All you need to know about sourdough feeding ratios - All you knead is bread (2024)

I am back with this series of do’s and don’ts of sourdough starters to help you understand the science behind them so you can make more informed decisions in a time where everyone seems to have “the ultimate recipe and process” for sourdough. Spoiler alert: sourdough is not a one-fits-all kind of thing. This week’s topic is: feeding ratios.

Last time we talked about the age of our sourdough starter and why claims that a starter not working because it was too young were probably wrong, and the issues had more to do with how often the sourdough starter was being fed.

After learning how often we should feed our starter, the next question is “How much should I be feeding my starter?” So let’s dive into Feeding Ratios!

All you need to know about sourdough feeding ratios - All you knead is bread (1)

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What is a feeding ratio?

Feeding ratio refers to the proportions of sourdough starter, water, and flour we use to refresh our starters. Typically, everything is based on the amount of starter. I’m sure you’ve seen 1:1:1 ratios, or 1:2:2, or 1:10:10… It’s usually given as starter:water:flour, so a 1:1:1 ratio means 1 part starter, 1 part water, and 1 part flour. 1:2:2 means 1 part starter, 2 parts water, and 2 parts flour, and so on.

What happens if I change the feeding ratio?

Nothing, just that your starter will peak at different times. You can adjust feeding ratios to your needs and to whatever your starter needs. In the first post of this series, we talked about how a 1:1:1 ratio might be more convenient if you’ve been feeding your starter too often. But maybe your kitchen temperature and overall conditions allow you to keep a starter at room temperature and feed it at a 1:1:1 ratio once or twice a day. Or maybe you live in a very warm and humid area, where a 1:1:1 ratio is too limited and the starter peaks too fast. If that’s the case, you will probably benefit from a 1:10:10 ratio.

If you like to keep your starter in the fridge, maybe you prefer to refresh it a few times before baking and, in this case, you can use the standard 1:2:2 ratio. Maybe you prefer a “no discard approach” and just take a little bit of starter from your jar and feed it at a 1:10:10 or 1:15:15 ratio to end up with the exact amount of starter you will use on your recipe.

Ideal feeding ratios

The ideal feeding ratio is the ratio that works for your schedule and/or needs is the ideal ratio for you. And this ratio can change at any time. Sourdough is alive, but we have a certain control over how fast or slow we want it to grow.

For a given temperature

The smaller the ratio, the faster it’ll grow because the amount of food for the bacteria is more limited. A larger ratio will result in a starter that will take its sweet time to peak.

Example 1: You have a few slow hours in the middle of the day and it’s the only moment you can prepare your dough. Then feed your starter a 1:1:1 ratio early in the morning and it’ll be ready around the time you’re free.

Example 2: You are having an extremely busy week. You can only prepare your dough tomorrow sometime during the morning but you only have time for your starter today. Then maybe a 1:10:10 feed today in the afternoon will work.

For a given feeding ratio

The higher the temperature the faster your starter will peak. And the lower the temperature, the longer it’ll take to peak.

Example 1: It’s winter and your kitchen is usually at around 66-68F (19-20C), you can feed your starter a 1:2:2 ratio on Friday evening and it’ll be ready in the morning. You can start preparing your dough on Saturday morning.

Example 2: You live in a very hot and humid place. Maybe higher feeding ratios (plus using fridge cold water) is what works for you. Feed your starter in the evening at a 1:15:15 ratio and it’ll be ready the next morning, or feed your starter at a lower ratio in the morning, and you can probably start your dough early in the afternoon.

All these are examples, of course, you know your starter better than anyone and can probably anticipate how it’s going to behave. But what if you are new to sourdough? Then let’s experiment a bit!

All you need to know about sourdough feeding ratios - All you knead is bread (2)

How to get familiar with your sourdough starter

If you don’t know your starter very well, you need to record its behavior for a little while. For that follow these simple steps:

  1. Kitchen temperature: Record your kitchen temperature, I usually just follow my house thermostat, but you can use any thermometer.
  2. Feeding ratios: Based on your temperature choose a feeding ratio. Unless you live in extreme cold or heat conditions, I would go for a 1:2:2.
  3. Time to peak: Record the time of the feeding and keep an eye on your starter until it peaks, then record that time and calculate how long it took.

Anything from 8-12h cycles using a 1:2:2 ratio falls under normal behavior for my starter. During winter it grows slower, during summer it grows faster. My house has AC, in winter we keep it from 66-69F (19-20C), and during summer we keep it 70-74F (21-23C), but when we are not home we let the temperature increase a bit, so during North Carolina’s hot summer days, I sometimes use 1:10:10 feeding ratios.

Can I adjust the water?

A typical liquid sourdough starter is a 100% hydration dough. But sometimes it’s interesting to play with the hydration levels of our starters. For example, if you’re working with Lievito Madre, you know it is a starter at 40% hydration (ish). Dryer starters tend to be a bit sweeter and less acidic and they’re fabulous for sweet breads. But they do take a bit of extra elbow grease to maintain. On the other hand, liquid starters at 100% hydration are very easy to maintain. But can you use 85% hydration? or 125%? of course! You’ll have to calculate how much water you need.

How do I calculate the water for feeding ratios?

If you want to experiment with other water contents in your starter, you need to know just a basic concept. If you want LESS water than flour, you will have to multiply the flour content by 0. something and if you want MORE water than flour you will have to multiply by 1.something

Example 1

If you want a starter at 75% hydration, then you decide the ratio of starter and flour, calculate the flour, and finally, multiply that amount by 0.75

Let’s start with a 1:3 ratio of starter:flour and 10 g of starter. This means we have 30 g of flour (3 times the amount of starter). To calculate the water we multiply the flour by 0.75:

30 x 0.75 = 22.5g of water

Example 2

If you want a starter at 125% hydration, then you decide the ratio of starter and flour, calculate the flour, and finally, multiply that amount by 1.25

Let’s start with a 1:5 ratio of starter:flour and 15g of starter. This means we have 75 g of flour (5 times 15g). To calculate the water we multiply the flour by 1.25:

75 x 1.25 = 93.75g of water

(you can round it up to 94 or 95 and it will be fine)

Can I use volume instead of weight for feeding ratios?

Working with weights allows you to be more precise and it makes the process easier to repeat. Weights are much more accurate to measure than volume. At least with regular home equipment. If you’re new to sourdough, bread baking, or baking in general, I would strongly suggest you use weight instead of volume. This way you’re already avoiding possible differences between feedings that could potentially lead to different outcomes. You will have a better picture without doubting if the differences you see come from off feeding ratios or something else. If you want an affordable scale I use THIS ONE, I’ve used it for many years and I think I’ve changed the battery once. Baking doesn’t need to be expensive!

With this being said, you do what works for you, if you are comfortable using volume measurements, use them. Just try to be as precise as possible (Can you tell I’m a scientist? 😉 )

How do feeding ratios work with other flours?

As far as bacteria go, the same! However, different flours make different doughs so you might not see your starter peak as a wheat starter would. You will have to find how the peak looks for different flours. Also, some flours absorb a lot more water than others, and a 100% hydration starter might look very different depending on the flour.

All this might seem a bit complicated but I assure you that once you start, you’ll understand right away and you will start to understand your starter much better!

One last thing about sourdough starters


You don’t have to put yourself in a box and follow exactly what others are doing. Use the feeding ratio that works for you, the hydration that works for you, and the measurements that work for you (volume vs weight). The idea of this series of posts is to give you enough information so you can make an informed decision that will work for your particular needs. Don’t be afraid of experimenting!

Here are a few recipes that you can try if you’re starting in the art of sourdough!

Sourdough burger buns (cookout time is here!)

Sourdough marble rye bread (one of the blog favorites!)

Sourdough Challah (another favorite!)

Happy Baking!

Maria

This post was posted in The science corner

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All you need to know about sourdough feeding ratios - All you knead is bread (2024)

FAQs

What are the feeding ratios for sourdough? ›

So, a sourdough feeding ratio is the relative amount (referring to weight) of old sourdough compared to fresh flour and water. Typical feeding ratios are 1:2:2 or 1:3:3 (old sourdough: fresh flour: water). However, even extreme ratios like 1:50:50 would still work.

What is the ratio of starter to flour for sourdough bread? ›

If a recipe calls for 120 grams of levain, you can feed a 1:10:10 ratio (6 grams starter, 60 grams flour and 60 grams water), a 1:1:1 ratio (40 grams starter, 40 grams flour and 40 grams water) or any ratio you wish. It will take more or less time depending on your temperature and feeding ratio.

What is the best hydration ratio for sourdough bread? ›

I typically like to stick to the 70 to 75% range. This gives me a nice open crumb without being to wet of a dough that it is impossible to work with. Should sourdough starter be 100% hydration? Sourdough starter can be at right at, above, or below 100% hydration.

What is the formula for feeding sourdough starter? ›

To give it a feeding, I discard the ripe sourdough starter in the jar down to 20g, add 70g fresh all-purpose flour, 30g whole rye flour, and 100g water. Then, I give it a thorough mix until everything is hom*ogenous.

What ratio should I feed my sourdough starter from the fridge? ›

Feed starter 1:2:2 and place into fridge. Take starter out of the fridge, discard and feed 1:1:1, leave on counter. Discard and feed 1:1:1, leave on the counter. Use starter at peak in a bake.

What is the best amount to feed sourdough starter? ›

Remove and discard half of your sourdough starter from the jar. Feed what's left in the jar with equal parts flour and water by weight (1:1:1 feeding ratio). You need a digital kitchen scale for this. Because we all work with different quantities of starters, this 1:1:1 feeding ratio is best understood by example.

What is the best flour mixture for 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.

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

Experts recommend feeding a starter twice daily. And at each feeding, you hold onto 1/2 cup of your original starter, discard the rest, and then add its same weight in water and flour. With this schedule, you'd discard almost a cup of sourdough starter every day.

Can you use too much starter in sourdough bread? ›

If you have too much starter compared to the additional flour and water you're adding, your hungry starter consumes all the nutrients and then it's not as bubbly.

How to make a 100% hydration starter? ›

When talking about a sourdough starter, 100% hydration simply means you're using equal amounts of flour and water. So if you had 50g of sourdough starter, you'd feed it 50g of flour and 50g of water.

Why is my sourdough too wet after bulk fermentation? ›

When the bulk fermentation goes too long — often when the dough more than doubles or triples in volume — the dough can over ferment. You know the dough has over fermented if, when you turn it out to shape it, it is very slack — if it's like a wet puddle — and very sticky and lacking any strength and elasticity.

What is the best ratio for sourdough feeding? ›

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.

Should I stir my sourdough starter between feedings? ›

It is important that you stir the sourdough starter every day in the morning and in the evening. Feed the starter. Add 60 g flour and 60 g lukewarm water, stir well to combine, and let sit out for 24 hours.

What is the bakers sourdough formula? ›

How do percentages work – the simple way
IngredientsQuantities / Percentages
Flour500g / 100%
Water350g / 70% (=350/500)
Starter100g / 20% (=100/500)
Salt10g / 2% (=10/500)

What are the portions for feeding sourdough starter? ›

To revive the dried sourdough starter, add 50 grams to a clean jar with 100 grams of water and 100 grams of flour. Let sit for 24 hours at room temperature. The next day transfer 25 grams to a new jar and feed with 100 grams of water and 100 grams of flour. Feed the starter once a day until it starts to double in size.

How do you calculate sourdough ratio? ›

It's usually given as starter:water:flour, so a 1:1:1 ratio means 1 part starter, 1 part water, and 1 part flour. 1:2:2 means 1 part starter, 2 parts water, and 2 parts flour, and so on.

What is a 1,5-5 sourdough ratio? ›

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.

Do you feed sourdough every 12 or 24 hours? ›

Leaving it out on the counter, it will need to be fed equal parts water and flour every 12-24 hours. Warmer homes or frequent baking will require more frequent feeding (around every 12 hours), while colder homes every 24 hours. Storing your sourdough starter in the fridge will require feeding around once a week.

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