Easy Sourdough Sandwich Bread
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As I mentioned a few weeks, a number of requests about how to make my mother’s peasant bread with a sourdough starter encouraged me to dip my toe into the wonderful world of naturally leavened breads. You can read more about that experiment here, which led to this simple sourdough focaccia recipe, an adaptation of my favorite yeasted, refrigerator focaccia.
It also led to this sourdough toasting bread, which is essentially the same formula, just baked in a different vessel and without the slick of oil and sprinkling of sea salt on top. I’ve been making this bread even more often than the focaccia these days because I love the shape: it’s so nice for morning toast and for sandwiches.
PS: How to Build a Sourdough Strater from Scratch
PPS: How to Activate, Feed, and Maintain A Sourdough Starter
Simple Sourdough Toasting Bread: What You Need
- A sourdough starter. I recommend buying one (read why here). But if you’re up for it, you can make one from scratch in just about a week.
- Time. As with the focaccia, this bread rises first for about 6 to 18 hours (depending on the time of year and strength of your starter), then again for another 4 to 6.
- A large loaf pan. I’ve been using this 10 x 5-inch loaf pan. If you only have two smaller loaf pans, such as 8.5 x 4.5-inch pans, you’ll need to split the dough in half after the first rise.
That’s it! Ready? Here’s the play-by-play:
As always, when mixing sourdough doughs, it’s best to weigh everything with a digital scale. Start with 100 g starter. (If this looks familiar, it is: this is the same basic process for the sourdough focaccia.)
Add 10 g kosher (or other) salt.
Add 430 g water. (Or less, see recipe for notes.)
Stir to combine.
Add 512 g bread flour.
Stir to form a sticky dough ball.
Cover with a towel or bowl cover or, preferably, a lidded vessel, and let rest for 30 minutes. Then, perform a series of stretches and folds. See video for guidance. Repeat this 3 more times for a total of 4 sets of stretches and folds during the first two hours. Then, let rise for 6 to 18 hours* (see recipe notes) at room temperature:
After 6 – 18 hours, it will look something like this:
Drizzle the surface of the dough with a little bit of olive oil; then fold the dough inwards from the sides to deflate.
Transfer dough to loaf pan.
Let rise till dough just begins to crown the rim of the pan, about 6 hours.
Bake for about 45 minutes.
I baked this loaf in a tall-sided pullman loaf. Love the shape!
Easy Sourdough Sandwich Bread
- Total Time: 24 hours 40 minutes
- Yield: 1 loaf
Description
** UPDATE: VIDEO GUIDANCE IS HERE **
The makeup of this dough is the same as this sourdough focaccia. Here, the dough is baked in a loaf pan, and there is no sea salt on top.
This recipe yields one large loaf. You’ll need a 10 x 5-inch loaf pan, such as this one. If you only have two smaller loaf pans, such as 8.5 x 4.5-inch pans, you should probably split the dough in half after the first rise.
Plan ahead: This dough rises first for 6 to 18 hours (or less if it is super hot out or if you live in a humid area) or until the dough doubles in volume; then again for about 4 to 6 hour or until the dough crowns the rim of the baking vessel.
Troubleshooting: If you have issues with your dough being too sticky, please read this post: Why is my sourdough so sticky? The 4 common mistakes.
If you’re just getting started with sourdough, check out this post first. You’ll find tips there on procuring a starter as well as how to feed it and maintain it. If you’re up for making your starter from scratch, you can do so in just about 1 week.
Water: Chlorine in water can adversely affect sourdough. Leaving water at room temperature for 24 hours will allow most of the chlorine to escape. When I am in the habit of making sourdough bread, I fill a large pitcher with water and leave it out at room temperature. I use this for my sourdough breads and starter. Truth be told, I’ve used water straight from the tap and have not noticed a difference.
Water quantity: Also, depending on where you live and the time of year, you may need to cut the water back. If you live in a humid environment, for instance, I would suggest starting with 400 g or 420 g water. If you are not using bread flour, you also may need to cut the water back a bit. So much success with sourdough relies on getting the water quantity right.
Starter: I use a 100% hydration starter, meaning it is equal parts by weight flour and water. If you need guidance on how to maintain a starter, see this post.
Ingredients
- 100 g (about 1/2 cup) active starter, see notes above
- 10 g (about 2.5 teaspoons) kosher salt
- 430 g water, (or less, see notes above) room temperature
- 512 g (4 cups) bread flour, such as King Arthur Flour
- a few tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
- room temperature butter, for greasing
Instructions
- Mix the dough: Place the starter, salt, and water in a large bowl. Stir with a spatula to combine — it doesn’t have to be uniformly mixed. Add the flour. Mix again until the flour is completely incorporated. If you have a straight-sided vessel, transfer the dough to it — it really helps monitor the rise and allows you to see the true growth in volume of the dough.
- Perform one (or more) “folds”: 30 minutes after you mix the dough, reach into the bowl and pull the dough up and into the center. Turn the bowl quarter turns and continue this pulling 8 to 10 times. See video for guidance. If time permits, repeat this “folding” step every 30 minutes for the first two hours. (Note: even if you perform just 1 fold, your dough will be in good shape.)
- Drizzle with a splash of olive oil and rub to coat. Cover bowl with a tea towel, bowl cover, or a lidded vessel, and set aside to rise at room temperature (70ºF/21ºC) for 4 to 18 hours — if it is super hot out or if you live in a humid environment, it may only take 4-6 hours. When the dough has nearly doubled in volume (or UPDATE: increased in volume by 50%, which is when I now end the bulk fermentation), it is ready. (Note: Do not use an oven with the light on for the bulk fermentation — it will be too warm. It is best to rely on visual cues (increasing in volume by 50% or doubling if you’ve had success with doubling) as opposed to time to determine when the bulk fermentation is done. A straight-sided vessel makes monitoring the bulk fermentation especially easy.)
- When the dough has nearly doubled, grease a 10 x 5-inch loaf pan with butter (or nonstick spray). Drizzle dough with a few tablespoons of olive oil. Rub your hands with a little bit of oil to coat. Use your hand to release the dough from the sides of the vessel, being careful not to completely deflate the dough. Video guidance here. Turn dough out onto a work surface. Quickly, shape the dough into a rectangle — I fold the dough envelope-style first; then I use a bench scraper to shape the dough into a rough rectangle. Transfer dough, seam-side down to prepared loaf pan and gently stretch into an oblong shape. (At this point, you can transfer the pan to the fridge if it makes sense with your schedule: rub the dough with oil and cover with a cloth bowl cover or plastic wrap or, preferably, a lidded vessel. Transfer to the fridge will the next day. Then proceed with the recipe.)
- Leave alone for 5 to 6 hours or until dough begins reaching the rim of the pan — this may take less time when it is very warm out. Do be patient with this second rise: to get good height, the dough should be near the rim of the pan before you transfer it to the oven.
- Heat oven to 425ºF. Transfer pan to the oven and bake for about 20 minutes. Reduce heat to 375ºF. Bake for 20 to 25 minutes more or until golden all around. If you have an instant read thermometer, it should register 206-210ºF or so before removing. Remove pan from oven and turn bread out onto a cooling rack. Cool at least 30 minutes before slicing.
- Prep Time: 24 hours
- Cook Time: 40 minutes
- Category: Bread
- Method: Sourdough/Natural Leavening
- Cuisine: American
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1,162 Comments on “Easy Sourdough Sandwich Bread”
Best recipe so far, family loves the loaf 🍞 too had to make some minor adjustments but all in all the best I’ve done. Thanks
Great to hear, Kat! Thanks for writing 🙂
Hi, I love your recipes so much. They’re great.! Just wondering if you have nutritional values for your sourdough Focaccia and sourdough sandwich bread 😊
This recipe is so forgiving for a novice sourdough baker! I’ve substituted the entire amount of bread flour with AP flour and using less water (400-420g) with great success. I have overproofed my first rise (grew greater than 50% because I left it overnight), and that turned out well because the second rise only needed <1 hour; that version turned out the softest I’ve ever made. When the bread is cut, it doesn’t fall apart and stays fresh at least 3 days on the counter (if it lasts that long). Thank you so much for your time creating those detailed instructions and videos with the stretching!
Great to hear, Dana! Thanks so much for taking the time to write and share all of this 🙂
Love all your recipes! I’m looking for a sandwich bread with soft exterior for my kids lunches that is predominately whole wheat and no sugar added. Any suggestions on how to adapt this one with whole wheat? Is the crust soft like the garbage loafs in the grocery store?
I suggest starting with 25% whole wheat flour, 75% bread flour. Depending on the results, you can add more next time around: 50% each or as much as 75% whole wheat flour and 25% bread flour. Just keep in mind: the more whole wheat flour you use, the less light and loft your loaf will be. The crust is soft but it doesn’t it all resemble grocery store loaf crust 🙂
Made my first loaf today at 75% bread flour & 25% whole wheat with 415g water (very humid here). Followed your directions & video to the T and it turned out perfect! I usually make boules but I think I’m converting & love that it’s no sugar added!!!
Great to hear, Tonya! Thanks so much for reporting back 🙂 🙂 🙂
Hello–Any thoughts on whether it’s possible to make a no-knead Japanese-style milk bread?
Hi! Can you freeze the loafs after??? It is an amazing recipe by the way!!!! Thank you!
Yes! Let them cool completely; then freeze.
Delicious. Tried a few times so far, and it’s been good every time. I think I might degas it a bit to get a tighter crumb, unless there are other suggestions.
I really want to know though, the top crust is fantastic, but the sides are just a bit off. Instead of a solid crust going around punctuated with a few holes here and there, all the sides (except the top) are just filled with craters and holes everywhere. Looks like the crust of a pan pizza or something.
First time I tried greasing with oil, second time with butter. The butter was definitely better, but it still seemed a tad different than the recipe’s pictures and video.
It’s not bad per se, I’m just wondering what’s going on. Too much grease? Not enough?
Anyways, love the recipe! Easy enough to do with two kids roaming around and “helping” too haha
Very interesting! I’m not sure how to advise, but I think you are on the right track with de-gassing more before transferring it to the loaf pan. I have a video on my Rye Bread recipe (not sourdough) for shaping it: https://youtu.be/n9Ii2ldFur0?si=MjIuXGZZzfZZ_HQq
It’s a similarly wet dough, and I wonder if this might help. Report back if you make progress!
This is my go to sourdough recipe it turns out great! Have you ever done the stretch and folds and then put in the frig overnight then finished the first rise in the morning? Curious if you think this would work? Thanks
Yep! Tuck the loaf in an x-large ziplock bag or make sure the top is very well sealed to prevent the dough from drying out.
Okay! I have commented on here before asking for your help as my dough does not seem to be rising as it should. When we broke it down, I realized I had not used bread flour. This time I use bread, flour, and the dough still barely rises during the book fermentation this time it set out for 14 hours in a 70° house and it still only rose about a quarter of the way. I am following everything exactly. I am using a healthy, thriving, active bubbly starter in the recipe. After the bulk fermentation, It doesn’t seem to have as much structure to it as it should. It is slightly risen and bubbly, but it’s a little bit more loose and sort of water. Do you think I should lessen the amount of water that I use in the recipe? Do you think that would allow it to be more pillowy and risen?
Thank you!!
Hi Rachel,
Have you had success making other sourdough bread recipes with your starter? Because if the dough is not rising during the bulk fermentation it’s making me think something is wrong with your starter? Can you tell me more about it? Did you make it or purchase it? What flour are you feeding it with? After a feeding, how quickly does it double in volume?
Questions:
Are you using a scale to measure?
Are you using a straight-sided vessel for the bulk fermentation?
Can you add fresh herbs to this? If so when would you add them?
Sure! I’d add them with the flour.
I put my bread in the fridge overnight (in the loaf pan). It has risen to the rim of the pan in the refrigerator! Do I need to wait 5-6 hours or even an hour before placing it in the oven? Can I place it in there cold?
You can place it in there cold! Sorry just seeing this. What did you end up doing?
Saturday I pulled my starter out of the refrigerator after 4 months with no food, let it get to room temperature then fed it, boy was it hungry, lots of bubbly activity. Followed your recipe throughout, used organic unbleached enriched flour, spring water, sea salt and organic olive oil, turned out great! I will be making this again and again except with different flour. Any suggestions on a lighter version? Is it impossible to have a store bought like lightness because it doesn’t have all the preservatives?
Hi! And great to hear 🙂 I think you could achieve a similar lightness if you reduce the water amount slightly. This may cause the rises to take a wee bit longer, but I think it should help. Try holding back 50-75 grams of water.
Thanks for writing and sharing these notes 🙂
Thanks for a great recipe. My entire family loved this!!
Great to hear, Lindsay! Thanks for writing 🙂
Hi- 4 cups of King Arthur flour is 480 grams, not 512
I love nothing more than a recipe that involves mostly ignoring it. This one turns out perfect every time.
So true! Thanks for writing Carly 🙂
Hi Alexandra,
I followed your recipe to the T and since it took too long for the 2nd rise, just before it had risen to the rim I put the loaf pan in a plastic bag and put it in the fridge over night. When I took it out this morning, to my surprise the dough had deflated, not completely but significantly. Is this normal? I have now kept it at room temperature and hoping it will rise to the rim but there hasn’t been much movement in last 3 hours. I live in a hot and humid climate hence put it in the fridge instead of on the counter overnight.
If it doesn’t to the rim in few more hours I will have to ditch the dough after 48 hours of working with it! What can I do differently for the next try?
Apologies for the delay here! It sounds as though it over-proofed.
Questions: what kind of flour are you using? Are you new to sourdough? Are you using a scale? And a straight-sided vessel for the bulk?
I am new to sourdough and baking in general. This is a great recipe! It was my first sourdough sandwich loaf. Crusty on the outside. Moist and chewy on the inside. I live in Arizona and it’s now chilly. So I used 400 g of water instead of 430 g. I split it for two loafs. Thank you for adding these little tidbits in your tip notes. 🙂
Great to hear, Lisa! Thanks so much for writing and sharing your notes.
I absolutely this bread!!! Can I substitute whole wheat flour in this recipe?
I absolutely love this bread and my family raves about how great it tastes. I wanted to try and substitute whole wheat flour. Do you think I should use 1/2 bread flour and 1/2 wheat flour? Thanks!
I do! Keep in mind the loaf may be slighytly denser/less lofty but still delicious 🙂
Hello! Your sd focaccia recipe is my favorite! Thanks so much for it! I usually reduce the amount of water because my flour has about 11,5 to 12% and it’s humid where I am.
I’d like to try this recipe but I’ll opt for the fridge rest and reduce the amount of water again.
In your recipe after the 4th stretch & fold, the dough should be left to rise by 50% before shaping, moving it to the bread tin and immediately refrigerating? That means it’d go in the fridge a log that hasn’t risen? For how long can it rest in the fridge? And upon removing, would I have to allow it to rise in its tin for a few hours before baking?
Does that mean the dough will undergo 3 rising /proofing? 1st the bulk fermentation, 2nd the cold proof in the bread tin, and 3rd the room temperature rise in the bread tin.
Any advice you can give me will be much appreciated. Hope to hear from you soon. Thank you in advanced!
Great to hear, Dima! Questions answered below:
In your recipe after the 4th stretch & fold, the dough should be left to rise by 50% before shaping, moving it to the bread tin and immediately refrigerating? Yes. Do cover the top with plastic wrap or tuck the pan into a 2-gallon ziptop bag to prevent the dough from drying out or forming a crust on the top layer.
That means it’d go in the fridge a log that hasn’t risen? Yes.
For how long can it rest in the fridge? 48 hours
And upon removing, would I have to allow it to rise in its tin for a few hours before baking? Yes. Until the dough crowns the rim of the pan.
Does that mean the dough will undergo 3 rising /proofing? 1st the bulk fermentation, 2nd the cold proof in the bread tin, and 3rd the room temperature rise in the bread tin. Yes.
Love the is recipe!! I’ve made it dozens of times and it’s been a staple for my family. Comes out perfect every time.
I’m wondering if I can do this recipe with inclusions? I would like to make jalapeño cheddar sandwich loaves, but wondering if it would alter the bread at all.
Great to hear! And yes, absolutely. Add them before you do a second set of stretches and folds. Consider adding a few more sets of stretches and folds to ensure they are incorporated evenly.
I couldnt do much shaping as it was quite wet and accidentally added to much oil. But cam out great a bit of a foccacia hybrid. !
It’s definitely a wet dough! Glad it worked out anyway 🙂 Thanks for writing.
Ahh help! I left the dough to proof overnight and it tripled! Should I do a fridge proof overnight in the fridge or should I try to do a daytime proof so I can watch it more closely?
Apologies for the delay Here! What did you end up doing? Tripling can be fine… it sounds as though you have a very active/lively starter, which is great. Next time, you can place the vessel in the fridge overnight; then pick up where you left off in the morning. Or, as you say, you can do a daytime rise.
Thank you so much for your response! I ended up baking it to see if it was edible and although it was extra jiggly (so much so that it took on the shape of my Dutch oven and didn’t rise as much as usual) it tasted fine! Haha thank you so much for your help . I use your other recipe for sourdough sandwich bread as well and your directions are incredibly helpful for the novice baker 🙂
Great to hear, Alexandria! Thanks for circling back and thanks or your kind words, too 🙂
Where did you get the container used for the bulk fermentation that has graduated markings and what size is the container? I agree that a straight sided vessel works best to see progress of sourdough rising.
Hi! And apologies for the delay here. Amazon sells these Cambros, which I love. I also love this 2-quart size, which you could get away with with this recipe.
Love the ingredients in this— I’ve made it a few times. The crust is softer when I bake to internal temp at 200*…is that okay? I like a softer sandwich crust. Also, can you retard in fridge?
Yes, that is fine! And yes, you can retard in the fridge 🙂
Trying this for the first time and my dough seems very wet! I only used 400g water but I can’t knead at all. Even after adding in another 150g flour I can only just form it (barley). Most other recipes I see ask for about twice the dry to wet ingredients. Please can you help… am I missing something? Thanks
Hi Sam! I see from your email address that you are in the UK. Having troubleshooted with many from the UK and other parts of Europe over the years, I have learned that your flour absorbs water differently than US commercial bread flour, which can lead to very wet doughs. The solution is to either use less water from the start or add more flour (though you will want to add more salt, too, if you add more flour: the weight of the salt should be 2-3% the weight of the flour).
What kind of flour are you using? I would continue to add more flour until the dough resembles the texture of the dough in the video/photos.
Hi Ali, yes in the UK. I’m using Doves farm strong white breadboard, my starter is Dove organic rye fed. I ended up adding 150g extra flour but didn’t want to go too much farther so tried rising it anyway… the rise was fast and more than doubled and when taking it out of the fridge this morning it had even risen at 4 degrees! It’s now in the oven (after I cleaned up where it spewed over the sides of the pan)… figured it was worth seeing it through to Baked but definitely a long way of a usable recipe for me which is so sad as I’m desperate to get a nice sandwich sourdough like yours! Thanks for replying so quicklyXx
I think it will be a matter of starting with much less water from the start next time around. The rye starter is also contributing to the wetness of the dough.
I would try using 50 grams starter and 375 grams water next time around and see how the dough feels. It definitely is a wet, high-hydration dough, but it should not be unmanageable. Good luck with your next endeavors!
So, I accidently used AP flour instead of bread flour. Just not paying attention to what I was doing. Should I scrap it?
No! Keep with it. AP flour is great… the dough will just be a little stickier. You could add a little more flour if the dough feels too wet.
Hi! Can you use this recipe for a batard or boule and have it turn out well? I love the consistency and flavor of this so much more, but unsure what the higher hydration would do to those loaves.
Hi! I think this dough is too high hydration to use for a batard or boule… I think you will find handling the dough problematic. But I have two other recipes you can use for free-form loaves:
Homemade Sourdough Bread, Step by Step
Easy Sourdough Bread (Whole Wheat-ish)
This is such a forgiving recipe and soooooooo delicious! I used fresh milled flour blend, it looked way to wet but I shaped it threw it in my greased loaf pan… let it ferment in the fridge overnight popped it into the oven the next morning and it was literally perfection. Crusty, slight chew and soft. This will be our go to sandwhich loaf from now on!
Looking forward to trying this! I have a 13” Pullman pan – should I increase the recipe and, if so, by how much? Thank you!
Hi! Yes, I think doing 1.25x the recipe would be a better fit for the pan.