creekbend
Super Star Member
I have never personally made homemade sourdough bread. My wife loves it and I pick up two loaves every two weeks or so at the local Amish bakery.:licking:
Bird said:In the late '70s, I got a sourdough recipe from Alaska magazine and used it for a few years. I do love good sourdough bread, but haven't made any in quite awhile.
The starter is more like a pancake batter. I dumped the whole thing into a bowl last night and added 2 cups of flour and two cups of water. I pulled a half cup or so out this morning to be my starter for the next go round. This is according to the instructions I got with the start.
This morning I added a half cup of olive oil and a heaping tablespoon of honey. I let that sit for about 15 minutes to let the honey dissolve and then added flour until the dough had the right consistency (about 3 1/2 cups of flour). It was a little loose as bread dough goes, but it was workable. I let the dough raise for about 4 hours. Then I formed it into loaves and let it raise another 3 hours. I baked it at 350 for 30 minutes.
Two cups of flour and two cups of flour would make your starter about 166% (that is a relationship between the weight of the water and the flour). Meaning that weight of water in your starter is roughly 166% of the weight of the flour. It will be handy to know that ratio if you ever get into recipes that call for a certain amount of water.
When you added the flour and water you were essentially feeding your starter. If you were to leave it out on the counter you would need to feed it every day to keep it healthy for the long term. If you aren't going to bake every day it means that you won't use any starter up, so you would need to discard some and then add flour and water to feed it. If you keep it in the fridge you don't need to feed every day. I've heard of people leaving starter refrigerated for several weeks and then reviving it.
The recipe sounds good. Loose is good as long as it is workable and the results you posted looked delicious.
I'm resurrecting this thread because I need a good sourdough pancake recipe. I've been making bread for a while, and I have withdrawals if I go more than a day or so without it. However, I've tried a few pancake recipes, and they always come out tasting too much like baking soda.
Can I just reduce the baking soda? Does anyone have a good pancake recipe that doesn't use soda? I'm fine if the batter has to set out overnight or something to accomodate the lack of baking soda.
In 5th grade we were studying about the early settlers heading west and we had a girl who just moved into town from Utah I think. her mom came to class and made sourdough pancakes for everyone. I skipped recess so I could eat more pancakes. I believe I had 27, and I've been hooked ever since. Wife makes all her own bread but has not made a sourdough bread, until I build her a pizza/bread oven, so that is my summer project.
I always make these. They have always turned out well and very tasty. Enjoy! :drool:
http://www.northwestsourdough.com/blog/OJacks.pdf
Thanks for the link. I may try these tonight. I notice that your recipe has half the soda of the recipe I've used before. I'm eager to see how they turn out.
polo1665 said:Hey Dave. Good to hear I'll have someone to compare notes with. I'm about ready to fire my oven up in the next couple of weeks, and bake some bread for the freezer.
My sweety likes them made with blueberrys. Let me know how you like them.
I realized that I never posted back with how I like them...
I like them. I re-visited this thread to find the recipe so that I could make them again.
Thanks.
Here's another good one. Tried it last weekend, with blueberries of course.......delicious. Recipe says waffle, but using the same batter makes great pancakes.
Classic Sourdough Waffles or Pancakes: King Arthur Flour
I'll have to try that one. My kids are not big fans of sourdough. I made the other recipe again this morning, and the kids seemed to think that the dough would taste better if it were made into waffles.