Sourdough Bread Recipe (IN CUPS) - East Pine Home (2024)

Looking for a sourdough bread recipe that’s simple and easy? Don’t want to fuss with digital scales, grams, and just use cups? I am your girl. Sourdough bread can be overwhelming but I want to help you break it down to make it easy. I have a sourdough bread recipe in cups! Yes, you read that right, a sourdough recipe in cups NOT grams. Before we jump in though let’s talk about that..

Sourdough Bread Recipe (IN CUPS) - East Pine Home (1)

Let me tell you this comes with a set of risks and problems when measuring in cups and why measuring with grams is a thing. Flour comes in so many varieties and when you are milling or using bread flour or all-purpose it can be “Fluffier” or have more air between each piece depending on how long it has had to settle. When I measure a cup then you measure a cup… Your cup might have more flour than mine. This is why so many recipes are in grams. Also when we are talking bread and recipes seeing 1000 grams is easier to weigh than 7 cups + 2 tbsp + 2 tsp. Sometimes that extra 1 tbsp can make or break a recipe.

IMPORTANT INFORMATION! About Sourdough in cups…

That being said this recipe when I say CUPS in this recipe dip your measuring cup in, take a butter knife’s FLAT side, and sheer off the excess for a “Perfect” cup. 

Sourdough Bread Recipe (IN CUPS) - East Pine Home (2)

As I mentioned above a tbsp can make or break a recipe and give different results. Having a few failed loaves is to be expected until you know what kind of texture you are looking for in a dough. I highly recommend investing in a digital scale if you want to do sourdough bread.

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YOUR STARTER 

If you are new to sourdough the first thing we need to talk about is what you will need. First, you need a sourdough starter. If you want to learn more about that you can head on over to this blog here. You will also want a Dutch oven. Yes, you can bake in something else, but really I think every kitchen needs one!

You will want to plan out when you want to make bread. This is not a quick, whip it up an hour before dinner kind of bread… although if you need that, I got you covered in my quick one hour bread recipe.

Sourdough bread in cups!

Sourdough is a long process. You can start it early in the morning, but it’s usually best to start the day before.

First, you will want to start around 8am the day before you want to make your bread. Feed your starter and let her get all bubbly and happy. By the afternoon you should have hit the “peak” where it is no longer doming at the top but starting to dimple down a bit (not sinking just dimpling). 

Webbing and floating

When you twirl the jar around you should see the webbing and bubbles from all sides. Scoop a small spoonful of your starter into a cup of water. If she floats, it is ready to use! Mix your water and starter than add in flour. Keep your hands wet so the dough is less sticky. When all the ingredients are combined, let the dough rest for 30 minutes.

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Next, add in your salt and work the dough until it is combined. Let the dough rest 30-40 mins in a warm place and do a “Stretch and fold”. This is exactly what it sounds like. Wet your hands, stretch the dough up out of the bowl and fold it back into a ball. It only takes about 30 seconds to do this and you should feel the dough get firmer. repeat in 30 mins. You will want to do 3-6 stretches and folds. Cover your dough with plastic wrap and let it bulk ferment for 5-8 hours in a warm spot. 

Remove the dough from the bowl carefully onto the counter and divide into two equal loaves.

To shape your loaf; You can do this several ways but I like to push and roll the dough forward and then pull it back towards me in a spinning motion to create a ball. Do push a roll motion like this for a few minutes to create tension and then let rest for 30 minutes on the counter. Place dough into floured bannteon baskets or a bowl lined with a floured tea towel. Cover with a plastic bag or plastic wrap and place in the fridge overnight ( minium 12 hours).

The Next Morning

Preheat your oven with your empty Dutch oven inside to 500 and let the dutch oven heat up for one hour. Take our your dough the last 5 mins it is preheating and rub the top with flour. Take a razor blade or sharp knife and score a deep slice across the length of the bread. and you can score fun patterns in it if you like. Place your dough on floured parchment and into your hot Dutch oven. Take a small amount of water (about 1/4 cup) and pour it between the paper and pot. Be careful not to get any on your bread. This will create steam in your pot and will help make a lovely crust!

Place lid on your Dutch oven and back at 500 for 30 mins. Remove lid lower your heat to 450 for another 30 mins. Remove from oven and place on cooling rack. Do not cut until your loaf is completely cooled.

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Need a Dutch oven? Check out the one I use here

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Simple Sourdough Bread (IN CUPS)

Print Recipe Pin Recipe

Prep Time 1 day d

Equipment

  • 1 Dutch Oven

Ingredients

  • 1 cup Sourdough Starter Bubbly and active fed 5-10 hrs before
  • 2 3/4 cups Water
  • 7 cups Bread Flour add tsp at a time if it is too dry
  • 1 tbsp Fine Sea Salt

Instructions

Lets Bake

  • Feed starter 6-8 hours before you want to start mixing ingredients.

    When your starter is at its peak, has dimples and when you roll it you see webbing on all sides take 1 cup and mix it in 2 3/4 warm water.

    Mix flour with hands or wooden spoon. This is super messy but wet your hands a bit and it will be eaiser to combine.

    Let rest for 30 mins covered.

    Add in salt dimpling it in with your hands to combine.

    Knead for about 5 mins until salt combines in.

    Put in a bowl and let rest for 30 mins. Stertch and fold until dough is more firm. Allow to rest for another 30 mins. Do one more stretch and fold until the dough is firm.

    A stretch and fold really only takes about 20 seconds. It is quick and easy.

    do about 3-6 stretch and folds 30-45 mins apart.

    Cover your dough bowl with plastic wrap or a damp towel and let bulk rise for 5-8 hours.

    Take out dough carefully and divide into two loaves. roll dough toward you on the lightly floured work surface to create a ball. Let rise on counter for 30 mins, roll dough again on surface and flip seam side up into a flour batton basket (you can use a foured tea towel too in a bowl.)

    cover with a plastic bag and place in the fridge for overnight or for 12 hours

    Preheat oven to 500 with your dutch oven inside for 1 hour.

    Place parchement paper on top of your loaf in the bannton basket. Flip over, dust with flour and score in any pattern you like with a razor.

    Place in dutch oven, add 1/4 cup of water under your parchement paper to create steam. Cover.

  • Place a large baking sheet on lower rack. This helps that bottom not burn.

    Place dough in dutch oven and bake with lid on at 500 for 30 mins. remove lid and lower heat to 450 continue baking for 30-40 mins. ( internal temp should be 210)

    Remove bread from dutch oven and allow bread to cool completely before cutting into it.

Some links are amazon affiliate links. I do make a small commission from at no cost to you.

Sourdough Bread Recipe (IN CUPS) - East Pine Home (2024)

FAQs

What is the secret to sourdough bread? ›

6. Just add water for softer sourdough. The secret to sourdough is simple: water. The more water you add to your dough will affect how open the crumb (bigger holes and softer texture) will be once it's baked.

How much is 100 grams of sourdough starter in cups? ›

475 grams all-purpose flour (3 1/2 cups) 100 grams active sourdough starter (1/2 cup)

How many cups of flour to feed sourdough starter? ›

Feed the starter 1/2 cup (4 ounces, 113g) water and a scant 1 cup (4 ounces, 113g) all-purpose flour twice a day, discarding all but 1/2 cup (4 ounces, 113g) of the starter before each feeding. It should soon become healthy, bubbly, and active.

What is the best ratio for sourdough bread? ›

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. In that case, the freshly fed sourdough would just require more or much more time to grow and reach its peak, as judged by the maximum volume increase in the jar (at least doubled).

What is the best flour 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.

Should you add yeast to sourdough bread? ›

Proper fermentation of bread dough requires robust yeast activity, especially if you want good oven spring and an open crumb. Adding small amounts of instant yeast to a sourdough is an easy and effective way to get there, and a practice any baker might want to add to their bread baking toolkit.

What is the ratio for sourdough starter in cups? ›

There are two different common ways of feeding a sourdough starter - volume measurements or weighed ingredients. For volume measurements you use a 1:1 ratio of flour to water for feeding your starter. This can be one cup of flour to one cup of water or 1/2 cup of flour to 1/2 cup water etc.

What should sourdough starter look like when ready? ›

Generally, when a starter is ripe, it has risen, is bubbly on top, has a sour aroma, and has a looser consistency. Typical signs your starter is ripe and ready to be used: Some rise. Bubbles on top and at the sides.

How much is 1 cup of sourdough starter? ›

US to Metric
MetricUS
1/3 cup sourdough starter92 grams
1/2 cup sourdough starter138 grams
2/3 cup sourdough starter184 grams
1 cup sourdough starter276 grams
3 more rows
Aug 5, 2020

Should I stir my sourdough starter between feedings? ›

stir your starter in between feedings - try stirring it twice in between feedings and really give it a chance to get oxygen into the mix. This will help to activate your starter without too much effort.

What happens if you add too much flour to sourdough starter? ›

The colony of wild yeast and bacteria inside your starter jar are fairly resilient, however, like most living things, they can be overfed. When you overfeed a sourdough starter you dilute the natural population of yeast and bacteria, making your sourdough culture weak and inactive.

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

It would be best if you discarded some portion of your starter each time you feed it unless you want to continue to let it grow. Eventually, you need to discard the used “food” (flour and water) that's been used to sustain your starter during the last fermentation period.

How much should I discard my sourdough starter? ›

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 overfeed sourdough starter? ›

Premature discarding and overfeeding will weaken your starter and elongate the process. Don't discard and re-feed a weak starter before it shows increasing bubble activity or height from the previous feeding. If you don't see more bubbles or a faster rise each day, skip a feeding, and give it more time.

How do I make my starter stronger? ›

There are three techniques for strengthening a weak starter:
  1. Change the feeding interval.
  2. Change the feeding ratio.
  3. Change the type of flour.

What makes sourdough bread taste better? ›

The sourdough starter is the real secret to getting a good fermentation going. Essentially your sourdough starter is old dough, which has already pre-fermented and contains Lactobacillus culture. Lactobacillus culture has a sour taste and is an active culture that lives off natural yeast spores from the air.

What makes sourdough taste better? ›

The key taste compounds include salt, which is directly added to the dough, as well as acetic and lactic acid, produced during fermentation. After these experiments, they applied a technique called “unified flavor quantitation,” which was previously developed by Hofmann's team, to the sourdough bread.

What are three top tips when making sourdough starter? ›

Top 10 Sourdough Starter Tips for Success
  1. Maintain a Schedule to Feed your Sourdough Starter. ...
  2. Know How to Store a Sourdough Starter. ...
  3. Maintain a Small Sourdough Starter.
  4. Use Sourdough Discard for Less Waste.
  5. Know How to Revive a Sourdough Starter. ...
  6. Measure your Ingredients by Weight.
Mar 26, 2024

Why add honey to sourdough bread recipe? ›

Honey: Honey adds a sweetness to this dough and helps balance any sour flavor that comes through from the fermentation process. If you are looking for whole wheat bread without the honey, try this recipe. Salt: Salt enhances the flavor and helps tempers the fermentation.

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