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Beginner Sourdough Bread Recipe

4.9 from 142 reviews

This Beginner Sourdough Bread recipe provides a step-by-step guide to making a classic sourdough loaf from scratch. Using simple ingredients and traditional techniques such as stretch and folds and cold fermentation, this recipe yields a crusty, flavorful bread with a chewy crumb perfect for beginners eager to master sourdough baking at home.

Ingredients

Scale

Levain

  • 80 grams ripe sourdough starter (about 1/3 cup)
  • 80 grams water (warm or cool depending on the temperature, 1/3 cup)
  • 80 grams all purpose flour (about 2/3 cup)

Dough

  • 230 grams levain or sourdough starter (about 1 cup)
  • 400 grams water, room temperature (about 1 3/4 cups)
  • 600 grams bread flour or all purpose flour (about 4 1/2 cups)
  • 12 grams salt (about 2 teaspoons)

Instructions

  1. Mix Levain: In a clear liquid measuring cup, combine 80 grams of sourdough starter, 80 grams of water, and 80 grams of flour. Mix well, cover, and let it sit at a warm room temperature (78-80ºF) for 3-4 hours until the mixture is bubbly, doubled in size, and just about to fall. This levain is your active starter for the dough.
  2. Mix Dough: In a mixing bowl, blend 230 grams of ripe levain, 400 grams of room temperature water, 600 grams flour, and 12 grams salt using a wooden spoon or dough whisk. The dough will appear shaggy and lumpy initially. Mix until it forms a cohesive ball. Cover the bowl and let it rest for 1 hour at 78-80ºF.
  3. Stretch & Fold #1: After resting, uncover the dough and perform three stretch and folds by lifting the underside of the dough and folding it over itself, rotating the bowl between folds. Cover and let rest for another hour at 78-80ºF.
  4. Stretch & Fold #2: Repeat the set of three stretch and folds after the hour of rest. The dough will become more elastic and stretchy. Cover again and rest for one more hour at the same temperature.
  5. Stretch & Fold #3: Uncover and repeat the stretch and fold procedure a final time. Cover and let the dough rest for another 1-2 hours, maintaining the warm temperature.
  6. Bulk Fermentation Check: After about 4-5 hours from dough mixing, the dough should have risen about 40%, appear bubbly, pull from the bowl sides, and feel elastic. If not, allow it another 30 minutes of fermentation at 78-80ºF.
  7. Cold Fermentation: Cover the bowl tightly with plastic wrap or a lid and refrigerate overnight (12 to 48 hours) to enhance flavor and dough strength. Alternatively, follow notes for same-day baking.
  8. Preheat Oven and Dutch Oven: Place a Dutch oven with its lid inside your oven and preheat to 500ºF. Leave it for 30 minutes to get thoroughly heated.
  9. Shaping: Remove dough from refrigerator and place on a clean surface. Using wet hands if sticky, gently shape dough into a tight round ball by dragging and folding it onto itself. Place the shaped dough onto a piece of parchment paper.
  10. Scoring: After Dutch oven preheating, score the top of the dough with one or two simple slashes using a sharp knife to allow expansion during baking.
  11. Baking: Carefully remove the hot Dutch oven from the oven using oven mitts. Remove the lid and lift the dough with parchment paper into the Dutch oven. Replace the lid and place in oven. Immediately reduce oven temperature to 450ºF. Bake for 25 minutes covered, then remove the lid and bake an additional 20 minutes uncovered. Bread is done when internal temperature reaches 205ºF.
  12. Cooling: Remove bread from Dutch oven and cool completely on a wire rack before slicing to preserve crumb structure and texture. Enjoy your homemade sourdough bread!

Notes

  • If you already have an active, ripe sourdough starter, you can skip the levain step and use it directly in the dough mixing step.
  • Bread flour is recommended for better gluten development, but all-purpose flour can be used as a substitute.
  • Maintain dough temperature between 78-80ºF during bulk fermentation for optimal yeast and bacterial activity.
  • The dough can ferment in the refrigerator from 12 up to 48 hours; the longer time develops more flavor and a better crust.
  • For same-day baking, reduce refrigerator fermentation and proceed to shape and bake accordingly.
  • Be cautious handling the very hot Dutch oven to avoid burns.
  • Simple scoring is recommended for this beginner dough to ensure proper oven spring without risk of deflating the loaf.

Keywords: Sourdough bread, beginner sourdough, homemade bread, fermentation, baking bread, Dutch oven bread