The Old Faithful - a Country Style Sourdough Recipe (2024)

I call this the Old Faithful because it’s reliable and produces an excellent sourdough loaf. We all have reliable recipes that keep us coming back time and time again to use them, this one is mine. I hope it becomes a staple in your sourdough baking recipe collection too.

Remember that the video covering the entire step-by-step process is available to watch at the bottom of this recipe.

Contents

  • The vitals
  • The equipment used
  • How I schedule this bake
  • Making the levain
  • Making the main dough
  • Bulk fermentation and stretching
  • How do I know when the fermentation is complete?
  • Shaping the dough
  • Proofing the dough
  • Baking
  • Watch the tutorial on this blog

The vitals

This recipe produces a dough that weighs eight hundred grams at seventy-eight per cent hydration. I use ninety per cent strong white bread flour with a protein content of 13.2%, and ten per cent wholewheat flour.

The equipment used

I’m using my trusty bench scraper and bowl scraper to keep my mixing bowl and surfaces clean and reduce waste.

You’ll need a mixing bowl or a large pot for mixing the dough.

Digital scales are a must for accurately weighing the ingredients. I’m using the: My Weigh KD-8000 digital bakers scale.

This 800g dough is designed to fit an oval proofing basket measuring 24cm (L) x 12cm (W) x 8cm (H). You can use a larger basket but this may not fit into a smaller basket.

You’ll need a baker’s lame, razor blade, or an extremely sharp knife to score the dough. I’m using my wire monkey UFO Zero bakers lame to score the dough, in my opinion, these are hands down the best lames on the market.

I use a baker's peel but isn’t necessarily needed you could use a cookie sheet tray or a stiff piece of cardboard to make your own peel. I make super budget-friendly peels from off-cuts of plywood from my local DIY store.

I’m using a lava rock baking stone to bake the bread. You could use a dutch oven, a challenger pan, or bake directly on the oven shelf.

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How I schedule my time to bake this loaf

My timeline is based on a kitchen temperature of twenty-eight degrees Celsius (82F), your timeline will slow down or speed up depending on the temperature in your kitchen.

I make my levain at 22.00 the night before making the dough. The next morning around 08:00 when my levain is ripe or mature I mix the main dough.

After mixing I laminate the dough three times with a thirty-minute interval in between. The dough takes a total of five and a half hours to bulk ferment. The dough is shaped and placed in a basket and left for one hour to proof at room temperature before being placed in the fridge overnight and baked the next day.

Making the levain

Ingredients

21g strong bread flour
21g water
3g Ripe sourdough starter

Mix all of the ingredients and leave the levain to ferment. It is ready to use when it has increased significantly in size. I like to use my levain when it smells of green apples and bananas with a pleasant sour note, similar to sour milk. I’m looking for a fruity sourness and use it before it smells like vinegar.

I use a relatively small percentage of ripe sourdough starter to make my levain. The ratio works well for me because it will be ripe and active the next morning when I am ready to bake. The amount of starter you use to make your levain will depend on how quickly you want it to be ready.

Whichever feeding ratio you choose you will need forty-five grams of ripe levain at one hundred per cent hydration to make the main dough.

Making the main dough

Ingredients

378g strong white bread flour (mine has a protein content of 13.2%)
45g wholewheat flour (I use organic stone-ground)
325g Water (room temperature)
45g levain (the ripe active levain we made from the instructions above)
8g sea salt (I use fine pure sea salt)

Add the water to a mixing bowl followed by the levain. Give the levain a quick stir to break it up. Don’t worry about trying to dissolve the levain completely as the fermentation process will take care of that.

Add the strong white bread flour and the wholewheat flour to the mixing bowl and sprinkle the salt on top.

Bring the mixture together with a spoon until it becomes too stiff to stir easily. At this point, wet your hand and continue to mix, squeezing the ingredients together. Make sure you clean any of the dry bits off the side of the bowl.

After a minute or two, the ingredients should be well mixed. The aim isn’t to create a smooth dough at this point, it’s to make sure everything is well combined and there are no dry pockets of flour.

Cover the bowl and leave it on your work surface at room temperature to rest. Don’t overly stress about time, anywhere between fifteen to thirty minutes will be enough time for the flour to hydrate and make mixing easier. I find the sweet spot is thirty minutes.

Using a bowl scraper turn the dough out onto your work surface and make sure you clean all of the dough from the inside of the bowl.

Mix the dough by kneading it to make sure that all of the ingredients are well distributed. This is complete when you can’t feel any lumps in the dough and it feels a similar texture throughout. It does not need to be silky smooth as the upcoming stretching and the long fermentation period will take care of that.

Cover the bowl and leave it on your work surface to bulk ferment.

Bulk fermentation and stretching

The dough will now be left to ferment. During this time the quality and handling of the dough will improve. It will also become more acidic which will produce that wonderful sour taste that sourdough is so famous for.

The water and proteins in the flour will now work together producing a strong dough that is capable of trapping the gas produced during fermentation. We’ll give it a helping hand by performing three sets of stretching on the dough.

Thirty minutes after kneading turn the dough out onto the work surface. The dough is gently stretched out into a large square or rectangular shape being careful not to tear it. Spraying the worktop with a little water will help the dough from sticking.

Once you’ve pulled the dough into a rectangle take one side of the dough and fold it over so that it covers the centre third of the dough. Now repeat with the other side.

Take the bottom edge of the dough and fold it over the centre third, and then repeat by folding the top section over the centre.

You will be left with a small square or rectangle. Fold the corners into the centre and turn the dough over on the worktop. You will now have a rough dough ball which you can rotate to create a tighter ball.

Place it back in the bowl and leave it for another thirty minutes before performing the second set. Repeat once more so you have completed three sets of stretching.

This method is called laminating but if you prefer you can leave the dough in the bowl and simply pull it up folding it over itself. As long as the dough is sufficiently stretched and not torn you will achieve a smooth textured dough and help build strength.

Leave the dough to finish the bulk fermentation.

How do I know when the fermentation is complete?

Ultimately the dough needs to ferment long enough to develop a strong gluten network and build flavour. But we need to make sure that the dough isn’t left for too long as it will over ferment, and the dough will become unmanageable and lose its strength.

You can judge the bulk fermentation by the amount the dough increases in volume. For this recipe, I leave the dough to ferment until it has increased by seventy-five per cent of its original size.

This took five and a half hours at twenty-eight degrees Celsius (82F). Your dough may be quicker or take longer to reach the same size. Temperature, the levain and the flour will all have an impact, so use my times as a guideline and keep an eye on the progress.

Shaping the dough

This dough is relatively soft and at higher temperatures, I like to give the dough a quick pre-shape to tighten it up a little and give it a bit of strength.

I turn the dough out onto the work surface using a little flour to stop it from sticking, don’t use too much, a little goes a long way.

I make sure that the surface of the dough that was facing upwards in the bowl is turned over and ends up facing downwards and touching the worktop, and the rough side is facing upwards.

I fold the bottom of the dough into the centre and then fold the top over the centre. Repeat with each side and turn the dough over. The goal is to create a firmer dough ball without degassing it.

Leave the dough to rest uncovered on the bench for fifteen minutes.

Now it’s time to shape and place the dough in the basket. Sprinkle a little flour on the worktop and use your scraper to push it under the dough while releasing it at the same time.

Turn the dough over. Fold the bottom over and stick it just under the centre of the dough. Pull the two sides of the dough outwards and fold them over the centre making sure they stick. Roll the top edge of the dough over to create a large cylinder. Pinch the seam closed where the dough meets.

Be light-fingered with this process the aim is to retain as much gas in the dough as we can.

Dust the dough with rice flour and place it into the sourdough basket with the seam facing upwards. Place into a plastic bag to stop the dough from drying out.

Proofing the dough

The dough can now be left to sit in the basket and take its shape. This period also enables the dough to regain any of the gas it lost during shaping so that it is optimum for baking.

At twenty-eight degrees Celsius, my dough took one hour to proof before I placed it into the fridge for an eighteen-hour cold-proof.

Remember that it will continue to proof after it is placed in the fridge as the dough temperature takes several hours to drop.

I use the “poke” test to know when the dough is ready to go into the fridge. I push the dough to see how inflated it is and how strong the dough feels. This takes a bit of practice but essentially you want your finger to push easily into the dough and 3-4 seconds for the impression to push back out.

The dough should be covered in the fridge and can be left until baking the next day.

Baking

I preheatmy oven to two hundred and twenty degrees Celsius (430F) with my baking stone placed on the lower third shelf.

I use a laser thermometer to see when the stone hits two hundred and ten degrees Celsius (410F). Now I’m ready to bake.

I remove the basket from the fridge and take it out of the plastic bag. I sprinkle a little flour onto the top surface of the dough and turn it over so the dough drops lightly onto my bread peel. I score the dough with a baker's lame so it can rise and open easily in the oven.

The dough is slid onto the baking stone and I cover it with a large pot to maintain a moist baking environment.

The sourdough bakes for twenty minutes covered with the pot and a further twenty-five minutes uncovered.

I leave my dough to cool completely to room temperature before slicing.

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Watch the "Old Faithful" video

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The Old Faithful - a Country Style Sourdough Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is the secret to sourdough bread? ›

The secret to sourdough is simple: water. The more water you add to your dough will affect how open the crumb (bigger holes and softer texture) will be once it's baked.

How to tell if your sourdough starter is bad? ›

Typical signs of food spoilage and mold include pink, orange, or green colors, white fuzzy spots, or sometimes areas that are darker with white areas on top. If you see any of these signs, I would recommend throwing your starter away and creating a new one.

What makes the best sourdough starter? ›

There is no single best ratio, but I've found a ratio of 1:5:5 fed twice daily at 12-hour intervals to produce a sourdough starter that's strong and healthy. This ratio corresponds to 20% ripe starter carryover, 100% water, and 100% flour (a mix of whole grain rye and white flour) at each feeding.

What is the secret to fluffy sourdough? ›

Keeping the lid on for the first part of baking allows steam to expand between the gluten fibers to rise the bread and create a fluffy loaf. Step 4: Remove the lid and bake for an additional 12-14 minutes or until the crust is crispy and golden brown. Once you take the lid off, the bread likely won't rise anymore.

What makes sourdough taste better? ›

The key taste compounds include salt, which is directly added to the dough, as well as acetic and lactic acid, produced during fermentation. After these experiments, they applied a technique called “unified flavor quantitation,” which was previously developed by Hofmann's team, to the sourdough bread.

Do you have to discard sourdough starter every time you feed it? ›

With each sourdough starter feeding, you'll be discarding some to avoid it from becoming overly acidic. Most will compost or trash this discard, but you can save it and use it in other recipes!

What kind of flower is best to make sourdough bread? ›

The best flour blend for creating a new sourdough starter is 50% whole-meal flour (whole wheat or whole rye) and 50% bread flour or all-purpose flour. I recommend a 50/50 mix of whole wheat flour and bread flour.

Does sourdough need to rise twice? ›

A 24-hour rise time will produce much more sour bread than a 4-hour rise time. If using a shorter rise period, 4-12 hours, a second rise is optional. If desired, punch dough down, reshape, and proof a second time.

Can I leave my sourdough starter out overnight? ›

Can I leave my starter out overnight after feeding it? Yes, if you have just fed it. Since the night is rather long, feed it in a 1:4:4 ratio so that's not over fermented by the morning. If for example you use a 1:1:1 ratio, the starter would have peaked in the middle of the night, and collapse by the morning.

How do I know if I killed my sourdough starter? ›

Keep feeding your starter, and you'll see normal activity (bubbles) return in a few days. If your starter has a bit of dark liquid on top, it's not dead! It simply means it's hungry and that it's time to feed it. Unless your starter has a pink or orange hue or is beginning to mold, you probably haven't killed it yet.

What flour is best for sourdough starter? ›

The best flour for feeding a sourdough starter is: All Purpose Flour (Plain Flour) Bread Flour. Whole Wheat Flour (Wholemeal Flour)

What are three top tips when making sourdough starter? ›

Top 10 Sourdough Starter Tips for Success
  1. Maintain a Schedule to Feed your Sourdough Starter. ...
  2. Know How to Store a Sourdough Starter. ...
  3. Maintain a Small Sourdough Starter.
  4. Use Sourdough Discard for Less Waste.
  5. Know How to Revive a Sourdough Starter. ...
  6. Measure your Ingredients by Weight.
May 21, 2022

Does sourdough starter get better the older it is? ›

While the age of your starter won't make your bread any better — turns out, only good sourdough practices can do that — it's a link in the long legacy of sourdough, one of the oldest forms of baking that exists. Whether your starter is a week or a decade old, you can become part of that lineage as well.

What is the secret behind the sour of sourdough bread? ›

First, the production of lactic acid (as well as acetic acid) lowers the pH of your starter to around 3.5 (and as high as 5). This lowering of pH results in that characteristic sour flavor of sourdough. Second, a low pH eliminates unwanted pathogens like enterobacteria or Staphylococcus.

What gives sourdough bread its unique flavor? ›

Sourdough bread's signature taste comes from friendly bacteria and yeast, which produce flavorful lactic and acetic acids in rising bread dough.

What makes sourdough bread better than other bread? ›

Sourdough relies on a mix of wild yeast and lactic acid bacteria, rather than baker's yeast, to leaven the dough. It's richer in nutrients, less likely to spike your blood sugar, contains lower amounts of gluten, and is generally easier to digest than bread made with baker's yeast.

What not to do with sourdough? ›

Here are the big errors to avoid when working with sourdough.
  1. You Bake Too Soon. ...
  2. You Use Unfiltered Tap Water. ...
  3. You Use Water That Is Too Hot or Too Cold. ...
  4. You're Impatient. ...
  5. You Don't Autolyse Your Dough. ...
  6. You Don't Let Gluten Develop Properly. ...
  7. You Don't Let the Bread Proof Long Enough. ...
  8. You Don't Form the Bread Correctly.
Apr 1, 2022

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