Dehydrating and Rehydrating Sourdough Starter (2024)

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Dehydrating and Rehydrating Sourdough Starter (15)

Dehydrating Sourdough Starter

The long days of summer are known for many things, but baking sourdough bread may not be at the top of the list. Hot kitchens and vacations complicate the maintenance of the sourdough starter you have worked so hard to develop. You don’t want to toss it or just let it sit in the back of your refrigerator all summer, slowly acidifying to the point of no return. But there is an easy way to put your culture in “suspended animation” and bring it back to life when the bread baking bug bites again.

Dehydrating is easy, convenient, and the perfect long-term storage solution. It's also a great option if you plan on transporting your starter or sharing with friends. Dehydrating sourdough starter creates a shelf-stable starter with microorganisms held in an inactive/dormant state. In dehydrated form, the sourdough starter will last years. We had great success bringing back to life a 2-year-old dehydrated starter stored in a jar at room temperature. Within 5 days it was fully active and used to leaven bread.

Even if you don’t plan to take a break from baking, having some dehydrated starter on hand is still a good idea. If something accidentally happens to your starter, you will have a backup on hand. All you need to do to bring it back to life is to feed it with flour and water for a few days.

Time & Temperature

Dehydrate at 88 °F / 31 °C for 4 – 6 hours

Equipment


  • Spatula or bowl scraper
  • Airtight container

Instructions

Before you begin:
Dehydrating sourdough starter will reduce the microbe population numbers, therefore it is best to start with a recently fed, healthy starter near peak activity. Doing so will set you up for better success when rehydrating. The more yeast and bacteria you start with, the more you are likely to be left with after drying, and the easier it will be to revive in the future.

Steps:
1. Spread the starter out on a silicone baking mat as thinly as possible. Use an offset spatula, bowl scraper, pastry brush, or any tool that will allow you to get a very thin layer. (Note: We found that 75 grams of 100% hydration sourdough starter spread very thinly covered one Brod and Taylor Silicone Baking Mat)

2. Place the silicone mat into the dehydrator and dry at 88 °F for 4 - 6 hours, or until completely dry. This may take more time depending on how thinly it is spread.

Dehydrating and Rehydrating Sourdough Starter (16)

Spreading a thin layer of starter on a silicone mat

Dehydrating and Rehydrating Sourdough Starter (17)

The dried starter in the dehydrator

Dehydrating and Rehydrating Sourdough Starter (18)

Close-up of dehydrated starter

3. Break the dried starter into small pieces or grind it into powder for storage.

4. Store in an airtight container (glass jar, plastic bag, plastic container) out of direct sunlight and direct heat. Optional - the dehydrated starter may also be kept in the refrigerator or the freezer.

Dehydrating and Rehydrating Sourdough Starter (19)

Jars of dehydrated sourdough starter sealed for storage

Dehydrating and Rehydrating Sourdough Starter (20)

A single jar of dehydrated sourdough starter sealed for storage

Rehydrating Sourdough Starter

Time & Temperature

4 - 6 days with the Sourdough Home or Proofer set to 78 °F / 25 °C

Equipment

  • or
  • or
  • Small bowl or a jar
  • Spatula

Instructions

A few days before you want to use your starter for baking, revive your dehydrated starter. Either the Sourdough Home or Folding Proofer can be used to keep the starter warm.

DAY 1

  • In a small bowl or jar, mix 5 grams of dehydrated sourdough starter with 15 grams of 80 °F water.
  • Allow the starter and water to sit for about 2 hours, or until the dried starter dissolves.
  • Stir in 15 grams of flour.
  • Cover and put in the Sourdough Home or Proofer at 78 °F overnight, or for 12 - 14 hours.

Dehydrating and Rehydrating Sourdough Starter (21)

5 grams of dried starter

Dehydrating and Rehydrating Sourdough Starter (22)

Dried starter dissolved in 15 grams of
water after 2 hours

Dehydrating and Rehydrating Sourdough Starter (23)

5 g starter, 15 g water, and 15 g flour
mixed together

DAY 2
There may not be visible signs of activity at this point.

  • Without discarding any of what is in the jar, stir in 10 g of flour and 10 g of water.
  • Return to the 78 °F Sourdough Home or Proofer.

DAY 3
You may begin to see signs of activity at this point such as small bubbles and a slightly sour aroma.

  • Without discarding any of what is in the jar, stir in 10 g of flour and 10 g of water.
  • Return to the 78 °F Sourdough Home or Proofer.

DAY 4

You should see clear signs of activity at this point. The starter will have risen since the last feeding and you will see bubbles.

Dehydrating and Rehydrating Sourdough Starter (24)

Day 4 before feeding: signs of activity
are showing, bubbles are visible

  • Discard all but 15 g of the starter.
  • To the 15 g of starter add 30 g of water and 30 g of flour.
  • Return to the 78 °F Sourdough Home or Proofer until the next day.

DAY 5
Your starter should be very active at this point. It will have doubled in size, be very bubbly, and smell sweet with just a hint of sourness. By Day 5 your starter will be very active. The time it takes to peak will have shortened from the previous days. In our experience, 7 hours after the day 5 AM feeding the starter had just about tripled in size.

IN THE AM

  • Discard all but 15 g of the starter.
  • To the 15 g of starter, add 30 g of water and 30 g of flour.
  • Return to the 78 °F Sourdough Home or Proofer.

IN THE PM

  • Check your starter around the 7-hour mark. If it has close to tripled in size, then repeat the same feeding as you did in the AM. If it has not yet peaked, let it go another hour or two before checking again.
  • At this point, your starter should be active enough to bake with. (We had great success making a levain from the starter at this point that was used in the dough the next day.)

DAY 6
The starter should be fully active at this point.

How does rehydrating sourdough starter compare to starting a sourdough culture from scratch?

Is there an advantage to rehydrating a dried sourdough starter rather than building one from scratch? Yes. A side-by-side comparison of rehydrating dried sourdough versus building a starter from scratch showed a noticeable difference in the time to mature. From our experiments, we found the rehydrated starter reached a vigorous healthy state much sooner than the starter built from scratch. The rehydrated starter was close to tripling in size by Day 5, whereas the starter from scratch has only risen very slightly. The starter from scratch lagged behind the rehydrated starter until the Day 13 mark when they were both rising and falling predictably and showing the signs of the same activity level. Conditions were kept the same for each starter- same seed amounts, same feeding, and same temperature.

Dehydrating and Rehydrating Sourdough Starter (25)

Day 4 comparison of starter made from scratch and rehydrated starter. The rehydrated starter is visibly more active.

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Day 5 comparison of starter from scratch and rehydrated starter in the morning before the daily feeding.

Dehydrating and Rehydrating Sourdough Starter (27)

Day 5 comparison of starter from scratch and rehydrated starter 7 hours after being fed in the morning.

Related Recipes

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Sourdough Milk Bread Rolls

Fruit Leather

Deja un comentario

9 comentarios

Do I need to add the water tray for this?

Carrie

Dehydrating and Rehydrating Sourdough Starter (39)

Carrie – No, you do not need the water tray when rehydrating your starter. We recommend keeping a lid on your starter jar to prevent it from drying out, rather than using the water tray.

Brod & Taylor

Thank you so much.

Bruce m hills

My husband and I are going to an inclusive plant based diet. Have you ever made sour dough with all whole wheat? Can you share the bread recipe.

Tammi Beames

Dehydrating and Rehydrating Sourdough Starter (40)

Tammi – Yes, you can certainly make sourdough with 100% whole wheat flour. We don’t have a recipe on our website, but we plan to work on it in the future. You can make any of our sourdough recipes using only whole wheat flour. You may need to add more water, and the finished loaf might have less volume, but it should still work just fine. A good place to start may be our Seeded Sourdough recipe. It has half spelt flour and half bread flour. You can use all spelt flour or replace the bread with whole wheat. If you have further questions, please don’t hesitate to reach out to us at contact@brodandtaylor.com. We are always happy to answer baking-related questions.

Brod & Taylor

When rehydrating a dehydrated starter, does the discard have to be thrown out like it does the first week when creating a starter from scratch, or can it be used in recipes?

Morgan Wilson

Dehydrating and Rehydrating Sourdough Starter (41)

Morgan – When rehydrating the discarded starter, you will begin discarding it on day 4. At that point, you can use the discard in a recipe rather than tossing it out. It will may not be strong enough to leaven bread (although it is possible it could be), but you can certainly use it in any sourdough discard recipe.

Brod & Taylor

How much dehydrated starter powder do you save per bag? Say I want to share my dehydrated starter with family and friends-how do I know how much powder to put in each bag?

Connie Wittmann

Dehydrating and Rehydrating Sourdough Starter (42)

Connie – You can out as much or as little as you’d like. Our rehydration instructions only call for 5g of dried starter so that amount would be enough to get a starter going. Of course, you may want to do a slightly larger amount so there is extra in case they need it- maybe 10 to 15g.

Brod & Taylor

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Dehydrating and Rehydrating Sourdough Starter (2024)

FAQs

Dehydrating and Rehydrating Sourdough Starter? ›

This process takes at least five days to active your dried sourdough starter before if can be used as an active leavener in a recipe. In a small wide-mouth jar, combine dried starter powder with 1 tablespoon of water. Let hydrate for 30 minutes.

How long does it take to activate a dehydrated sourdough starter? ›

This process takes at least five days to active your dried sourdough starter before if can be used as an active leavener in a recipe. In a small wide-mouth jar, combine dried starter powder with 1 tablespoon of water. Let hydrate for 30 minutes.

How do you make 100% hydration sourdough starter? ›

If you feed 1/2 cup of starter with 1 cup flour and 1/2 cup water, the starter will be at 100% hydration. If you feed your 1/2 cup of starter with 1 cup flour and 1/4 cup water, the starter will be at 50% hydration.

Why is my dehydrated starter not rising? ›

If your starter gets completely covered on top with bubbles but does not rise, it is healthy but may just be a wet mix. Try reducing the water in your next feeding and see if you have different results. Also, the type of flour you are using can impede the rise of your starter.

What happens if I over hydrate my sourdough starter? ›

If it's a little too much (10–20%), your starter will be a little sloppier than usual (with extra water) or a little tighter than usual (with extra flour). Extra water may cause the starter to get sour more quickly, where extra flour will slow that process down.

Why is my dehydrated sourdough starter not bubbling? ›

If a sourdough starter is not bubbly, it may require more frequent feedings. If feeding every 12 hours, increase to feeding every 8-10 hours, to make sure the culture is getting enough food. Check the temperature in the culturing area. Sourdough likes a temperature between 70°F and 85ºF, around the clock.

How do you wake up a dehydrated sourdough starter? ›

In a small bowl or jar, mix 5 grams of dehydrated sourdough starter with 15 grams of 80 °F water. Allow the starter and water to sit for about 2 hours, or until the dried starter dissolves. Stir in 15 grams of flour. Cover and put in the Sourdough Home or Proofer at 78 °F overnight, or for 12 - 14 hours.

What is ideal sourdough starter hydration? ›

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.

How do you know if sourdough starter is hydrated? ›

(Water (g) / Flour (g)) x 100 = Hydration Percentage

Make sure to take into account the amount of flour and water used in your leaven as well. For example, if you use half flour and half water in your sourdough starter, then a 100g leaven would contain 50g flour and 50g of water.

At what temperature should you dehydrate sourdough starter? ›

You definitely can dehydrate sourdough starter in a dehydrator. You will need to line the trays with parchment paper before you spread the starter on. You don't want to set the dehydrator above 98.6F (37C) as you will kill the bacteria. If you can set it lower than this, then do so.

Can dehydrated sourdough starter go bad? ›

Storing sourdough starter in the fridge is the best way to prevent it from going bad, especially with long periods between feeding. Or, you can dehydrate sourdough starter to keep it alive for extended periods of time (up to a year or longer) without needing to feed it at all.

Why is my sourdough starter not doubling in size? ›

If your sourdough starter won't rise anymore, reset it by putting 25 grams of starter in a jar and feed it 50 grams of flour and 50 grams of water. With this ratio, your starter should double in size in about 12-24 hours. If your starter has never risen before, follow a proven guide to create an active starter.

Why is my sourdough not doubling in size? ›

The most common issue is not kneading enough between rises. The yeast cannot float through the dough, so it has to just eat the flour near it. If it exhausts that supply, it's stuck. Kneading the dough a bit - and it doesn't take much - puts the yeast and bacteria back in touch with fresh food.

How to make a very active sourdough starter? ›

Keep sourdough starter warm.

Starter is most active at 75-85F. Find a warm location in your kitchen/house, use warm water during feeding, consider using a heating pad or proofing box, and monitor the temperature with a thermometer. If your schedule allows, let refrigerated starter warm up to room temp before feeding.

What is the GREY liquid on the top of my sourdough starter? ›

This liquid is called hooch and generally forms on the surface of your starter. It can sometimes form in the middle of your starter or even underneath. It looks like the flour and water have separated, however this liquid (hooch) is quite normal.

What does high hydration sourdough look like? ›

High hydration dough results in bread with a thin and crackly crust and a tender, evenly open crumb. When done right, the baked result is sublime: bread that's light and airy with a creamy texture and an impeccable mouthfeel.

How do you activate a sourdough starter fast? ›

To Activate Your Sourdough Starter:
  1. Place starter in a vessel. ...
  2. Add 45 g each of all-purpose flour and room-temperature water. ...
  3. Wait. ...
  4. When the starter has roughly doubled in volume, it's likely ready to go. ...
  5. If it doesn't float after 24 hours, add more flour and water (equal parts), stir again, and wait.
Nov 7, 2019

How many days does it take to start a sourdough starter? ›

How long does it take for a sourdough starter to be ready? In general, I've found it takes about 7 days from when you first mix flour and water to when a sourdough starter is ready to be used to bake bread.

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