Easy Sourdough Bread (Whole Wheat-ish)
This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure policy.
This is my favorite sourdough bread: It’s high hydration, whole wheat(ish), and just so darn tasty. As far as sourdough recipes go, this is about as simple as it gets. Below, you’ll find video guidance for every step of the process. Let’s do this! 🍞🍞🍞🍞
Sourdough is often described as a journey. The more I make it, the more this sentiment becomes a truth. For the past few years, I’ve been tinkering with various sourdough recipes, and though I can’t say I won’t stop tinkering, this is the current snapshot of my sourdough journey.
These are the characteristics I like in a sourdough boule:
- high hydration (at least 75%)
- whole wheat-ish
- crusty but not super crusty
- nicely salted
- tangy though not super sour
I’ve outlined the process below to create this type of loaf, which as far as sourdough recipes go, is on the simple side — there’s no kneading, no autolyse-ing, no pre-fermenting, no levain-ing, no fancy scoring.
It’s a little bit smaller than most sourdough boules, too, reasons for which I explain below. And as with all sourdough baking (and bread baking in general), it does take time, though the time is mostly hands off.
This post is organized as follows:
- Two Sourdough Fermentation FAQs
- Two Tips for Assessing Fermentation
- Whole Wheat Flour
- Roller-Milled vs. Stone-Milled Flour
- 75% Hydration
- Mixing Sourdough Bread
- Bulk Fermentation
- Shaping + Bench Rest
- Proofing Sourdough
- Scoring and Baking Sourdough
- The Best Way to Store Bread
2 Sourdough Fermentation FAQs
Two of the most frequently asked questions I receive about sourdough bread baking are:
- How do I know when the dough has risen sufficiently and is therefore ready to be shaped?
- How do I know if it has proofed sufficiently and is therefore ready to be baked?
If you are unfamiliar with sourdough baking, these two questions relate to two distinct phases of fermentation:
- The first question relates to the bulk fermentation (the first rise), which takes place after the dough is mixed.
- The second question relates to proofing (the second rise), after the dough is shaped.
One thing I have learned through troubleshooting with various people is that it’s very hard to put a timeline on these two phases. Sourdough is much more sensitive than yeast-leavened breads to the environment in which it is being baked.
The bulk fermentation for me in my cold Upstate New York kitchen often takes 12 hours regardless of the time of year. For someone baking in humid Hawaii, it may take 6 hours (or less! or more!). Similarly, the proofing phase may vary by many hours depending on the environment. Additionally, there are countless variables that affect fermentation: type of flour, water, salt quantity, strength of the starter, to name a few.
Yes, there are textural/visual cues to help discern when each phase of fermentation is complete, but it still can be hard to judge.
If you struggle with these assessments, I have two tips for you:
2 Tips for Assessing Sourdough Fermentation
Tip #1: Buy a clear, straight-sided vessel.
After my digital scale, my clear, straight-sided 4-qt Cambro (**this one is BPA-free!**) has become my most important tool when it comes to sourdough bread baking. Why? For two reasons:
- Because it’s clear, it allows me to see when the dough is filled with bubbles and activity throughout — top, bottom, sides, etc.
- Because it’s straight sided, I know exactly when the dough has risen sufficiently (roughly 50% increase in volume) and is therefore ready to be shaped. When dough rises in a bowl, it’s very hard to gauge how much the dough has grown.
If I could single out the biggest lesson I’ve learned in my sourdough baking journey, it’s this: Do not allow sourdough rise beyond double during the bulk fermentation.
Why? When sourdoughs rise for too long, the dough weakens. A weak, fragile dough is hard to handle and difficult to shape into a tight round, which in turn makes for a dense loaf. Most recently I shoot to shape the dough when it has increased by 50% in volume.
Tip #2. Use Your Refrigerator & Be Flexible
Because judging bulk fermentation and proofing can be tricky, you can use your refrigerator during both phases.
Using your fridge for the bulk fermentation:
If, for instance, you see your dough rising nicely but all of a sudden it’s 10 pm and you’re ready for bed, and you know if you let the dough continue to rise, it will be way beyond double in the morning, stick the vessel in the fridge. The following morning, take it out and let the dough rise at room temperature until it has nearly doubled or, as I advise more and more, increased by 50% in volume.
With sourdough baking, you have to be patient, and you have to be flexible with the timing.
Using your fridge for proofing:
Using my fridge for the proofing phase has been the biggest change in my sourdough process of late. Previously, after shaping the boule and placing it in a towel-lined bowl, I would transfer the dough to the fridge for 1 hour, then bake it. These days, I like to stick the shaped boule in the fridge for at least 12 hours, but ideally 18-24 hours. Why?
- The extended cold proof creates a lighter, airier crumb.
- A cold round of dough is so much easier to handle from scoring it to transferring it to the Dutch oven.
Whole Wheat Flour FAQ
In my email course, Foolproof Bread Baking, I receive a lot of questions about how to incorporate more whole grain flours into bread.
This is a tricky one to answer for me for two reasons:
- I like white bread. A good loaf of bread for me has so much to do with texture. I love a pillowy, oily focaccia; a soft, squishy brioche bun; a ballooned, crisp-tender Neapolitan pizza. As soon as whole grain flour is entered into the mix, the texture changes, becoming heavier, denser.
- Commercial whole wheat flour isn’t necessarily healthier than commercial white flour. Wait, what? Read on.
Roller-milled Flour vs. Stone-milled Flour
Without getting too far into the weeds, most of the commercial flour on the market is made from wheat that has been roller milled, meaning a roller mill has separated the wheat kernel into three parts: the endosperm, germ, and bran. White flour is made from the endosperm.
Whole wheat flour, similarly, is made from rolled-milled wheat: again, first the kernel is separated into three parts: the endosperm, germ, and bran; BUT then the germ and the bran are added back in various proportions. Much research shows that as soon as the wheat kernel is separated into the various parts, much of the nutritional value is lost — even when the bran and germ are added in after the fact.
So what’s the solution?
Stone-Milled Flour
Stone-milled flour, contrary to roller-milled flour, is flour made from wheat that passes through a stone mill, the process of which keeps the endosperm, bran, and germ together. Much research shows that keeping the components together preserves the nutritional value.
The rub with stone-milled flour? Stone-milled flour is more perishable due to the presence of both the bran and the germ, but the germ in particular, which is packed with vitamins, minerals, and fats, which can go rancid quickly.
The boon? Because the bran and germ are present in the flour, it’s also more flavorful.
Anything else to consider? Baking with stone-milled flours requires a little more finesse. Even a small amount of bran and germ in the mix makes for a denser loaf. Many millers offer high-extraction stone-milled flours — meaning stone-milled flours that have been sifted to remove some of the bran and endosperm. But even when you bake with high-extraction, stone-milled flour, the finished loaf, when made from 100% of this type of flour, will be very dense.
For this reason, I use at the most 25% stone-milled flour (100 g for this recipe), but preferably in terms of texture, 12.5% stone-milled flour (50 g for this recipe). 12.5% may seem like a tiny amount, but I am constantly surprised by how much flavor, texture, and color this small proportion of stone-milled flour offers to a loaf of bread.
In fact, I now prefer a partially whole wheat loaf to an all white loaf. The freshly milled, stone-milled flours offer so much flavor.
Where to Buy Stone-Milled Flour?
In the past few years, it has become easier to find stone-milled flour, and if you are up for it, you should seek out locally, stone-milled flour. Why? Because if you’re buying locally milled flour, you likely can find out how recently it was milled. Because stone-milled flour perishes more quickly than roller-milled flour, it’s best if you can find a local source, which will ensure it will be fresh. Note: Store stone-milled flour in the freezer if you don’t bake regularly.
Final note: I no longer buy commercial whole wheat flours. I buy commercial white flours: King Arthur Flour’s all-purpose flour and bread flour are staples. I find locally milled stone-milled flours at a local co-op, Honest Weight Food Co-op, and I also order online from various sources. Here are a few I love:
Finally: Here’s a great resource if you’re interested in learning more about wheat and flour: The Bread Lab. Also, Dan Barber’s The Third Plate was eye opening.
75% Hydration
Standard sourdough recipes often call for 500g of flour per loaf. As noted above, the recipe below makes a loaf that’s a little bit smaller for two reasons:
- I’m often asked if the bread recipes here on the blog as well as in my book can be halved. The answer is yes, but in an effort to make a loaf that may not feel quite so overwhelming for people, I’ve reduced the flour to 400g.
- I wanted to include quantities that make hydration easier to understand. Hydration is something I don’t discuss too often because I find it can turn people off (me included). In short, hydration is: the ratio of water relative to flour in a bread dough. The proportions in this recipe — 300g water and 400g flour — make it a little easier to see it’s a 75% hydration dough: 300/400=0.75.* With this baseline, you can increase the amount of water to make it higher hydration or decrease the amount of water to make it lower hydration depending on your preference.
*Note: This is a crude calculation. If you want to be super accurate when calculating hydration, you include the weight of the starter in the equation, too, which will throw off the percentage slightly.
Salt
I love salt. The standard percentage of salt in a bread recipe is 2% by weight of the flour. For 400g flour, this means 8g salt. I use 10g. The amount of salt, fortunately, is a variable that can easily be tailored to your liking. If 10g of salt is too much for you or if you know from the start you are sensitive to salt, start with 8g, then adjust accordingly. Also, higher amounts of salt will slow down the rise a bit as well.
5 Phases: Simple Sourdough Bread
This videos and photos below shows how to make from start to finish the high-hydration, whole wheat(-ish) sourdough bread recipe included at the end of the post.
Phase 1: Mix the Dough
Step 1: Gather your ingredients — flour, salt, water, a sourdough starter — and equipment, namely a digital scale. I recommend buying a starter (reasons for which I explain here). But if you’re up for it, you can make a sourdough starter from scratch in just about a week. I only recommend doing so if it currently is summer (or a very warm fall) where you are.
Most important, you need a fed, active starter.
To ensure it is ready, drop a spoonful of it in a glass of water. If it floats, it’s ready:
Start by weighing 300g water, 100g starter, and 10g salt.
You’ll need 400g flour. You can use all bread flour of a mix of bread flour and whole wheat flour. My preferences is 350g bread flour (King Arthur Flour) and 50g stone-milled, freshly milled flour (I use a mix of Anson Mills rye and graham).
Mix to form a sticky dough ball.
Then transfer to a straight-sided vessel for the bulk fermentation (the first rise).
Phase 2: Bulk Fermentation
After 30 minutes, stretch and fold the dough:
You’ll repeat this stretching and folding 3x at 30-minute intervals; then you’ll leave the dough to rise until it increases in volume by 50-75%.
Phase 3: Shape + Bench Rest
Transfer dough to a clean work surface. I prefer to use no flour and minimal handling to shape it into a ball.
After the initial shape, let the dough rest for 20-40 minutes; then shape again and transfer to a flour sack-lined bowl.
Phase 4: Proof
Transfer bowl to fridge to proof (second rise) for 18 to 24 hours
Phase 5: Score + Bake
After 18 to 24 hours, transfer dough to a sheet of parchment paper. This video shows how:
Score as you wish; simple is fine.
Transfer to a Dutch oven and bake at 450ºF covered for 30 minutes, then uncovered for 10 minutes at 400ºF.
The Best Way to Store Bread
How do I store bread? is one of the most frequently asked questions I receive.
If you want to store the bread at room temperature for 3 to 4 days, I think the best method is in a ziplock bag. I’ve tried other reusable/environmentally friendly options, but nothing seems to keep bread freshest — the crumb the softest — better than a ziplock bag.
If you intend to keep the bread for longer, I would stick the ziplock bag in the freezer, and pull out slices or hunks as you wish. I often slice bread as soon as it cools completely, transfer the slices to a ziplock bag, then freeze. This way, I know the bread was frozen at its freshest.
A ziplock bag will not prevent the crust of bread from turning soft, which is why I suggest always reheating day-old bread. I use a toaster at breakfast for slices of bread, and I reheat half or quarter loaves in the oven at 350ºF for 15 to 20 minutes when serving for dinner.
Bread revives so beautifully in the oven or toaster.
I baked this loaf in a tall-sided pullman loaf. Love the shape! I proofed this in the fridge for about 12 hours; then let rise at room temperature for roughly 5-6 hours before baking at 400ºF for about 40 minutes.
Easy Sourdough Bread (Whole Wheat-ish)
- Total Time: 48 hours 45 minutes
- Yield: 1 loaf
Description
Special equipment: Straight-sided vessel for the bulk fermentation, Dutch oven, flour-sack towel
Here’s my list of essentials for sourdough bread baking.
Digital Scale: Do not attempt this recipe without a scale. This one costs $9. Troubleshooting what goes wrong with sourdough bread is impossible if you’ve measured with cups. They’re simply not accurate.
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.
Flour:
- I prefer making this bread with 350g bread flour and 50g of freshly milled, stone-milled flour, which provides both flavor and color. (Read the post above for more details and why I suggest stone-milled flour as opposed to commercial whole wheat flour.) I’ve been using a mix of Anson Mills graham flour and rye flour, but there are many great stone-milled flours out there, and you may have a local source, which is even better.
- 50g may seem like a tiny amount of stone-milled flour for this recipe, but I am constantly amazed by how much flavor this small amount of freshly milled flour adds. If you are new to sourdough baking, I recommend starting with 100% bread flour (King Arthur Flour is my preference) because it’s so forgiving and easy to work with. Once you get the hang of it, start incorporating stone-milled flour a little bit at a time. I don’t like using more than 100g (25%) of stone-milled flour in this recipe.
- If you cannot find bread flour — I know supplies are limited at the moment — you can use all-purpose flour. If you live in a humid climate, consider reducing the water by 20 g. You can add the 20 g of water in slowly while you mix until the dough resembles that in the video/photos.
Salt:
I like breads to be a little bit saltier than standard. If you are sensitive to salt, start with 8g. Next time, adjust salt as you wish.
Ingredients
*Please read notes above before proceeding. Watching the video is helpful, too.*
- 400 g bread flour, see notes above
- 8g to 10g kosher salt or sea salt, see notes above
- 300 g water
- 100 g active sourdough starter
- rice flour, for dusting
Instructions
- Mix the dough. In a large bowl, combine the water, starter, and salt. Stir with a rubber spatula to loosely combine. Add the flour, and stir with a spatula to combine — it will be a wet, sticky dough ball. Transfer to a straight-sided vessel and cover with a tea towel or bowl cover for 30 minutes.
- Stretch and fold. After 30 minutes, grab a corner of the dough and pull it up and into the center. Repeat until you’ve performed this series of folds 4 to 5 times with the dough. Let dough rest for another 30 minutes and repeat the stretching and folding action. If you have the time: do this twice more for a total of 4 times in 2 hours. [Video guidance here.] Note: Even if you can only perform one series of stretches and folds, your dough will benefit. So don’t worry if you have to run off shortly after you mix the dough.
- Bulk fermentation: Cover the vessel with a tea towel or bowl cover and let rise at room temperature (70ºF/21ºC) for 4 to 18 hours (times will vary based on the time of year, the humidity, and the temperature of your kitchen). The bulk fermentation will end when the dough has nearly doubled in volume and you can see bubbles throughout the dough and on the surface. (Note: Do not use your oven with the light on for the bulk fermentation — it is too warm for the dough. To determine when the bulk fermentation is done, it is best to rely on visual cues (doubling in volume) as opposed to time. A straight-sided vessel makes monitoring the bulk fermentation especially easy because it allows you to see when your dough has truly doubled.)
- Shape: Gently transfer the dough to clean work surface. I prefer to use no flour and a bench scraper at this step, but if you find an un-floured work surface to be difficult, feel free to lightly flour it. [Video guidance is especially helpful for this step.] Fold the dough, envelope style: top third over to the center; bottom third up and over to the center. Then repeat from right to left. Turn the dough over and use your bench scraper to push the dough up, then back towards you to create a tight ball. Repeat this pushing and pulling till you feel you have some tension in your ball. Place the dough ball top side down and let rest 30 to 40 minutes. (FYI: This is called the bench rest.)
- Proof. Line a shallow 2-qt bowl (or something similar) with a tea towel or flour sack towel. Flour sack towels are amazing because the dough doesn’t stick to them, and therefore you need very little rice flour, but if you only have a tea towel, you will be fine. If you are using a tea towel, sprinkle it generously with rice flour. If you are using a flour sack towel, you can use a lighter hand with the rice flour. After the 30-to 40-minute bench rest, repeat the envelope-style folding and the bench scraper pushing and pulling till you have a tight ball. [Video guidance here.] Place the ball top side down in your prepared towel-lined bowl. Cover bowl with overhanging towel. Transfer bowl to the fridge for 12 to 24 hours. (Note: When you remove your dough from the fridge, visually it will likely look unchanged. This is OK. You do not need to let it then proof at room temperature before baking.)
- Bake. Heat oven to 500ºF. Remove your sourdough from the fridge. Open the towel. Place a sheet of parchment over the bowl. Place a plate over the parchment. With a hand firmly on the plate and one on the bowl, turn the dough out onto the parchment-paper lined plate. [Video guidance here.] Carefully remove the bowl and towel. Carefully remove the plate. Brush off any excess rice flour. Use a razor blade to score the dough as you wish. I always do a simple X. Grab the ends of the parchment paper and transfer to the Dutch oven. [Video guidance here.] Cover it. Lower oven temperature to 450ºF, bake covered for 30 minutes. Uncover. Lower temperature to 400ºF. Bake for 10 minutes more or until the loaf has darkened to your liking. Transfer loaf to a cooling rack.
- Cool. Let loaf cool for at least 30 minutes before cutting.
- Prep Time: 48 hours
- Cook Time: 45 minutes
- Category: Bread
- Method: Sourdough
- Cuisine: Global
Keywords: sourdough, bread, naturally, leavened, boule, high, hydration, whole, wheat
This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure policy.
952 Comments on “Easy Sourdough Bread (Whole Wheat-ish)”
How much should I adjust the water for stone milled whole wheat flour?
Hi Clint, It’s so hard to say because all flours absorb water differently, and freshly milled flours I find to vary dramatically in how they behave. I would start by adding the water slowly. Maybe hold 50 g of it, and add it in slowly. If you add it all at once, it may be soupy and more like batter.
Hi Ali,
I finished my second bake after implementing the changes we discussed. The crumb was definitely less sticky. Again, the flavor was great and we are enjoying the bread. I need some advice before I bake again. My batard loaf opened up explosively on the side even thought it was scored with 5 cuts at 45 degrees across the top. The holes in my crumb (both boule and batard) were also not as even as your picture. Mostly nice small to medium but also some larger irregular and some more vertically shaped.
It is starting to feel like I might need to increase the bulk ferment. There also isn’t much volume change in the dough after the cold retard but that compares similarly to other prior formulas I have baked.
I know you changed from doubling to 50% increase during bulk. Can you explain why you ended up changing and any thoughts on my experience?
Once again, thanks for your help and wonderful recipes. I have shared many of them with family and friends so I found your website.
★★★★★
Hi again,
I just completed my third bake.
I let the dough bulk ferment to 60%. Both of my loaves showed signs of over expansion and tearing even though both we well scored. Is there any way to send you a picture? Maybe you could telling by seeing them what is going wrong?
★★★★★
I would love you to send me photos! Here is my email: alexandra@alexandracooks.com
I’ve been meaning to respond to your previous comment … sorry for the delay. I’ll wait to respond more until I see the photo. Thanks, Bruce!
Wowza! Following this recipe (mostly, I made one little error/deviation when I had to chuck the lot into the fridge for a few hours directly after the initial mix), made the most gorgeous loaf of bread I’ve ever produced! And I’ve been trying for years!!!!
★★★★★
So wonderful to hear this, Amy! Thanks so much for writing 🙂 🙂 🙂
This is the best sourdough recipe that I have ever used. As First time sourdough baker I tried for over two years to bake a successful loaf and then I came across this one. It is very forgiving and one can consistently produce an excellent result. Over the last six months I have added my own touches along the way. I have added around 10 grams of sugar and instead of using 300 grams of water, I use 150 grams of butter milk and 150 grams of water. I find that this gives a nice soft texture and the bread remains fresh for 2 to 3 days after which I keep the left overs in the fridge, which keeps it in good condition up to 6 days.
It truly is the best, my heart felt thanks to Alexandra.
So nice to hear this, Daniel! Love the idea of using buttermilk here! Can’t wait to give that a try. Thanks for writing 🙂 🙂 🙂
excellent tutorial with easy to follow instructions! I’m going to utilize the tips here and looking forward to improving my breadmaking techniques!
Hi Ali,
The sourdough is going great thank you but when I turn it out of the proofing basket goes very flat. The flavour and structure is great, its just a bit pancake like 😂. Do you have any advice please?
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Hi Lisa!
When you mixed the dough, did it feel very wet? If not, it’s possible that your dough over-fermented. How long roughly was the bulk fermentation?
If it was very wet when you first mixed the dough, I think you need to reduce the water quantity. I find that a lot of people I converse with from the UK in regard to sourdough have this same issue: the dough being too wet. There’s not much you can do at this point, but next time around, I would hold back 50 g of water or more to start … you can always add it in slowly.
I am using your recipe and it is time for me to go to bed and my dough has not doubled in volume before I can shape it. Can I put it in the frig at 10 p.m. and take it out in the morning, shape it and then bake it?
Yes! Do that.
I have a comment and question! GREAT GREAT instructions – so very helpful for this first time Sourdough Bread maker.
My bottom crust seems very tough to cut….nothing like the top and sides of the loaf coming out of Dutch Oven. Is there anything that can help softened that for the cut?
pgauld@uga.edu
★★★★★
Hi Pam! If you jump to the FAQs on this post: Why is my sourdough so sticky? 4 Common Sourdough Mistakes + Answers to FAQ’s and then scroll down to the section titled “My crust is so tough. What can I do to prevent this?” you’ll find some ideas there.
Lovely looking bread, may I ask if you are using white bread flour for this recipe? its looks very white in colour.
Leif
★★★★★
Hi Leif! I use King Arthur Flour bread flour or all-purpose flour as well as a mix of Anson Mills stone-milled flours here.
Five star recipe. I’m a sourdough and bread baking newbie and this recipe has helped me understand baking sourdough bread so much better. Made this 3 times and people are in awe of how beautiful my loaves are. One loaf had a harder tougher bottom – what causes this?
★★★★★
Hi Nancy! Great to hear this. Thanks for writing. Regarding the one loaf that had a tougher bottom, were you using the same baking vessel? Recently I’ve been preheating my DO at 475ºF; then lowering it to 450ºF when I transfer the bread to it. I lowered the preheating temperature because I found my loaves were getting too dark on the bottom. You might just need to play around with the temperature and the timing a bit. You can also bake your bread directly on the oven rack after you bake it for 30 minutes covered in the DO.
Hi there, I baked my first loaf with your recipe a couple of weeks ago but it didn’t quite turn out as I had hoped.
The flavour was great (might up the salt next time) but it was sticky inside with some big air pockets at the top – so much so that it was hard to cut slices without it collapsing. I baked the loaf in my Dutch oven and I actually ended up adding nearly 20+ minutes with the lid off to get the top browned. Unfortunately the extra time didn’t seem to cook the inside enough but the bottom was hard as a rock! I probably had a 20hr bulk ferment in the fridge.
Would using convection help at all? I’m also not sure what kind of whole wheat flour mine is as it doesn’t say anywhere on the bag. Any assistance you can provide for this rookie sourdough baker! I could also share some photos I took to show what it looked like.
Thanks in advance!
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Hi Hillary! I don’t think it’s necessarily an issue with your Dutch oven — it sounds as though the dough was not quite right. You may need to reduce the water quantity a bit; it’s possible the dough was underfermented; it’s possible your starter isn’t strong enough.
I would read this troubleshooting post before you make another loaf: Why is my sourdough so sticky? 4 Common Sourdough Mistakes + Answers to FAQ’s
I’ve been baking sourdough for a long time and your method and recipe goes far beyond anything I’ve made in the past. Thanks for putting together your excellent site.
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Wonderful to hear this! Thanks so much for writing 🙂
I usually never leave a review. But this was my first VERY successful loaf after a couple years of MEH loaves. Thank you! I’m added cinnamon, pecans and maple sugar to this recipe to Rey something new. Proofing in the fridge is a game changer.
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So nice to hear this, Jasmine! I love the fridge proof, too 🙂 Your additions sound wonderful!
This looks fabulous!! I’ve just made a loaf with 415g strong white, 85g whole wheat and 340g water. Used 100g starter and 12g salt. I did second proof for about 15/16 hrs in fridge. Just find the dough very difficult to shape into a ball and even after the fridge proof it’s quite messy. I don’t have a scraper and must get one. Yours looks so together – any tips please. Loaf tastes lovely but maybe is a tiny bit sticky
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Hi! It sounds as though it might have over fermented. How long was the bulk fermentation? And when you shaped it to get it into the pan, did it have any strength? or was it kind of a puddle of dough without structure? This troubleshooting post might offer some guidance.
Great recipe I use it all the time! One question, at what point would it be best to add some herbs or roasted garlic?
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Great to hear, Ryan! I would add them after you’ve completed at least two sets of stretches and folds — when the dough is starting to feel stronger and more elastic. Sprinkle them over top; then continue with a few more sets of stretches and folds.
Dear Ali,
Thank you so much for this wonderful sourdough recipe. About 8 months ago I started this journey by making my first starter,,, which I have named “Rise and Shine”. From there it has been a path filled with discoveries and learning experiences that have helped to lead me here to your sourdough bread. I think like you I really appreciate the fridge time and the freedom it gives me to bake this bread when the family is out and about. What attracted me to your recipe was the visual confident, yet relaxing cadence of your hands taking us through the process of making the bread. Just wonderful. The measurements worked perfectly for me and I found that it created less mess than if I were using my measuring cups. As a thank you I purchased you book and look so forward to reading through it and trying a few more of your recipes. Your Sourdough recipe will become a staple in our home and I look forward to it for many more years to come. Thank you very much.
★★★★★
Ron, thank you so much — your comment means the world. I’m so glad you found the videos helpful. In my own sourdough journey, the videos I’ve watched along the way have been tremendously helpful, so it’s so nice to hear this. Great to hear, of course, that the bread turned out well, and I can’t thank you enough for purchasing my book. Happy Baking! Have a wonderful weekend.
Amazing recipe! 1st bite Hit all the endorphin notes….
Thank you
★★★★★
So nice to hear this 🙂 🙂 🙂
Do you need to let the dough come to room temperature before baking?
Nope! Just remove from the fridge, score it, then bake it 🙂
Thanks for such a lovely recipe! 🙂 One question: my starter is very active and peaks usually within 2-3 hours after feeding. Do you think I need to adjust my timeline accordingly? Less time for bulk fermentation etc. Thank you and happy easter!
★★★★★
Hi Soo! Yes, definitely rely on the visual cues as opposed to the timeline outlined in the recipe. When your dough increases in volume by 50-100%, it’s time to shape it.
Question: I am on a severely sodium-restricted diet. Can I make this with significantly less salt? And will it still taste good? I’m struggling to find bread – even homemade – with low sodium content.
Thanks for a great recipe! I can’t wait to dig into it!
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Hi Nicole! I think you can definitely cut the salt back. What’s tricky with bread is that salt tightens gluten, so it helps give the dough strength. If you don’t use any salt, it will be terrible — gummy and dense. I think it might just take some trial and error to get the amount of salt right, though I do think you could get away by cutting it in half.
I have been using your recipe for over a year and it rarely fails (and only when I do something silly). So thank you! Can you give advice on steps to make rolls or baguettes using the same recipe? Should I shape the rolls and put them in the fridge overnight? What would you do to keep the humidity high as they won’t fit in a Dutch oven?
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Hi Rikke! Great to hear this! I would maybe try shaping the dough into rolls or baguettes and then doing a room temperature proof (if time permits) for 3 to 4 hours; then baking. If not, you can definitely shape and do a cold proof, just be sure to cover the pan tightly so that the bread dough doesn’t dry out.
For baguettes, I would probably use a preheated Baking Steel or stone.
For rolls I think you could bake them on a sheet pan and place the sheet pan on a heated Baking Steel or stone or just bake them without the stone underneath.
To create steam, there are a few things you can do. Tartine Bread recommends lining a pan with water soaked towels and placing the pan in the oven while the bread bakes. You can also use a spray bottle or a pan with ice cubes.
Your easy sourdough recipes have been a saviour – I love them so much, and they are foolproof recipes it seems. However, I would now love to tinkle with it abit and add seeds to my ‘whole wheatish’ loaf. Is there any seeds you would recommend to add to this recipe? And at what point should I add them? Thank you 🙂
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So great to hear this, Kiera! I would add seeds with the flour. I love using a mix of sesame, sunflower, and pumpkin seeds, but you truly can use anything you love!
I made this with King Arthur Whole Wheat flour because I have a huge bag and didn’t know about stone milled flour before reading this. I couldn’t believe how good the flavor was even with the commercial whole wheat flour! My only complaint is that the loaf came out kind of wavy around the edges (indented all around from the parchment). Any tips on how to avoid this? It makes it more difficult to slice, especially when the bread is so airy 🙂
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Hi Kallan! Apologies for the delay here. Great to hear re KAF whole wheat flour.
Regarding your issue, I wonder if you sprinkle some cornmeal on the parchment, it might provide a bit of a barrier between the dough and the parchment and would prevent the waviness?
Did the parchment stick to the bread? Or did it release easily?
Hi, do you have a blog that I can follow and have new entries sent to my email address please?
Hi Suzanne! If you want to sign up for my email newsletter, do so right here: Never Miss a Recipe
Been making sour dough bread for 40 plus years but mine is a sweet sour dough bread. I feed with sugar, potato flakes and hot water. I also use oil and sugar and lil salt when I mix up the dough. Like to try yours too! Yours is probably more healthy, ha.
Hi,
I can imagine that somebody asked this question but 814 comments?!
So let me ask you: why do you invert the dutch oven? Is there a special reason that you put the dough on the lid?
Thanks.
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Hi Hans! I just find it easier and less dangerous to lower the bread onto the shallow part of the pot rather than have to drop it into the deep part. Whichever side of the pot you use, the results will be the same as far as texture and shape of bread goes.
I love this recipe! I’ve been working on sourdough for a while and your site made it all come together for me. Thank you! Question–do you use the small Pullman pan or the large?
So great to hear this, Molly! It’s the small Pullman 🙂
I’ve been making this recipe for over a year now and I’m finally feeling adventurous by wanting to add flavor. What do you recommend for figuring out percentages of, let’s say olives, or raisin and cinnamon? Would I keep the ratios the same and the just add 100g of olives or would I need to increase the amount of flour?
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Hi Rebecca! No need to increase the amount of flour. Add things like olives or raisins after you’ve done a few sets of stretches and folds; then do a few more sets of stretches and folds after you’ve added the ingredients to ensure they’re incorporated fully.
Hi! Is the 30-50% increase in rise for bulk measured from the start, or from after the last set of folds?
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Hi Julia! You’re looking for a 50% (or slightly more) increase in rise total … I never see much rise during those first two hours of stretches and folds. If you do see a rise during the stretches and folds, that’s fine, but you’re looking for a 50% increase in rise from how the dough looks immediately after it is mixed together.
just amazing recipe. I tried enormous recopies to get a perfect loaf. already baked this bread couples of times and it comes just perfect every time. thank you for all tips, they just cover all troubleshoots. I want to bake rye sourdough bread I thought just to increase water. If this right? thank you
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Great to hear, Inna! Regarding rye, it will take a little bit of trial and error to get right, and I wouldn’t suggest using all rye flour as the loaf will be very dense. I would start with 100 grams rye at the very most. Keep the water the same to start; then adjust next time around. You may find you actually need to reduce the amount of water.