A Beginner’s Sourdough Bread Recipe
This is a simple, reliable sourdough bread recipe, perfect for beginners. The process gives you a golden, crusty loaf with a soft, open crumb. If you’re new to sourdough, read through the steps before you begin so you understand the timing and rhythm. Once you’ve got the hang of it, this method honestly becomes second nature.

Sourdough bread
Sourdough bread rises naturally with no commercial yeast needed. Instead, it uses wild yeast and beneficial bacteria (lactobacillus) from a sourdough starter.
The yeast produces carbon dioxide to lift the dough, while the bacteria create lactic and acetic acids that give sourdough its flavour. The long fermentation makes sourdough easier to digest and develops that classic tang.


The sourdough starter & levain
You’ll need an active sourdough starter before you begin. I keep mine at 100% hydration which means equal parts flour and water by weight. Keeping the acid levels balanced helps the dough stay strong and easy to handle and regular feeding keeps your starter healthy and reduces excess acidity. Read more on how to maintain a sourdough starter.
Feeding ratios
I usually feed my starter at
- 1:2:2 doubles within about 6 hours at 21 to 26 °C (70 to 78 °F).
- 1:3:3 takes longer to rise and is useful for overnight feeds.
Both are 100% hydration (equal flour and water by weight).
Creating a levain
A levain is a portion of your active starter fed and grown specifically for the loaf you’re making. To make one:
- Take a small amount of your active starter.
- Mix it with fresh flour and water (for example, 1:2:2).
- Let it rise at room temperature until it doubles and looks bubbly and domed.
Use the whole levain in your bread dough. It’s essentially your freshly-fed, ready-to-use starter. After taking out what you need, feed the remaining starter (about 30g but it can be less) and store it in the fridge for next time. Even a small amount can be built back up again. Save any leftover discard for sourdough discard recipes.

Tools you’ll need
Baker’s schedule (example)
You can adjust these times to suit your day.
| Time | Step |
| 8 am | Feed your starter and create levain |
| 1 pm | Autolyse (mix flour and water) |
| 2 pm | Add levain and salt |
| 2:30-7:30 pm | Bulk ferment with folds |
| 7:30 pm | Shape, then cold-proof overnight |
| Next morning | Bake |
If you run into problems, see my Sourdough Troubleshooting Guide or watch my step-by-step video.
Method (overview)
- Feed your starter so it’s ready to go.

- Mix the flour and water until no dry bits remain, then cover and rest for at least 30 minutes (up to 2 hours). This allows the flour to hydrate and start forming gluten naturally.

- Add your bubbly levain and salt to the dough. Use wet hands to mix until it forms a sticky, rough ball and knead it in the bowl for 5 minutes. Cover again.
Folding and bulk ferment
- Stretch and fold the dough every 30 minutes for 3 hours. Each fold builds strength and structure. You could do this with coil folds or traditional stretch and folds.
Stretch and folds


Coil folds
Bulk fermenting continued

- After your last fold, place the dough in a clean bowl. Keeping the bowl clean stops dried dough from gluing itself on and makes it much easier to clean up later.

- Let the dough continue bulk fermentation until it’s about 40-50% larger than when it started. It should feel lighter and airier, with some bubbles forming.

Note: Ideal bulk ferment temperature is around 24 °C (75 °F). Cooler rooms take longer and in warmer ones the dough move faster.
Shaping and cold proofing
If you’ve made this recipe before, you might notice I’ve simplified my shaping method. I now use an easier fold-and-roll approach that still builds great structure without being too technical. If you’d prefer to follow my original, more detailed shaping method, you can still find it in my YouTube video here.
- Lightly flour your bench. Tip the dough out gently.

- Gently stretch the dough into a loose rectangle.

- Do a pamphlet fold and fold the bottom third up, then the top third down.

- Turn the dough dough 90 degrees.

- Roll the dough up, gently pressing down with each roll to keep tension as you go.

- Pull it toward you gently to build surface tension and tuck in the sides.

- Place seam-side up in a floured basket. Stitch the top lightly to help it hold height.
- Cover and refrigerate for 12–24 hours to proof slowly.

Note: Dust your basket or floured cloth with rice flour or a 50/50 mix of rice and bread flour. Rice flour doesn’t absorb much moisture, so it’s the best way to stop dough from sticking during long proofing.
Baking

- Flip your dough into it (seam-side down) into your dutch oven and score the dough with a razor or sharp knife.

- Bake covered for 20 minutes, then uncover and bake another 15 to 20 minutes until deep brown.

Dough proofing
Under-proofed dough
An under-proofed dough hasn’t fermented long enough. It will feel tight and dense, and won’t hold its shape when you try to stretch it. After baking, the crumb will be heavy with small, uneven holes and a chewy thick crust. The loaf might burst where the dough tried to expand too late in the oven.
If this happens, extend your bulk ferment next time. The dough should feel lighter and slightly puffy before shaping.
Over-proofed dough
An over-proofed dough has gone too far. It looks very soft and airy, but it feels weak and sticky when you try to shape it. In the oven, it can collapse or spread out rather than spring up. The crust may brown unevenly and the crumb can seem gummy or flat.
If this happens, reduce your ferment time or keep the dough somewhere cooler next time. Aim for a dough that’s risen about 40 to 50% and feels elastic but not fragile.
Trouble shooting tips
- Dough sticking to your hands: Wet your hands during folds to stop it sticking.
- Dense loaf: Under-fermented. Let bulk go longer next time.
- Flat loaf: Over-proofed; shorten the proofing stage.
- Runny starter: Feed a higher ratio (1:3:3 or 1:4:4) to strengthen it.
Adding inclusions (seeds, nuts, cheese, etc.)
Add inclusions after completing the folds during bulk fermentation. This lets the dough build some strength before you mix in anything heavy or textured.
How to add:
- Lightly flatten the dough into a rectangle with wet hands.
- Evenly sprinkle half your inclusions over the surface.
- Fold the dough up like a letter (bottom third up, top third down).
- Turn the dough 90 degrees, then sprinkle on the rest of the inclusions.
- Roll it up into a log, then gently shape it into a ball. Let the dough continue bulk fermentation.
How much to add:
- Around 15-25% of the total flour weight works well for seeds, nuts, or grains.
- For cheese or dried fruit, use a bit less like 15-20%, as they release moisture or sugar.
More sourdough recipes

A Beginner’s Sourdough Recipe
Ingredients
Levain (this will all be used in the dough)
- 20 g sourdough starter
- 40 g all-purpose flour
- 40 g water
Dough
- 400 g bread flour or all-purpose flour, at least 11% protein
- 285 g water
- All the levain
- 8 g salt
Instructions
Levain
- In a small bowl, mix the levain ingredients until well combined and smooth.
- Transfer to a clean jar or glass and cover with a loose lid or damp towel.
- Let it sit at room temperature (around 22-26 °C / 72-79 °F) until it has at least doubled and looks bubbly and domed. This usually takes 4 to 6 hours, depending on room temperature.
Dough
- About an hour before the levain is ready, combine the flour and water in a large bowl. Use wet hands to mix until no dry bits remain. Cover with a plate or damp towel and rest for 30 to 60 minutes.
- Add all the levain and salt. Mix with wet hands until the dough is sticky and roughly combined. Give it a few slap and fold kneads in the bowl to begin creating structure. This is when you lift the dough slightly and slap it back down into the bowl, folding it over itself. After this, cover the bowl and let the dough rest for 20 minutes.
- Over the next 3 hours, perform stretch and folds (or coil folds) every 30 minutes to build strength. Keep your hands damp to prevent sticking. It’s 5 to 6 sets total. After each fold, cover the dough and let it rest until the next one.
- After the final fold, transfer the dough to a clean bowl and cover it to finish fermenting.
- Let it rise in a warm spot until it looks puffy, jiggles slightly when you move the bowl, and has grown about 40-50% (not doubled). This might take between 1-3 hours, depending on your room temperature, so watch the dough, not the clock.
- Tip: Ideal bulk fermentation temperature is around 24 °C (75 °F). Cooler kitchens take longer, warmer ones the dough will rise faster.
Shaping
- Line your banneton with a towel and flour it well with rice flour or a 50/50 rice and bread flour mix.
- Turn the dough out onto a lightly floured surface and gently shape it into a rectangle.
- Fold the bottom third up, the top third down, then turn it 90 degrees. Roll the dough up, gently pressing down with each roll to keep tension as you go.
- Pull it gently toward you to build surface tension and tuck in the sides.
- Place seam-side up in the floured basket and lightly stitch the top to help it hold height.
Cold Proof
- Cover the basket with a floured tea towel or slip it into a large plastic bag to prevent drying out and refrigerate for 12-24 hours.
Baking
- Preheat your oven and Dutch oven to 230 °C (450 °F) for at least 30 minutes.
- When hot, carefully remove the Dutch oven and flour the base.
- Take the dough from the fridge, flip it gently out of the basket, and place it seam-side down into the pot.
- If using a large pot, transfer it on parchment paper to lower it in easily.
- Lightly dust the top with flour and score the surface with a razor or sharp knife.
- Bake covered for 20-25 minutes, then uncover and bake another 15-20 minutes until deep brown.
- Cool for at least 2 hours before slicing to let the crumb set.
Notes
Tip for cooler weather sourdough
Sourdough rises more slowly in cool rooms. To help it along, keep your dough somewhere slightly warm, like inside your oven that’s off but with the light on or beside a cup of boiled water. You can also use slightly warm water (around 30 to 35 °C / 85 to 95 °F) when mixing your dough to give fermentation a gentle boost.Dough proofing
Under-proofed dough
An under-proofed dough hasn’t fermented long enough. It will feel tight and dense, and won’t hold its shape when you try to stretch it. After baking, the crumb will be heavy with small, uneven holes and a chewy thick crust. The loaf might burst where the dough tried to expand too late in the oven. If this happens, extend your bulk ferment next time. The dough should feel lighter and slightly puffy before shaping.Over-proofed dough
An over-proofed dough has gone too far. It looks very soft and airy, but it feels weak and sticky when you try to shape it. In the oven, it can collapse or spread out rather than spring up. The crust may brown unevenly and the crumb can seem gummy or flat. If this happens, reduce your ferment time or keep the dough somewhere cooler next time. Aim for a dough that’s risen about 40-50% and feels elastic but not fragile.Levain
A levain is a small offshoot of your main starter, fed and grown just for this loaf. The whole thing goes into your dough. When you feed your starter, split it into two portions:- One for the levain: feed it fresh flour and water in a clean jar and leave it to rise until bubbly and doubled.
- One to keep: feed the remaining starter as usual and store it in the fridge for next time.
Hi, I followed your recipe to make my own starter (the scientist in me loved the process so much!) and from there to make my very first loaf of sourdough. My family loved it, so thank you for creating something that was accurate and so easy to follow! I’ve never come across the second (cold) proof in baking breads before, and was wondering what the function is please? Thank you again!! And trying your pizza bases today 😀
Hey! So glad you liked the recipes 🙂 The cold ferment is to slow down the rise of the yeast and let the bacteria do their magic; fermenting the flour, making it easier to digest and it helps develop the taste. The longer the cold ferment, the more sour the bread can taste.
I’m so glad I found your website. We made our first loaf today from this recipe and had great success! Just wished we had baked 2 loaves so that there was some left for toast. Your video and instructions are so clear and easy to follow – very reassuring for a novice sourdough baker. Many thanks!
So glad you liked the recipe and videos! 😀
My 7th and 8th loaves came out of the oven this morning (after your Sourdough Hot Cross Buns). Being a novice and having never baked bread before, I am thrilled that so far each one has been successful even when experimenting with flour combinations. Thank you for sharing your recipes and knowledge it is appreciated.
Hey I made this recipe worked out well thank you so much! I just have one query my bread doesn’t really have a strong sourdough flavour though it definitely smells like sourdough. Is this to do with my starter? Also when my starter doubled in size it then started to reduce again is this normal?
Hey Julia, if you’d like a stronger ‘sour’ taste, you can extend that cold fridge proof for the full 20 hours 🙂
Thank you so much! My first successful loaf after many disappointments! You are a genius!
So glad to hear you liked the recipe 😁😁
This recipe is great! I’ve made it four times since lockdown started – first time working with a sourdough starter ever so I’m really pleased that it all worked out. The videos on the folding and knitting were especially helpful 🙂
That’s so cool to hear Katie! I’m so pleased you like it! 😄
Hi, just wondering when we take the dough out of the fridge to bake the next day do we need to wait for the dough to come back to room temperature or can we bake it from cold straight out of the fridge? I’m a newbie to sourdough and giving it a go through the lockdown here in NZ. You site and instructions are brilliant by the way! 🙂
Hey thank you! I bake the dough straight from the fridge 😄
thank you for the awesome recipe, now I can bake myself some sourdough bread at home. 🙂
Made this recipe recently and was really happy with the texture of the bread, but it tasted very under-seasoned to me. Anyone else think it needed more salt? If I add more salt next time, will that impact the texture at all?
Hey, you can definitely add more salt if you like. It won’t affect the texture 🙂
Hi. Using your recipe I am nearly finished coiling/ stretch & folding but dough has become quite wet in that it doesn’t form any resemblance of a ball. It just spreads out & fills the dish again?? Thanks for any advice you can give me.
Hey,
It’s hard to know what the exact issue is but I always find it helpful to go back to the basics when troubleshooting sourdough;
– Ensure your starter was ready and rising easily.
– Endure the acid content in it is low enough – you can read more about this in my sourdough starter guide, posted below.
– Check you’re using your starter before it has peaked otherwise the starter is more likely to be exhausted.
Most importantly – sourdough is a journey, read about it as much as you can because the more you understand about it the easier it will be to figure out what’s going on.
https://homegrownhappiness.com/starting-and-maintaining-a-sourdough-starter/