise level and timing.  It should rise by 1.5 or 1.75, so not quite double. I found this practice to be very helpful.
  4. NO FLAVOR: Did you forget the salt? This is the most common issue if bread is bland. Salt is imperative.
  5. TOO SOUR: The “hungrier” the starter, the more sour the bread. Feed the starter 8-10 hours before baking for less sour loaves.
  6. NOT SOUR ENOUGH: Use an unfed starter. The longer it’s unfed ( but within the 7 days) the more sour it will be.
  7. OVERLY WET OR DRY DOUGH: Many people accidentally mismeasure the flour because they forget to “zero out” the weight of the bowl or measuring cup on the scale! Check your weight (without seeds, salt or any additions) only flour.
  8. WEIRD FLAVOR OR SWEET SCENT: Your starter may have been contaminated with unpleasant bacteria. Bread should taste/smell heavenly, earthy and “bready” after coming out of the oven. Like the best smell ever. 🙂
  9. BURNED BOTTOM Perhaps lower heat to 475F with a slightly longer bake. Also, try placing a sheet pan under the Dutch oven (but don’t preheat the sheet pan). Or add a layer of cornmeal below the parchment. Burnt bottoms seem to happen mostly in electric ovens.

Sourdough FAQS

What are the health benefits of Sourdough bread?

Digestibility: Sourdough bread is more easily digestible than bread made with commercial yeast, due to the natural fermentation process. This can be beneficial for people with gluten sensitivities.
Higher nutrient content: Sourdough bread, made with organic, non-GMO flour is higher in nutrients and lower in glyphosates.

Is sourdough healthier than regular bread?

Bread made with sourdough starter has so much more flavor and complexity than yeasted bread. It is also much easier to digest because it is fermented. Many people who are gluten-sensitive do much better with bread made from sourdough starter.

Why is my sourdough bread gummy?

If your bread is gummy or overly moist after baking, most likely, the dough was underproofed, or your starter is too young or insufficiently active. Try proofing longer, and double-check your starter is healthy and active and doubles after 6 hours of feeding.

Why is my sourdough bread so dense?

Underproofing the dough can cause bread to be dense- by not allowing enough time for the carbon dioxide to develop and create the bubbles in the dough that create the airy texture. An inactive starter can also be the culprit.

Why is my sourdough bread flat?

Most likely, the sourdough has over-proofed and has collapsed, creating a flat hard loaf. It is still edible, but not as light and airy as it should be.

Why is my sourdough dense?

Besides the reasons above (underproofing the dough and an inactive starter) sourdough can be overly dense if you use too much whole-grain flour, or not enough water.

Why does my sourdough taste bland?

Most likely, the salt was left out or mismeasured.

What is the secret to the best sourdough?

Active and healthy sourdough starter is the secret to perfect sourdough bread! Care and proper feeding of your starter will ensure your sourdough loaves are beautiful, flavorful, light, and airy. A Sourdough Starter that doubles in size within 6 hours of feeding is the best sign that the starter is healthy and active.

Practice Makes Perfect!

Baking sourdough is such a satisfying hobby.  Making your first “good” loaf is the BEST feeling EVER! Know that every time you bake, your bread will improve as long as your starter is healthy and active.

I suggest that you make the exact same loaf, repeatedly, a few times to get it down before changing any variables. Take notes each time. Consider this first month of baking as “practicing”.  The most challenging thing is getting to know your environment, kitchen temperature, oven temperature, and timing, and getting your starter healthy.

So just be patient, keep trying, and don’t give up. I promise you will get it -read the reviews for inspiration!

Enjoy the sourdough process ~xo

Sylvia

More sourdough recipes you'll love!


Sourdough BreaD Video (start-to-finish)

This 16-minute, step-by-step video will show you how to make sourdough bread from start to finish, with me walking you through it personally.

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***Scroll down to the recipe card for clear, detailed instructions. 

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A beginner's guide to the best Sourdough Bread that turns out perfect every time!

Sourdough Bread Recipe

5 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars 2 Stars 1 Star 4.9 from 1371 reviews
  • Author: Sylvia Fountaine | Feasting at Home
  • Prep Time: 13 hours
  • Cook Time: 35 mins
  • Total Time: 13 hours 35 minutes
  • Yield: 1 loaf 1x
  • Category: baked
  • Method: bread
  • Cuisine: American
  • Diet: Vegan

Description

An easy Sourdough Bread recipe that rises overnight and bakes in the morning. A simple flexible recipe made with sourdough starter, that can be adapted to your needs. View the  3 instructional videos above for more details. If you don’t see the videos, make sure your ad blocker is off.


Ingredients

Scale
  • 4 cups organic white bread flour, spooned and leveled (520 grams total flour) -please don’t include the bowl’s weight. I highly recommend weighing the flour for the first few loaves. (See notes for adding other types of flour.)
  • 2 teaspoons fine sea salt (12 grams)
  • 1 7/8 cups water (385 grams)
  • 90 grams homemade sourdough starter or store-bought starter (1/3 cup) fed 8-12 hours earlier, using it slightly after peaking (For a more “sour” taste, use an unfed starter, 46 days after feeding if refrigerated- see notes.)

Optional additions: 


Instructions

  1. 8 am.  Twelve hours before mixing your dough, feed your sourdough starter, leaving it out on the counter making sure it doubles in size within 6 hours. (See notes for extra sour). OR, if you keep your starter in the fridge and fed it in the last 7 days- it is OK to use it straight from the jar, cold, without feeding. Best to use starter after it peaks, when it is “hungry”.
  2. 8:00 pm  PLEASE use a kitchen scale if this is your first loaf. Weigh the flour in a medium bowl (***zero-ing out the weight of the bowl).  Then add salt, spices, seeds.  Mix starter and water in a small bowl until cloudy and well mixed. Pour the starter-water into flour incorporating all the flour using a fork or wood spoon. It should be a thick, shaggy, heavy, sticky dough. See video. Mix for about 1-2 minutes using the wood spoon- it will be hard to mix. Don’t worry about tidy dough here, just get the flour all mixed in and cover with a wet kitchen towel and let rest 15 minutes. It will loosen up as it rests.  (Alternatively, mix starter and water in the bowl first, then add the salt and flour-like in my 3rd video- either way works.)
  3. 8:20 pm: Do the first set of stretches and folds.  (See the 1st video in post) With one wet hand (put a bowl of water next to you) pull the dough from one side and stretch it upward, then fold it up and over to the center of the dough.  Quarter turn the bowl and repeat, stretching up and folding it over the middle, repeat for about 30 seconds or until the dough gets firm and resists. This helps strengthen the gluten. Cover, rest, and repeat the process 15 minutes later. With wet fingers, stretch up and fold over, turning, repeating, for 30 seconds until the dough gets firm and resists. Then turn the dough over in the bowl. Yes, you could do this a couple more times if you would like to build the gluten, but not imperative.  🙂
  4. 8:35 pm Proof overnight, at room temp. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap, wax wrap, or a damp kitchen towel (to keep the moisture in) and place it on your kitchen counter for 8-12 hours.  (see notes on temperature) 68-70F is the ideal temp.  (If it is warmer, check at 6-8 hours. If it is very cold, it may take up to 18 hours in winter.)
  5. 6-8 AM Check the dough in the morning. The dough should have expanded, with a slight springy dome to the top. It won’t necessarily double in size ( maybe 1.5 -1.75 times bigger) but will have expanded. Do the POKE TEST: With a floured finger, poke into the dough. If it indents easily and mostly springs back to its original shape,  it has probably risen enough. If it feels firm or very hard to indent, let it rise longer. If it feels loose, runny, or indents too easily or doesn’t spring back, it is most likely over-proofed (bake it anyways).
  6. Line a high-sided bowl with parchment.  This brand of parchment does not stick to the bread- but if you are unsure about yours, spray oil your parchment lightly before putting the dough in it. (If you are a seasoned bread baker, you do not actually need parchment -this is only for easier transport only, bread will not stick to the inside of a dutch oven.) I like using a high-sided medium-sized bowl versus a flat or shallow bowl to help shore up the sides. You can also use a rice-floured Banneton (bread proofing basket) if you have one.
  7.  2nd Set of STRETCH and SHAPE : (Watch 2nd video -Stretch and Shape video). Loosen the dough from the all edges of a bowl with using your wet fingers, a wet spatula or wet plastic dough scraper,  sliding down the sides of the bowl. With both wet hands, carefully pull the dough straight up, in the middle and lift it, stretching straight up in the air- about 1-2 feet (see photo) and place it back down, gently folding it on top of itself. In this first stretch, the dough may feel quite loose and runny.  This is OK. It should firm up as it stretches and folds. (Note: If your dough breaks here, it is probably over-proofed, bake it anyways. If your dough won’t stretch like the photo and feels too tight or firm, it needs to proof longer).  After the first stretch, give the bowl a quarter turn, wait 30-60 seconds, wet your hands again and stretch it up high again, folding over itself in the bowl.  Wait 30-60 seconds. (You could repeat this one more time, 15 minutes later). Then, the third time you lift and stretch, you will lift it all the way into your parchment-lined bowl, folding over itself like you’ve been doing. (Alternatively, lift it into your floured proofing basket seam side up. ( If seam up, pinch the seam closed).  Sprinkle top with seeds and flour (get the sides too) gently rubbing it to even coat –and add seeds if you like. If using a banneton, sprinkle the seeds in the banneton before adding the dough. 
  8. FINAL RISE and PREHEAT OVEN: Place the bowl in the refrigerator for one hour uncovered which will firm up the bread, and make scoring easier and help boost  “oven spring”.  It won’t rise in the fridge.  (You could also keep it in the fridge for 3-4 hours if you want to bake later.) Preheat the oven (for 1 FULL hour)  to 500F with your dutch oven inside and lid on (see notes). If you have convection- use it.  You can also bake the bread at 45oF or 475F.  You want your oven as hot so don’t skimp on the preheat. I usually preheat for 1 full hour.
  9. SCORE & BAKE When ready to bake, place dough by the stove. Pull out the dutch oven, close the oven, remove lid.  Score the bread in the bowl, using a very sharp knife, lame, razor blade, (or try scissors dipped in cold water), score the dough swiftly and deeply, at a 45-degree angle, 3/4- 1-inch deep. One deep slash is just fine. Or criss-cross, or crescent shape. (Or feel free to add other designs, for ideas -google “scoring bread”). You want to score where you want the dough to puff out from. You can also cut with wet kitchen scissors. Carefully lift the parchment by the corners and place both bread and parchment directly into the dutch oven. Cover quickly. It is OK if parchment peaks out. You want to score and transfer as quickly as possible. (Alternately, if using a proofing basket, cover the basket with parchment, carefully flip the dough into the parchment in the palm of your hand and then center the parchment and dough into your dutch oven, then score).
  10.  BAKE. Place dutch oven in the middle of the 500F oven for 20 mins with convection on, 25 minutes w/no convection (or 28 minutes at 450F). Remove lid.  It should be puffed and just lightly golden and internal temp close to 200F  (if not, put lid back on for a few more minutes). Lower heat to 450 F, continue baking 10-15 minutes until deeply golden and internal temp reaches 204- 208F.  No pale loaves please, let them get golden! (For a less “crusty” loaf, increase covered baking time, lower uncovered baking time. You can play with this for desired results.)
  11. COOL: It will smell heavenly. Remove from the dutch oven, let it cool 1 hour on a rack or tilted up on its side, before slicing so you don’t let the steam out and don’t smash it- be patient. This is the hardest part. 😉. Take a picture! Feel proud. You did it!
  12. SERVE: This type of bread is always BEST, served toasted! Then lather it with butter, ghee or olive oil. Add mashed avocado and salted tomatoes, almond butter, honey or jam. A piece of toast can turn into a great meal. See this Mushroom Toast!
  13. STORE: Store the bread wrapped in a kitchen towel for the first day or two to keep the crust nice and crispy, then move it to a zip lock bag to keep it moist for longer. Bread can also be sliced and frozen. Make sourdough croutons with leftover bread- great in salads and soups!

Notes

Sourdough starter : Using your starter after its peak will ensure your bread rises sufficiently. Make sure your starter is healthy, hungry, and strong, able to double in size 4-8 hours after feeding.  If you store your starter in the fridge and last fed it over a week ago, make sure to feed the morning before making bread. If it has only been 3-7 days since last feeding (and you keep it in the fridge), it is OK to make bread without feeding. Use a 1/3 cup starter for your bread dough and place the remaining back in the fridge and feed a week after the last feeding. BUT if it has been a week after your last feeding, pull it out of the fridge, discard (or save for pancakes, waffles, or give away) all but 1/2 cup. Feed it. Let it metabolize the flour 4-8 hours before mixing up the bread dough. Use a 1/3 cup of starter (90 grams) for the bread, place the remaining back in the fridge, and feed in a week. For a more “sour” flavor, use starter that has been in the fridge 4-6 days. Do not feed before using it. The sourdough starter is the sourest the longer it goes without feeding.

Dutch Oven or Bread Baker: Make sure your dutch oven or bread baker can handle a 500F oven. If not, 450F will suffice, and bake 25 minutes before removing the lid. Aim for an internal bread temp of 200F when removing lid- before baking it uncovered.  Take notes and adjust the next time!

NO DUTCH OVEN? If you don’t have a dutch oven, you can try baking your bread on a sheet pan, covered with a large metal bowl or pyrex bowl to keep the steam in. It will yield a flatter loaf but it does work. Bake 25-30 minutes covered, remove the bowl,  bake until golden 10-15 more minutes until golden, and be sure to check internal temp with a thermometer. It may take a few practices tries to perfect this.

Smaller Loaves: If you would like to create two smaller loaves bake each at 450F for 18 minutes (or until internal temp is 200F) uncover, lower heat to 425F and bake until golden and internal temp is 204-208F. You may have to fiddle with this timing.

LOAF PAN: Yes you can bake this in a loaf pan. Shape and place it in an oiled loaf pan ( or line with parchment) for the last hour in the fridge, while oven preheats. Bake uncovered at 450 for 15 minutes, lower heat to 425 and bake another 25-ish minutes or until internal temp reaches 204-208F. You may need to play with this according to your oven. Place on middle or lower rack.

PRACTICE: As you practice making your loaves (yes, it is a fun practice) you’ll get a feel for the dough and you’ll begin to notices how changes in seasons (changes in temperature) affect the loaves and their proofing time. I suggest making the exact same loaf repeatedly several times. Warmer temps will call for shorter proofing, cooler temps, longer proofing. You can also change the proofing time by adjusting the sourdough starter amount. For a faster rise, you can add a little more starter, for example, a 1/2 or 2/3 cup. For a longer cooler rise, say in the fridge for 36-48 hours, you can reduce the starter amount to 1/4 cup or even 3 tablespoons. You can play with ratios to get the proofing time just how you want it. Take notes! You can also adjust the hydration for an airier loaf, either reducing flour or increasing water. So many variables!!! *Remember your starter and your dough are actual living “creatures” that are affected by your particular environment. The most important advice I can give you is to pay close attention to your particular “creature”, observe it carefully,  and look for signs- it is communicating with you. Pay attention. 🙂 Work with it, not against it. Be patient, respond thoughtfully.

Perfecting bread is a lifelong process, and I’m still learning too. 😉

Nutrition

  • Serving Size: 1 slice ( 1/12 of a loaf)
  • Calories: 154
  • Sugar: 0.2 g
  • Sodium: 582.3 mg
  • Fat: 1.1 g
  • Saturated Fat: 0.2 g
  • Carbohydrates: 32.7 g
  • Fiber: 4.9 g
  • Protein: 6 g
  • Cholesterol: 0 mg

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Comments

  1. I’ve been struggling with a different sourdough recipe so I fed my starter like heck for 7 days then started this recipe. I live in the Pacific NW and my kitchen is about 63 degrees all the time. After16 hours of proofing it looked slack and wet. The poke test indicated I’d probably over proofed it. I decided to just go forward and finish it even if it came out like a hockey puck. I forgot the 2nd round of stretch/fold and went ahead and prepared it for baking (and baked it). It was the BEST (out of probably 25 loaves) I’ve baked. Go figure. I doubt I could recreate that comedy of errors.






  2. I’ve been making this bread for months and I love it! I want to try to make bread bowls and have ordered a set of 4 12 oz dutch ovens. Any suggestions about temps and timing if I divide the dough into four sections?






    1. Love that idea Susan!!! What are the dimensions of the dutch ovens, like in inches, just curious? I would lower heat to 450 to start, 20 minutes, remove lids,lower to 400F then bake until 205F and golden- FYI, totally guessing here you will need to fine-tune.

  3. I made my 50th loaf today. I’m celebrating by (one more time) saying THANK YOU. After many attempts over the years, I tried your technique and found success. Not only did I benefit from your words and videos but also from more than one Q&A here in the comment section. You are so patient and generous. I hope gifts come back to you tenfold. My best.

    1. They have Pam. A hundredfold. You need an award…50 loaves!!!??? That is truly amazing. LOVE IT.

  4. Tried a few other method which all failed. Nearly gave up til I found this one. Process easy and IT WORKED 😁 thanks






  5. Thank you for your recipe and great videos. I have made beautiful loaves. I do have a question. When my dough is shaggy and I let it autolyse, twice it has become extremely wet after the first 30 minutes. Just today, I started two batches exactly the same using a scale. One went from shaggy to more firm, and the other went from shaggy to completely wet. Any idea why? Is there a way to save the wet one? Thank you!!!

    1. So I’m clear-you made two exact batches, the same way? Is it possible scale is off?

      1. Thank you for your prompt reply! The scale is fine, I think it may have been my math. I echo the sentiments of many on the boards, that your videos and method are awesome.






  6. Made sourdough for the first time using your recipe, it turned out fabulous. QQ, what are your thoughts about doing the the bulk fermentation in the fridge? Also, what happens if I were to leave the final rise in the fridge for longer than 4 hours?






    1. Chris, I think doing it in the fridge is perfectly fine-either the bulk rise or the final rise, just don’t know exactly how long. You’d have to play with it.

  7. Hello! Have made this recipe a few times:) The flats couple times I made it, it turned out pretty good. These last two batches though, the dough is hard to lame after sitting in fridge—it’s too soft or something…. and then it doesn’t rise in the oven.

    I don’t know what I’m doing wrong. Too much water? After the dough proofs, it’s still fairly gooey—but after a set of the stretch and folds it’s fine.

    All tastes great but yea, the bread just doesn’t rise anymore and it’s hard to lame the dough before baking.






    1. I wonder how your starter is doing? Try feeding it and leaving it out to see if id doubles in size in 6 hours. If not, you may need to revive with some daily feedings.

  8. I am a brand new bread maker…literally this is the first recipe I’ve ever used for bread and my first ever sourdough starter. The bread came out soooooo good and my family is obsessed. It is the best bread we’ve ever had and I am so happy I found this recipe!! Thank you!






  9. I do not have a scale so am measuring the ingredients. I do not understand how you get the water measurement of 1cup and 7/8. Can you please explain this to me?

  10. Hi!! I’m about to make this recipe but I’m confused on the final proofing. You’re actually putting the bread in the fridge? I thought most recipes want the bread to rise about double the size in the last proofing but am I getting something wrong??

    1. This bread seems to get a little more oven spring with a 1-hour stint in the fridge, after the main bulk rise. Also easier to score. Feel free to try it both ways and see what is best for you.

  11. Hi, I’ve made this recipe before and absolutely love it. Easy to follow tastes amazing, and good for a beginner like me. I’m in the process of making it again, but thought I would try splitting the dough in half and dyeing one half with blue sweat pea flower extract. I’m at the 2nd fold stage and am wondering how I should incorporate both doughs to create a marbled effect…should I skip your coil folds and instead do a letter fold lamination? Thank you!

    1. Wowww, how cool! I haven’t tried this but love how creative you are! I think the letter fold is what I would do. Let me know how it turns out- or shoot me a photo! sylvia@feastingathome.com

  12. The recipe works very well for me (done about 4-5 times so far) except in one regard: after proofing, the dough seems waaay too wet and sloppy…I can’t even begin to form it into a loaf. Rather, I just end up scooping it with both hands and plopping it into the middle of the parchment-lined bowl. But it’s a mess, and not at all like the proofed dough in your video.

    Any suggestions? And thanks in advance! Aside from that issue, the bread still turns out well and I learned a lot from this site!






    1. Are you trying the second set of stretches? Stretching it will strengthen its structure. Also, I wonder if it is over proofing a bit?

      1. Yes, I have done up to four sets of stretches, with the same result: gloppy wet dough at the end. Yesterday’s batch was so wet and sloppy at the end that I basically had to use both hands to scoop it up (losing a bit as it ran through my fingers) and plop it into the bowl before placing it in the ‘fridge while the oven warmed up.

        I’m wondering if using all-purpose flour is part of the problem?

        For now, my plan is to reduce the hydration a bit, and do even more stretching; does that sound like the right approach?

          1. Try bread flour, and if still runny feel free to lower the water a tad.

          1. Alright, I have ordered some proper bread flour. Will give it a try! Thank you for your responses.

        1. Doug – I feel your pain! My bakes for several months now have all been like this. A runny batter after the proofing stage. Two suggestions: this loaf tin (available in the UK on Amazon) is fabulous!

          CANDeal Loaf Pan With Cover/Bread Baking Mould Cake Toast/Non-Stick Toast Box with Lid For 450g Dough, Vented Hole for Rapid Baking(Black, Smooth Style)

          No need to oil, grease or line. Just pour the batter into it directly and allow some time for it to rise before baking. The loaf will be a fairly tight crumb but the flavour wonderful. Also, I find this shape of loaf very versatile and useful.

          Secondly, my problems were solved when I improved my starter.I think my starter was just really ‘tired’. I fed 20g with 40g wholemeal flour and 40g water overnight at 4C. Repeated next day with a 40g mix of wholemeal and rye flour. On the third day I used this to set up a 10:20:20 starter for baking.

          Sylvia – your videos are fabulous!! The mix I have been using is similar to your recipe so I did not change that. But your stretch and fold (2nd video) was much easier and along with a fortified starter, I was finally able to properly shape a loaf. Ps. I used bread flour with about 20% wholemeal flour in the dough. Flavour is fabulous!

  13. I have been learning/making sourdough bread since March and struggle at times. Your overnight method works wonderfully and my bread is spectacular (to my standards) each time! Thank you thank you!






  14. Hi!
    What’s your view on using the “proof” function of the oven to let the dough rise?
    I live in a colder climate and temps get pretty low at night. Leaving the dough on the counter overnight with the heating on is not the most efficient option. Timing the starter to be ready in the morning is not always an option either.

    Even after a 14 hour proofing period on the counter i needed to put it in the oven with the light on to finish rising.

    Thanks as always!

    -Jonathan

    1. Feel free to give it a try! If it proofs too fast, you could try just leaving it in the oven (off) with the light on, overnight.

  15. I think this recipe is great but I live on my own and one large loaf is just too much for me. So, would it be sensible to halve the recipe or halve the dough after its risen and bake it in two lots?






  16. I had tried to make sourdough many times before with recipes calling for 25+ minutes of kneading. They never turned out right and came out of the oven hard as a brick. Thank you for this awesome and super easy recipe! I love the result and my friends and family do too!






  17. I sure as hell wish I would have found your site 10 months ago. Several frustrating trial loaves later, from so many different sites/recipe creators, your recipe has finally allowed me to be fully proud of the finished product! It actually looks like something from a fancy baker’s shop. And it almost cost me nothing to make AND it was super-easy. I can’t believe it. THANK YOU! Happy New Year!






  18. Thank you for this beautiful recipe! My bread came out perfect for the first time! I was wondering if you had any tips as to how to make a French baguette with the same recipe? I have a baguette mould and I would love to try it out with this recipe! Thank you again!






  19. This recipe worked great for me! I tried several others before, but this one by far the easiest and best loaf of SD I have made this year. Thank you for the instructional videos as well.






  20. Love this recipe, wanting to make some “small baguettes” (15″ long). Trying to figure out if I can use the same recipe? Also how many baguette loves this size I can get out of the recipe? (maybe 2?) Or if you have another sourdough “baguette” recipe I can try?

  21. Tried this for the first time Weds/Thurs and it’s now my new go to. Love not having to drag out the stand mixer and that it just sits on the counter overnight to rise. No banneton fuss, no flour mess. Perfection.

  22. Came out great for a first try!
    I used a round covered baker this time. I just got the Emile Henry large bread loaf baker which is also covered. How do I adapt this recipe for that pan?






  23. Made this recipe about a dozen times. It’s the first sourdough recipe that’s been reasonably reliable since the first time. I made a few adjustments to it to make porridge bread like quinoa and oat. I also tried making this by autolysing the flour before adding the starter. I was in a slump after taking a 5 day trip to visit family, during which I taught my friend how to make this recipe. Upon returning home I wasn’t able to successfully make any loaves (4 flop loaves). Decided to go back to the recipe as is and pay better attention to the dough, and finally after removing all the bells and whistles, my 5th loaf finally looks and feels as it should—hollow, light, and round.

  24. I live at 5000 ft. The bread turns out well but I can never get it up to even 200 degrees, I tried it at 28 minutes at 500 and then 15 min at 450 and could only get it up to 194 degrees. Should I be cooking longer or raising temperature? I did try cooking longer (. 35 minutes at the 450 degrees) but the bread became hard and overcooked, blackened on bottom. What should I do?






    1. Strange! Are you positive your thermometer is accurate? Are you preheating the oven with the dutch oven inside?

    2. Look into High Altitude in baking sourdough. Im learning anew at 5040ft above sea level.
      Proof less, and a miriad of simple changes when baking. And especially with sourdough. Good luck and keep at it 🙂

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