Cook's Illustrated

Getting Started with Sourdough Starter

Asourdough starter—also called a culture or levain—is a mixture of flour, water, and microorganisms that flavors and leavens bread. Wild yeasts and bacteria are naturally present on wheat kernels and on flour ground from them, but it takes time and proper care for them to multiply and transform the initial mixture into a bubbly, boozy-scented leavener.

First, you mix flour and water and let the mixture sit for a day or longer until the dormant microorganisms on the flour wake up. After that, you “refresh” (or “feed”) the nascent culture on a daily or twice-daily basis by moving a portion of it to a new mixture of flour and water and discarding the remainder. (Don’t worry about waste—you can save the leftover portion as backup and for

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Cook's Illustrated

Cook's Illustrated5 min read
The Accessible Luxury of Tinned Fish
Some foods are practical and pantryfriendly, and some make you feel like you’re treating yourself to a refined delicacy, but it’s the rare food that can do both. Enter tinned fish. Invented in the early 1800s as a protein source for Napoleon’s armies
Cook's Illustrated4 min read
Cold-Start Chicken Breasts
In 2020, my former colleague Andrew Janjigian delighted carnivores with his cold‑start searing technique: Place a pair of rib eyes in a dry, unheated skillet; set it over high heat; and flip the steaks regularly as they sizzle in their own fat. The m
Cook's Illustrated5 min read
Equipment Corner
The ThermoWorks Thermapen ONE is our favorite instant-read digital thermometer. Its backlit display, durable construction, and quick and accurate temperature readings make it a reliable choice for any cooking project. ThermoWorks also sells the Therm

Related