How to Make Sourdough Starter

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In order to bake sourdough bread successfully, you need to create your own sourdough starter, a bubbly best friend if you will. Here you'll find easy step by step instructions for making a sourdough starter from scratch. You'll find notes on what to do each day, as well as the type of flour to use and a handy troubleshooting guide - all essential for making a sourdough starter.

You can find my step by step instructions for how to make a sourdough starter (including a video) in the recipe card at the end of this post.

16oz jar of sourdough starter with a bubbly sourdough starter at its peak. You can also see a jar of flour in the background of the photo and a light blue cloth in the foreground.

What Is A Sourdough Starter?

A sourdough starter is a mixture of flour and water which is colonised with wild yeast and bacteria over a period of time. The mixture is maintained at room temperature while it's being established. Then it can be kept in the refrigerator once it's considered mature. Active sourdough starter is used to bake sourdough bread.

The most amazing part is that every single sourdough starter will be unique in its own way because it is dependent on many environmental factors unique to your home and environment (in fact many baker's have fun naming sourdough starter). Want to understand the science behind a sourdough starter, take a look at how a sourdough starter works. You might also find the history of a sourdough interesting.

A jar of sourdough starter with a blue rubber band showing that the starter has doubled. There is a spoon pulling the bubbly sourdough starter out of the jar.

What Equipment Will You Need?

You don't need any fancy equipment to make a sourdough starter, but you will need:

  • Clean Glass Jars - I recommend having at least 2 jars on hand (I prefer 16oz mason jars). Check out the sourdough starter jars I recommend. 
  • Rubber Band - is really handy to place on your jar so you can check when and if your sourdough starter is doubling.
  • Spatula or something to stir your sourdough starter with (a butter knife is a good stirring tool too)
  • Digital scale - this is essential for accurately measuring the flour and water for your sourdough starter.
  • Flour - all purpose flour or bread flour is fine to use. Having some rye flour or whole wheat flour on hand to strengthen your sourdough starter is also a good idea.
  • Water - good quality, clean water is essential to making a sourdough starter. Do not use distilled water or tap water full of chlorine (although filtered tap water is perfectly fine). If you're not sure of the quality of your water, use bottled water.
Flat lay of equipment necessary to make a sourdough starter. There is a digital scale with a blue plastic lid sitting on top, some blue rubber bands, a jug of water, a glass canister of flour, 2 clean jars and 2 jar spatulas.

How Long Does It Actually Take?

There's no doubt, making a sourdough starter takes time and a lot of patience! While it generally only takes about 7 days to create a viable sourdough starter, it will usually need more time before it’s truly ready for baking. You can check out my guide to understand when your sourdough starter is ready to bake with. The float test isn't always a reliable method to check your sourdough starter's readiness for baking. Just because it floats, doesn't mean it's ready to bake sourdough bread with.

The exact timing depends on your home environment, particularly temperature and conditions. Don’t be discouraged, your starter can still be used, but you’ll notice your sourdough loaves improve as it continues to mature. Many bakers find their starter becomes reliably “active” after around 14 days, though for some it can take several months. This is totally ok.

In the meantime, you don’t have to let your discard go to waste. Try making sourdough pancakes, sourdough waffles or even a quick sourdough discard sandwich bread. Just keep in mind that your starter should be at least 7 days old before you begin using the discard to bake with.

What Flour Should I Use to Make Sourdough Starter?

You can really use any type of plain, non raising flour made from a grain that you like for this sourdough starter recipe. Do not use self raising flour or bleached flour of any kind.

I have successfully created sourdough starters with plain flour (all purpose flour), bread flour and wholemeal spelt flour. I've also milled my own whole wheat berries and started a super active starter from this freshly milled whole-grain flour

Your starter will gather yeast not only from the environment, but also from the bacteria on the flour. Whole flours will have more of the "good stuff" on them, so will generally take off sooner. Read more about where the yeast in sourdough starter comes from.

A little rye flour added to your plain or bread flour will often help to get your starter bubbling sooner. It's like superfood for your sourdough starter!

How To Make a Sourdough Starter

Days 1-3

To create your sourdough starter, begin with 50g of flour and 50g of water in a clean jar on Day 1. Mix well, cover loosely, and leave it somewhere warm for 24 hours. On Day 2, simply stir the mixture to add oxygen, no extra flour or water needed. By Day 3, you’ll start a routine of discarding some of the starter and feeding the remainder with equal parts flour and water (50g each). This daily feeding encourages growth, bubbles, and even some interesting smells - completely normal signs that your starter is alive. If you notice a layer of liquid on top, called “hooch,” stir it back in when you feed.

Days 4-7

From Day 4 onward, your starter will need to be fed twice a day, around 12 hours apart. Continue discarding before each feed and watch as your starter becomes stronger, rising higher each time. By Day 5, you may want to mark your jar with an elastic band to track its growth. Keep this up through Day 6 and beyond. On Day 7, your starter will officially be a week old! While it may not be fully mature just yet, the key is consistency.

Keep feeding twice daily until it reliably doubles within 2–6 hours of a feeding. At that point, your starter will be strong enough to bake with. It will continue to improve as it matures over the coming weeks.

You will find a very detailed set of instructions for making a sourdough starter in the recipe card at the bottom of this post.

A 16oz jar of sourdough starter that has just been mixed together. It is being held on its side so you can see into the jar.

Tips For Success

  • Be patient! You won't create magic overnight, but with time and patience, you will make a thriving sourdough starter.
  • Temperature is important. Try to keep your starter between 24-28C (75.2-82.4F) to encourage fermentation.
  • Use a scale. Skip the cups and spoons and measure your flour and water accurately to give your starter the best chance.

Troubleshooting Your Sourdough Starter

While you are growing or developing your sourdough starter, you may have some issues or questions that arise.

Here are the most common questions that I get asked about sourdough starters. You might also like this comprehensive list of the most common sourdough starter questions I get asked.

  • Liquid forming in or on top of your starter - sometimes you may get some dark liquid forming on top of or in the middle of your starter. It's called hooch and is perfectly normal (it's actually a mixture of alcohol, water and byproducts of the fermentation process). Just pour it off if you can and feed as per normal (if you stir the hooch back in, you'll make your sourdough starter hav ea much stronger flavor). You'll find that your starter develops hooch when it is hungry. You can read about how to prevent hooch on sourdough starter.
  • My starter smells like nail polish remover - again it's perfectly normal, it's just hungry, so feed, feed, feed.
  • My starter isn't bubbling like the first few days - sometimes starters start out strong and then taper off a little between days 3-7. It's ok and may just be that the good bacteria is taking a little longer to win. Just keep feeding it consistently and you should see some action. Even if it's not really doing anything, the yeast will still need to be fed.
  • How do I keep my starter warm - it's not totally essential to keep to keep your sourdough starter warm, it will still work. It will just take a lot longer in a colder environment. Some ideas to keep your starter warm are inside the oven with the light on, next to the kettle, inside an Eziyo yoghurt maker or in a cupboard next to your oven. Check out this guide to keeping your sourdough starter warm.
  • Fruit Flies in my starter - your sourdough starter may attract fruit flies. They might have already been in your kitchen or they've heard there's new food! You can eliminate fruit flies in your sourdough starter using this guide.
  • Why is my sourdough starter forming a skin? - sometimes you'll find that your sourdough starter develops a crust or skin. It's totally ok and just means that it's getting a bit too dry on top. Try covering your sourdough starter with a jar lid that's not screwed on. Just scrape the skin off and feed as per normal.
  • My starter has grown mold - if your starter develops anything pink or orange or furry, it's definitely time to ditch it and start again. Make sure that your jar is clean, especially the sides of the jar. If the mold happens a few times, consider using a different flour as sometimes the mold spores come from the flour and not the environment. Believe it or not, my very first sourdough starter actually grew mold (I was heartbroken), but the experience made me stronger and allowed me to get a better understanding of how sourdough starter works.
  • Can I feed my starter with different flour? - If you run out of the type of flour you started with, it's ok to feed it with a different flour. If you just feed it once and then go back to the type you started with you shouldn't have any issues. If you are swapping the type of flour for all subsequent feeds then your starter may go through an adjustment stage as the levels of bacteria and yeast get used to their new food.
  • Can I cook with my discard straight way - no, you need to wait at least 7 days before you use your sourdough discard. It's not recommended to keep your sourdough discard before this time. When you're ready to start using your discard, you can use some of these sourdough discard recipes.
  • What water to feed my sourdough starter with? - water quality is extremely important to a sourdough starter. You should avoid many types of water including distilled and reverse osmosis. You can read this full guide to the water you should use for your starter.

What To Do If Your Sourdough Starter Isn't Ready to Bake With:

  • Continue to feed your starter with fresh flour and water twice a day for a few days until its consistently rising and falling. Remember that every starter will be different. It could take 14 days, it could take 28 days, but a consistent feeding schedule is key.
  • If you need a break pop it in the fridge for a few days. When you’re ready, take it out and start feeding it twice a day again for a few days. I generally don't recommend keeping an immature starter in the fridge, however if you need a break or you're going away, this is an option.
  • Try feeding your starter a different type of flour for a few feeds. Unbleached is best. Rye flour is always a good one - it's like superfood to your sourdough starter.
  • If you live in a cooler climate you might only need to feed once a day. Check to see when your starter is actually hungry (it will fall and be smelly).

Why Does Hydration Matter?

The instructions for this sourdough starter use equal amounts of flour and water to achieve a 100% hydration level for your starter. Majority of recipes (and all of my recipes) use a 100% hydration starter. If you need guidance on understanding hydration more, take a look at my guide to sourdough hydration for beginners.

As long as you always feed your starter equal amounts of flour and water, it will be at 100%. Even if you only have 20g of starter, and you feed it 50g of water and 50g of flour, you'll still have a 100% hydration starter.

When you are feeding your starter, you just need to make sure you always feed it more than it weighs itself. For example if you have 50g of starter in your jar, you'd want to feed it at least 50g of water and 50g of flour (a total of 100g) to make sure it has enough food.

Generally, the rule is 1:1:1 so 1 part starter, 1 part flour, 1 part water. But as long as you feed the starter more than it weighs, it will thrive.  This is called a sourdough starter ratio. A lot of the time when a sourdough starter isn't doubling consistently, it's because it's not being fed enough. Always remember the 1:1:1 ratio.

pasta madre is a good option if you want to build a lower hydration sourdough starter.

A mature sourdough starter will have lots of unique characteristics - it will look quite spongy and aerated.

Maintaining A Sourdough Starter

Once you have a thriving sourdough starter established, you'll need to continue to feed your sourdough starter regularly to ensure it remains healthy and active.

There are lots of ways to feed a sourdough starter and I always get asked what the best way to do it is (especially when using a clean jar every time). 

If you’d like to put your starter into a clean jar each time, then the easiest way to do it is to take 50g of your sourdough starter and place this into a clean jar. Feed the 50g of starter in the clean jar as normal (ie 50g of flour and 50g of water or whatever sourdough starter ratio you prefer). Creating less mess with your sourdough starter is always a good thing.

You could also use a bowl to pour the 50g of starter into and feed it and mix it in the bowl while cleaning your jar so you can pour it back in. This is a good method if you only have one jar to use.

You can either use the discard in the old jar or just wash out and have a clean jar ready for next time. It’s a good idea to transfer to a clean jar when the rim of your old jar gets really built up but you don't have to clean your sourdough starter jar as much as you think. If you’re feeding everyday, change your jar at least once a week.

How To Make Sure You Never Have to Start from Scratch

Once your starter is viable, it's a great idea to dry some of it out to ensure you never have to start again. These instructions on how to dehydrate your sourdough starter are your insurance policy to never having to start from scratch again. You'll simply be able to reactivate your dried sourdough starter if something happens to the starter on your kitchen counter.

Other alternatives to drying your sourdough starter include:

Using A Digital Kitchen Scale

I have provided the measurements for this starter in grams because it is easier to ensure accuracy (although sourdough starters are very forgiving and can tolerate eyeball measurements - as long as you're feeding your starter more than it weighs).

Many people come to my Facebook Group asking for help with their sourdough starter - and often the problem is that they are measuring using volume rather than weight (remembering a cup of flour does not weigh the same as a cup of water). Once they start weighing their ingredients accurately, their sourdough starters develop quickly and rarely have issues.

The benefits of weighing your sourdough ingredients vs using volume measurements cannot be ignored.

What to Bake with Your Sourdough Starter

When you are in the process of creating your starter (from 7 days onwards) you can start using your sourdough starter to make sourdough discard recipes like sourdough discard banana bread, sourdough blueberry buckle and sourdough discard lemon muffins.

Once you have a mature, active sourdough starter, you'll be able to use it to bake this simple sourdough bread recipe, as well as lots of other sourdough recipes like these sourdough dinner rolls, sourdough bagels and sourdough pizza dough.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use gluten free flour when making a sourdough starter?

Yes, you can use gluten free flour to make a sourdough starter. Brown rice flour is a great one to start with, or a store bought blend of gluten free flour can be helpful too.

How long does a sourdough starter take to peak?

When your sourdough starter is considered mature, it should peak in around 4 to 6 hours when fed a 1:1:1 ratio, but the time it takes to peak will be dependent on the ratio you use and the temperature you keep it at.

Are there different types of sourdough starter?

Yes there are lots of different types. Read about 10 different types of sourdough starter.

How To Make A Sourdough Starter - Pinterest Image
A jar of sourdough starter at it's peak. There is a jar of bread flour and a kitchen scale in the background of the photo.

Sourdough Starter Recipe

Kate Freebairn
Make a sourdough starter today - all you need is flour, water and time. Bake your own sourdough bread from home with no special equipment.
4.50 from 97 votes
Total Time 14 days
Servings 50 Grams of Starter
Calories 4 kcal

Video

Equipment

  • Clean Jar
  • Digital Scales
  • Silicone Spatula

Ingredients  

  • 50 g Flour Bread, All Purpose, Rye, Whole Wheat - whatever you'd prefer
  • 50 g Water Filtered

Instructions 

  • DAY 1:
    All you need for today is 50g of water and 50g of flour plus a clean jar.
    Mix the water & flour together in the jar, pop the lid on loosely (or a piece of paper towel & elastic band). Place the starter somewhere warm for the next 24 hrs.
    If your house is cold, pop it near the kettle or oven to keep it warm.
  • DAY 2:
    Once your starter is 24 hours old, you need to check on it and give it a good stir.
    You do not need to add anything today - just get some oxygen into your mixture and then recover and pop aside for another 24 hours.
    Your starter may already have some bubbles forming - this is a great sign. But it's also totally fine if it's not doing anything. Time is everything! Make sure it’s in a warm spot - you can find some ideas here.
  • DAY 3:
    On day 3 remove half of your starter and then add 50g of flour and 50g of water to the remaining 50g of starter in your jar.
    Mix it together with the end of a wooden spoon, being sure to get lots of oxygen into your mixture. Replace the cover and pop it away until tomorrow.
    See notes below for more info on using a clean jar vs same jar.
    Don’t worry if you keep checking it - it’s completely normal  It’s good to notice how it changes in shape, size and smell over the 24 hours.
    At this stage it's completely normal for it to smell really bad and to have developed a layer of liquid on top (this is called hooch). It might look like the water has separated from the flour but it's just telling you that it's hungry. Stir the hooch in when you feed your starter. It's also quite normal for it to double in size. Keep going - it will be fine 
  • DAY 4:
    Step 4 is to feed your starter in the same way as you did yesterday. Remove 100g of your starter and then add 50g of flour and 50g of water to the remaining 50g of starter in your jar. Mix it all together with the end of a wooden spoon. Replace the cover.
    You’ll need to do this twice today, around 12 hours apart. While your starter will be fairly forgiving, set a reminder on your phone if you think you’ll forget  it’s just like having a pet.
  • DAY 5:
    Step 5 is to feed your starter in the same way as you did yesterday. Remove 100g of your starter and then add 50g of flour and 50g of water to the remaining 50g of starter in your jar. Mix it all together with the end of a wooden spoon. Replace the cover.
    You’ll need to do this twice today, around 12 hours apart.
    It's a good idea at this stage to pop an elastic band around the jar you are using. Put the elastic band at the level of your starter when you feed it. This helps you to be able to see how far your starter is rising when it peaks.
  • DAY 6:
    Step 6 is to feed your starter in the same way as you did yesterday. Remove 100g of your starter and then add 50g of flour and 50g of water to the remaining 50g of starter in your jar. Mix it all together with the end of a wooden spoon. Replace the cover.
    You’ll need to do this twice today, around 12 hours apart.
  • DAY 7:
    YAY! Your sourdough starter is a whole week old. Keep feeding twice a day as you have been for at least 14 days.
    Now I know you want to get to baking bread … but just remember that the most important thing about this whole process is time. Your starter might be ready, but chances are it will need a bit longer to mature - generally 14 days.
    You need to keep feeding your starter the same way as you have been, twice a day (discarding before you feed) until it's consistently doubling within around 2-6 hours after you've fed it. Once it's consistently doubling after every feed you can try and bake with it. Your starter will keep maturing as you use it.
    For more information on how to know when your starter is ready, go here.

Notes

Method of Feeding - Clean Jar vs Same Jar:
It's up to you how you want to feed your starter - you can just pour half out and then put the flour and water directly into the same jar (you can clean the sides and rim with a silicone spatula). This will not be super accurate and may mean your starter takes longer to build - but it will still work!
You could also weigh the jar with starter in it, then remove 50g from there (keeping your starter in the same jar).
Alternatively you can place 50g of your starter into a clean jar and feed into that so you have a clean jar each time.
You'll find my guide to the best jar for sourdough starter here.
 

Nutrition

Calories: 4kcal Carbohydrates: 1g Protein: 1g Fat: 1g Saturated Fat: 1g Sodium: 1mg Potassium: 1mg Fiber: 1g Sugar: 1g Calcium: 1mg Iron: 1mg
Tried this recipe?Share your creation with us @ThePantryMama or tag #thepantrymama!

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4.50 from 97 votes (77 ratings without comment)

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176 Comments

  1. 4 stars
    I'm a a first time sourdough baker and this is my story so far. I read all the guides multiple times and bought the recommended Ball mason jars plus the King Arthur organic unbleached all purpose flour. Following the directions I mixed and tended my starter and on day three I started seeing a few bubbles. By day six I wasn't seeing bubbles any more and no rise at all so I started trouble shooting. I had used tap water allowed to stand for several days in a covered jar initially so my first adjustment was to try boiling the water but that didn't make any difference. Then I tried switching out the metal cover for a paper cloth and after that I just left the jar open but neither step helped. Actually, leaving the jar open resulted in a hard crust on the top so I probably won't do that again. Next I thought I was possibly overfeeding since my house is pretty constant at 70 degrees and it seemed possible I was just not giving the starter time to get going so I backed off the feeding to once a day - no joy. Note I was trying to just make one change at a time so I could tell what worked and next I switched to Bob's Mill organic rye flour and bam - the next morning it was more than doubled and full of bubbles. Woohoo! For the next feed I split the starter into two batches - one with 70 grams of starter and one with 50 grams. I fed both 1:1:1 but used the rye flour in the 70 gram batch and switched back to King Arthur for the 50 gram batch. Two objectives here - I wanted to have 200 grams of starter I could use to bake with a regular sized batch for maintenance. I also wanted to see if the King Arthur would do any good after the starer had become active. The next morning both had more than doubled and were full of bubbles. I'm guessing this is kind of a normal approach that wasn't really documented anywhere. If you're planning to bake when you split your starter at feeding time you use part of it to maintain the starter and the other part to build active starter for the next days baking. Maybe I only had to do that since the jars I bought max out at about 200 grams of active starter? Just mixed up the English Muffin dough and looking forward to seeing how it turns out later today. Question: short of buying a proofing box how do you set up a 75 degree environment for the starter? I tried on top of the kitchen cabinets and on top of the refrigerator but neither were anywhere near that warm. Bumping the house up to 75 would be expensive and miserable. Should I just settle for the idea the starter will have to live with 70 degrees or should a small proofing box be on my wish list?

  2. I love your website recipes, they helped me to build a new starter. I tried many ones and was not successful. I just have a question when I keep a starter on the counter do I continue feeding it twice a day same way when I was building a new starter?

  3. Hello Kate,
    I've just found your site as I was searching for info on how to start sourdough again in a hot and humid climate. Hello from neighbouring Vanuatu!

    I had success during lockdown and kept my starter going for more than 2 years until we went back to visit family in Europe. Since we've been back in Vanuatu I've tried starting again but failed all 4 times. I'm just reading now that I would need to adjust the water-flour ratio and also the feeding times, but not sure how to do it.

    My latest attempt started on Friday, with 2 different kinds of water, tap water and rainwater, boiled and cooled to room temp.
    On Saturday my rainwater one was already overflowing and had to clean my countertop, too bubbly and too runny.
    The tap water one I started Saturday morning just to be able to alternate clean jars between the two kinds.

    Would I need to just toss them both and start anew, with more flour and colder water, or is there a way to save these two?

    Thanks!

      1. Hello! Thanks for your support with learning how to start a new sourdough starter 🙂 When you say keep feeding it twice a day for 2-4 months, do you mean once it is active and in the fridge, or at room temperature to keep building up the yeast colonies?

        1. Yes feeding twice a day for 2-4 months. Your starter should not go in the fridge before this time. You want to make sure it's a mature starter before you start storing it in the fridge 🙂

    1. If there's a hooch present should I give it a stir before removing half and feeding? Is it ok to stir before removing and again after adding flour/water?

  4. Day 4 here for me - it's not rising between feedings. I am keeping it in the microwave with the door ajar so the light is on. I am using the correct flour. Is this normal for it not to be doubling in size at this point? Thanks!!!

  5. I found your blog and recipe after starting a starter. It was calling for 60 grams 60 grams and 60 grams. Can I change to your recipe with the starter I am already working on? I think I have been feeding incorrectly by feeding 60 grams instead of 120. Ahh, so much to learn!

  6. My starter, Jorge, is doubling or tripling with every feeding within about four hours. I'm only on day 7. Does that mean it's ready to use? Or, should I still keep up double feedings until at least day 14? Your content on started is amazing!

  7. My starter smelled like rotten vomit on day 3. It was doing really well the first 2 days, doubling in size and then on day 3 when I took the lid off the awful smell filled my whole house. Any idea on what that would happen?

  8. 5 stars
    After day 14 what is the feeding schedule , I can't seem too find it in your notes , I am sure i am just missing it , but i just want t make sure I get it right . my starter is looking so good right now , i do not want to mess it up I am so nervous to wreck it.

  9. 5 stars
    Hello!
    I was wondering what ratio of feeding you recommend for the starter in the evening if planning to bake with it the next morning? (I’m also at high altitude). Thank you!

  10. Hi, so is it OK if I add starter that I have in my refrigerator to starter that I have out on a warming mat it’s been out for like 10 days? I feed it every 12 hours and my other question is does the float test always work or is there another way of knowing that your starter is ready? I read so many different things.

  11. Is there a possibility to feed my sourdough starter once a day or does it have to be twice a day? I usually only have time in the evening so one feeding would be convenient.

  12. Do we need to adjust this recipe (or feeding times) in any way while trying to make the starter in a tropical environment? My room temp is currently 33C (91.4F) and humidity about 67%. Figured I'd just check on any tips on this before starting off. Thanks

    1. 33C is quite warm, so you will find that your starter is using up the flour and water you give it really quickly. I would start feeding it 1:2:2 instead of 1:1:1 and that should help the issue. All the best and I hope your starter works 🙂

  13. 5 stars
    This is a much better recipe than the one I have used previously. My starter is much more active. Thanks

  14. I am on day 5 and it hasn’t really done much. It has bubbled but no rise. My house is 70/71 degrees most of this time. Is this the issue?

  15. I’m on day 4 and forgot to feed twice today (I misread which day!) Will my starter be ok if i start feeding twice a day tomorrow?

  16. I have a probably stupid or ignorant question, why do I have to discard and not just feed and use the starter?

    1. Never a stupid question 🙂 So if you didn't discard, you'd end up with a MASSIVE starter! If you had 50g of starter and fed it 50g of water and 50g of flour then you'd have 150g of starter ... then you'd need 150g of flour and 150g of water for the next feed and so on. This post explains why you must discard your starter before each feed.

  17. What would the measurements be if I want to make two loaves? Do I just double everything to include the starter? Thank you!

  18. Hello! Love your site! I think I screwed up. On the second day I removed and added flour/water instead of just stirring. Will it recover or should I start over?

  19. If you have 100g of starter (I've had this starter for over 6 months, ive beenbaking Sourdoughbread since ive made my starter im fairlynew at this) and ive added 100g of flour and 100g of water, is this ratio okay? The last few bakes my dough has been very sticky and im wondering if my ratio is off on my starter

  20. I’m on day 7 and my starter is not rising at all. It rose one time and doubled in size on day 3 and hasn’t risen since. I started with whole wheat flour and then switched to unbleached bread flour. It’s a little chilly in our house so I’ve been keeping it wrapped in a towel in the pantry and warming up the water to room temperature. It doesn’t smell foul, just sort of sour and yeasty. It is bubbling, but not rising! I’m using Berkey water and keeping the same jar with the lid on. Am I doing something wrong or do I just need to wait it out? Thank you!

    1. I don't think you're doing anything wrong, starters just take time. Definitely use warm water if it's a bit cold and try to keep it warm consistently 🙂

  21. Help It wasn't even a full day when bright neon pink spots appeared on my starter. It doubled in size and has bubbles but these neon pink dots appeared like sprinkles. It also smelled a mixture of acetone and vomit. I'm pretty sure this counts as failed. Others had faint pink streaks almost orange in hue but the ones from my starter are almost like hot pink/neon pink so I was shocked at first lol.

    1. Pink spots or streaks indicate a bacterial growth (you can read more about this here).
      You definitely don't want to continue with a starter if it shows pink. Have you tried different batches of flour?

  22. I am on day 3 and a complete beginner to sourdough! You are so inspiring Kate! I can not wait to bake all of your delicious recipes! Thank you for being so detailed and explaining literally everything so well! ❤️❤️

    1. That's ok, just take 50g out the starter you have now and feed that into a clean jar 🙂 It will be fine 🙂 xx

  23. 5 stars
    Starter doubled days 1-2, but flat lined since day 3 (on day 6 now). I've read lots of your posts (thank you for all the data), and have decided to pull 50g of the original starter, and add 50:50 to hopefully kickstart again. My question is this:
    You mention from day 4 "Remove 100g of your starter and then add 50g of flour and 50g of water to the remaining 50g of starter in your jar. "
    Can I just interpret this as: remove all but 50g of starter, and add 50:50?