If you’ve ever stood in front of a bubbling jar of flour and water wondering whether it’s supposed to smell like that, you’re in the right place. This guide walks you through everything you need to bake a genuinely good loaf of sourdough bread at home — no commercial yeast, no bread machine, no professional equipment required.
You’ll need about 15 minutes of actual hands-on work spread across a day, patience for the dough to do its own thing, and a starter that’s alive and bubbly. That’s it. Follow the steps below in order and you’ll end up with a loaf with a crackly, deep-gold crust and an open, chewy crumb — the kind that makes people ask what bakery you bought it from.
What Is Sourdough Bread?
Sourdough bread is bread leavened naturally, using a live culture of wild yeast and lactic acid bacteria instead of store-bought (commercial) yeast. That culture — called a starter — is simply flour and water left to ferment until it’s colonized by the yeasts and bacteria that are naturally present in flour and in the air around your kitchen.

Once a starter is active, a small portion of it is mixed into fresh flour, water, and salt to make the final dough. As the dough ferments, the yeast produces the carbon dioxide that makes the bread rise, while the bacteria produce lactic and acetic acid — the compounds responsible for sourdough’s signature tang.
How it’s different from regular bread:
- No commercial yeast. Regular bread typically rises in an hour or two using packaged yeast. Sourdough relies on wild yeast, which is slower but produces more complex flavor.
- Longer fermentation. Sourdough dough ferments for several hours to overnight, versus 1–2 hours for yeasted dough. This extra time is what builds flavor and structure.
- Natural acidity. The lactic acid produced during fermentation gives sourdough its tang and also helps the bread stay fresh longer without preservatives.
- A living process, not a fixed recipe. Your starter, your kitchen temperature, and the flour you use all shape the outcome slightly differently every time — which is part of why sourdough bakers get so attached to their process.
Sourdough is also one of the oldest forms of bread-making, predating commercial yeast by thousands of years. It’s most closely associated in the U.S. with San Francisco, where French bakers brought the technique during the Gold Rush — but naturally fermented breads exist in food traditions worldwide, from German pumpernickel to Ethiopian injera.
Why Bake Sourdough? (Is It Worth the Hype?)
If you’ve seen the hype online and wondered whether sourdough is really worth the extra effort compared to a quick yeasted loaf, here’s an honest breakdown of what you actually get for the time investment.
- Flavor and texture: The long fermentation develops a depth of flavor — tangy, slightly nutty, complex — that yeasted bread simply doesn’t have time to build. The crust turns deeply caramelized and crackly, and the crumb is chewier with an open, irregular structure.
- Digestibility: During fermentation, the bacteria and enzymes in sourdough break down some of the compounds in wheat, including phytic acid (which can interfere with mineral absorption) and certain proteins that some people find harder to digest. Many people who feel uncomfortable eating regular bread report tolerating sourdough better. It’s worth being precise here: this doesn’t mean sourdough is safe for anyone with celiac disease, and the broader scientific evidence for sourdough’s health benefits, while promising, is still considered limited by researchers — so it’s fair to describe these as likely, not guaranteed, benefits.
- Blood sugar response: Several studies suggest sourdough bread has a comparatively lower glycemic impact than bread made with commercial yeast, likely due to the organic acids produced during fermentation. Again, this varies by recipe and flour, so treat it as a general trend rather than a rule.
- No commercial yeast required: Once you have a starter, you never need to buy yeast packets again — useful if you bake often, and handy in a pinch if store shelves run low (as happened during the early pandemic, when home sourdough baking surged).
- Shelf life: The acidity in sourdough naturally inhibits mold growth, so a well-baked loaf tends to stay fresh at room temperature longer than a soft yeasted sandwich loaf.
- The honest trade-off: sourdough takes planning. You can’t decide at 4pm that you want fresh bread by dinner. But once you understand the rhythm — feed the starter, mix the dough, let time and temperature do the work — it becomes far less intimidating than it looks from the outside.
What You Need Before You Start

A sourdough starter
This is non-negotiable — sourdough bread cannot be made without one. You have three options:
- Make your own from just flour and water, left to ferment over 7–10 days with daily feedings.
- Get one from another baker. Sourdough communities are generous — a small spoonful of an established starter is often all you need to get going, and mature starters tend to be more reliable than brand-new ones.
- Buy a starter culture from a baking supplier, which arrives ready to feed and use within a few days.
Whichever route you choose, your starter needs to be active before you bake with it: bubbly, roughly doubled in size after feeding, and smelling pleasantly tangy (not harsh or like nail polish remover). If you’re unsure whether it’s ready, use the float test: drop a small spoonful into a glass of room-temperature water. If it floats, it’s ready. If it sinks, give it another feeding and check again in a few hours.
Ingredients
- Bread flour (higher protein content than all-purpose, which helps build a stronger gluten structure)
- Water
- Fine sea salt
- Active, bubbly sourdough starter
- Optional: a small amount of olive oil or another neutral fat, which softens the crumb and makes the dough more forgiving for beginners
Equipment
- A digital kitchen scale — sourdough is measured by weight, not volume, because precision genuinely affects the outcome
- A large mixing bowl
- A bench scraper (a butter knife works in a pinch)
- A banneton or proofing basket, or a cloth-lined bowl, for the second rise
- A bread lame, sharp razor, or small serrated knife, for scoring
- A Dutch oven, or one of these alternatives if you don’t have one:
- An enameled roasting pan with a lid (or a sheet pan to cover it)
- A cast iron skillet with an upturned roasting pan as a cover
- A clay baker or Romertopf (soaked first, per manufacturer instructions)
- A baking stone with a metal bowl placed over the loaf to trap steam
The pot matters more than people expect: baking sourdough in a covered vessel traps steam, which keeps the crust soft long enough for the dough to fully expand before it hardens. Skip this step and you’ll likely end up with a pale, tough crust and a loaf that doesn’t rise as much as it should.
How to Make Sourdough Bread — Step by Step

Step 1: Feed and activate your starter
Feed your starter 4–12 hours before you plan to mix your dough (timing depends on your starter’s strength and your kitchen’s temperature). It’s ready when bubbly, risen, and passing the float test described above.
Step 2: Mix the dough
In a large bowl, combine your active starter, water, and (if using) oil. Mix until the starter is fully dissolved, then add the flour and salt. Mix by hand or with a sturdy spoon until no dry flour remains — the dough will look rough and shaggy at this stage, and that’s completely normal.
Cover the bowl and let it rest for 30–60 minutes. This rest is called an autolyse, and it’s one of the most underrated steps in sourdough baking. During this time, the flour fully hydrates and gluten begins developing on its own — without any kneading. Skipping it isn’t fatal, but including it makes the dough noticeably easier to work with later.
Step 3: Bulk fermentation (the first rise)
This is where the dough does most of its rising. Cover the bowl and leave it somewhere warm (ideally 70–80°F / 21–27°C). The dough is ready to move to the next step when it looks puffy, has visibly expanded, and is close to doubled in size.
Timing depends entirely on temperature — this is the single most common point of confusion for beginners, so don’t rely on the clock alone:
| Kitchen temperature | Approximate bulk rise time |
| 80°F / 26°C (warm summer kitchen) | 2–4 hours |
| 74–76°F / 23–24°C | 4–6 hours |
| 68°F / 20°C (cool winter kitchen) | 8–12 hours |
Watch the dough, not the timer. A too-warm kitchen will finish bulk fermentation faster than the chart suggests; a drafty or air-conditioned room will slow it down. If your dough hasn’t budged after several hours, it’s more likely a temperature or starter-strength issue than something wrong with the recipe.
Step 4: Stretch and fold (optional, but recommended)
About 30–45 minutes into the bulk rise, you can strengthen the dough with a set of stretch-and-folds instead of traditional kneading. Wet your hand, grab one side of the dough, stretch it upward, and fold it over the center. Rotate the bowl a quarter turn and repeat until you’ve gone full circle. Do this once or twice more, spaced about an hour apart, during the bulk rise.
This step builds structure and traps more gas, which translates into a taller loaf with a more open crumb. It’s optional — some bakers skip it entirely with good results — but it’s an easy way to improve your first few bakes.
Step 5: Shape the dough
Turn the dough out onto a lightly floured surface. Working around the edge, fold sections of the dough toward the center, rotating slightly after each fold, until you’ve built a taut round shape (a boule). Flip it seam-side down and use your cupped hands to drag it in small circles across the counter, building surface tension on the outside.
For an oval loaf (a batard), gently roll and elongate the shaped dough into a football shape instead.
Step 6: Second rise (proofing)
Place the shaped dough seam-side up into a floured banneton or a cloth-lined bowl. Let it rise until puffy but not fully doubled — usually 30 minutes to an hour at room temperature.
Want to bake the next day instead? You can refrigerate the shaped dough overnight (a “cold retard”) for 8–14 hours, which develops deeper flavor and makes the dough easier to score. Just watch the clock here: leaving dough in the fridge for too long after a long bulk rise is the most common cause of an over-proofed, flat loaf. If your bulk fermentation already went long, shorten or skip the cold retard.
Step 7: Score the dough
Right before baking, make one confident, shallow slash (about ¼ inch / 6mm deep) across the top of the loaf with your lame or sharp knife. This isn’t decorative — it gives the trapped steam a controlled place to escape, so the loaf expands evenly (“oven spring”) instead of splitting randomly along its sides or bottom.
Step 8: Bake
Preheat your oven to 450°F (232°C) with your Dutch oven inside, if you’re preheating it (this is optional — many bakers get excellent results without preheating the pot).
Place the dough into the hot pot, cover with the lid, and bake for 20 minutes. Then remove the lid and continue baking uncovered at 400°F (204°C) for another 30–40 minutes, until the crust is a deep golden brown. The loaf is done when a digital thermometer inserted into the center reads 205–210°F (96–98°C).
Step 9: Cool completely before slicing
This is the hardest step for most beginners, and also the one people most often skip: let the bread cool on a wire rack for at least an hour before cutting into it. Sourdough continues cooking internally as it cools, and slicing too early traps steam inside, leaving you with a gummy, underdone-looking crumb even if the bread was perfectly baked.
Sample Baking Schedule
Sourdough fits naturally into a weekend rhythm. Here’s a simple timeline to plan around:
| When | What to do |
| Friday evening | Feed your starter and leave it out overnight |
| Saturday morning | Check that your starter is bubbly and active (float test); mix the dough |
| Saturday, all day | Bulk ferment at room temperature |
| Saturday evening | Shape the dough; either do a short room-temperature second rise and bake same day, or refrigerate overnight |
| Sunday morning | If refrigerated overnight: score and bake straight from the fridge |
If your starter lives in the fridge rather than on the counter, give it two feedings (morning and evening) the day before baking to make sure it’s fully active.
How to Adjust Sourness, Texture & Difficulty
One of the best things about sourdough is how adjustable it is once you understand the levers.
To make it less sour: keep your starter warmer and feed it more frequently (even twice daily), use a wetter starter, and shorten the overall fermentation time. A well-fed, vigorous starter produces a milder loaf.
To make it more sour: do the opposite — keep the starter cooler, feed it less often, use a stiffer (drier) starter, and let fermentation run longer, including an overnight cold retard.
To make it softer (less chewy, more sandwich-friendly): increase the water in your dough slightly, add a tablespoon or two of olive oil or another fat, and consider baking it in a loaf pan instead of free-form in a Dutch oven. This is one of the most common requests from home bakers who love the flavor of sourdough but find the classic crusty boule too chewy for everyday sandwiches.
If you’re finding the process overwhelming: it’s completely fine to use a smaller amount of starter alongside a small pinch of commercial instant yeast for your first few bakes. This isn’t “cheating” — it just guarantees a reliable rise while you’re still learning to read your dough and your starter’s strength. You can drop the commercial yeast once you’re comfortable.
Common Sourdough Problems & Fixes
| Problem | Likely cause | Fix |
| Dough won’t rise or rises very slowly | Kitchen too cold, or starter isn’t fully active | Move dough somewhere warmer (75–80°F); confirm your starter passes the float test before mixing |
| Dough over-proofed / bread came out flat | Bulk rise or second rise (including cold retard) went too long | Shape at around 65–75% risen if you plan to cold retard overnight; reduce fridge time |
| Dense, gummy crumb | Sliced too soon, underbaked, or insufficient fermentation | Cool for a full hour before cutting; confirm internal temp hit 205–210°F; check starter strength |
| Bread split unevenly on the side or bottom | Crust set too fast due to lack of steam, or scoring was too shallow | Bake covered for the first 20 minutes to trap steam; score with more confidence and slightly deeper |
| Starter has a layer of liquid on top | Normal — called “hooch,” a sign the starter is hungry | Pour off the liquid and feed more frequently |
| Starter is pink, orange, green, or fuzzy | Mold contamination | Discard the whole starter and begin again — do not attempt to salvage it |
| Crust is too hard to slice | Oven ran hot, or crust dried out during cooling | Reduce bake temperature slightly; wrap loosely in a cloth after the first hour of cooling |
| Dough is very sticky and hard to shape | Hydration too high for your comfort level, or kitchen is warm and humid | Reduce water slightly in your next bake; flour your hands and surface generously while shaping |
Sourdough Variations to Try Next
Once you’ve got a reliable base loaf down, sourdough opens up into a huge range of directions:
- Whole wheat or rye sourdough for a heartier, more mineral-rich loaf
- Sourdough sandwich bread, baked in a loaf pan for neater slices
- Discard recipes (pancakes, crackers, focaccia) that put your daily starter discard to good use instead of throwing it away
- Add-ins like roasted garlic, olives, herbs, cheese, or dried fruit, folded in after the autolyse
- Regional styles, from a tangier San Francisco-inspired loaf to milder European-style pain au levain
Sourdough Recipe Card
Sourdough Bread — Beginner’s Recipe
Prep time: ~30 minutes active | Rise time: 8–14 hours | Bake time: ~50 minutes | Yield: 1 loaf
Ingredients
- 150g active, bubbly sourdough starter
- 350g water, room temperature
- 25g olive oil (optional, for a softer crumb)
- 500g bread flour
- 10g fine sea salt
- Rice flour or cornmeal, for dusting
Instructions
- In a large bowl, whisk the starter, water, and oil together until the starter dissolves.
- Add the flour and salt. Mix until no dry flour remains; the dough will be shaggy.
- Cover and rest (autolyse) for 30–60 minutes.
- Cover and bulk ferment at room temperature until nearly doubled (see timing table above).
- Optional: perform 2–3 sets of stretch-and-folds, spaced about an hour apart, during the first half of bulk fermentation.
- Turn the dough out and shape into a round or oval loaf.
- Place seam-side up in a floured banneton. Proof for 30–60 minutes at room temperature, or refrigerate overnight (8–14 hours).
- Preheat oven to 450°F (232°C).
- Score the dough with one confident slash.
- Bake covered for 20 minutes, then uncovered at 400°F (204°C) for 30–40 minutes more, until deep golden brown and internal temperature reaches 205–210°F (96–98°C).
- Cool on a wire rack for at least 1 hour before slicing.
Storage: Keeps at room temperature, cut-side down or in a paper bag, for 3–4 days. Freezes well, sliced, for up to 3 months.
Frequently Asked Questions
Sourdough is leavened with a live culture of wild yeast and bacteria instead of commercial yeast, giving it a tangy flavor, chewier texture, and longer fermentation time than standard bread.
It may offer some advantages — including improved digestibility and a lower blood sugar impact — thanks to the fermentation process, but the overall scientific evidence for broad health benefits is still considered limited, so it’s best treated as a likely benefit rather than a guarantee.
Yes — but wild, naturally occurring yeast from the starter, not the commercial baker’s yeast used in most packaged bread.
Some people with non-celiac gluten sensitivity report better tolerance of sourdough, likely because fermentation breaks down some of the harder-to-digest wheat components. It is not safe for people with celiac disease, who require a certified gluten-free diet.
The lactic acid bacteria in the starter produce lactic and acetic acid during fermentation, which create the characteristic tang.
It should be visibly bubbly, roughly doubled in size after its last feeding, and pass the float test (a spoonful dropped in water floats rather than sinks).
Most beginner recipes use 100–150g of active starter per loaf, though amounts vary by recipe and desired rise speed.
Usually a temperature issue (too cold), an underfed starter, or a starter that’s still young and building strength. Feed more frequently and keep it somewhere warm.
It’s a layer of liquid that separates when the starter is hungry. It’s harmless — just pour it off and feed your starter.
Daily if kept at room temperature; once a week if stored in the fridge, with a couple of feedings to reactivate it before baking.
Warmer, more frequent feedings and shorter fermentation produce a milder loaf; cooler, less frequent feedings and longer fermentation (including a cold overnight retard) produce a sourer one.
It’s a rest period after mixing flour and water (before adding salt and starter, in some methods) that lets the flour fully hydrate and gluten begin developing without kneading.
No — the autolyse rest and stretch-and-fold technique build gluten structure without traditional kneading.
Bulk fermentation typically takes 4–12 hours depending on temperature; the second rise takes 30 minutes to an hour at room temperature, or 8–14 hours if refrigerated overnight.
Yes — it develops deeper flavor and makes scoring easier, but watch total fermentation time carefully to avoid over-proofing.
It’s the most reliable option, but a covered roasting pan, cast iron skillet with a metal cover, clay baker, or baking stone with a steam source all work.
Scoring gives the dough a controlled place to expand as it bakes, preventing it from splitting unpredictably along the sides.
Increase hydration slightly, add a small amount of oil or fat, and consider baking in a loaf pan instead of free-form.
Most often caused by slicing too soon, underbaking, or insufficient fermentation. Cool fully before cutting and confirm internal temperature reaches 205–210°F.
Usually over-proofing, a weak starter, or insufficient steam during the first part of baking.
Not fully, but you can salvage it by baking it as-is (expect a flatter, denser loaf) or reshaping gently and giving it a very short rest before baking.
About 3–4 days at room temperature, thanks to its natural acidity, which helps resist mold.
Yes — baked bread freezes well sliced for up to 3 months. Shaped, unbaked dough can also be frozen, though timing and rise behavior after thawing will vary.
Many bakers report success without major recipe changes, though fermentation may move faster; it’s worth baking a test loaf as-is first to establish a baseline before adjusting.
Yes — divide the dough evenly after shaping and reduce the total bake time by about 10–15 minutes.
Bread flour, thanks to its higher protein content, builds a stronger gluten structure than all-purpose flour, though all-purpose can be substituted for a slightly softer result.


