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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.

A round loaf of rustic sourdough bread, sliced in half to show its airy, hole-filled crumb and golden crust, sits on a wooden cutting board with a knife partially visible underneath.

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.

Close-up of a golden brown sourdough bread loaf with a crisp crust, featuring decorative leaf-shaped scoring patterns on the surface.

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:

  1. Take a small amount of your active starter.
  2. Mix it with fresh flour and water (for example, 1:2:2).
  3. 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.

A sliced loaf of rustic sourdough bread sits on a wooden cutting board, revealing a crispy golden crust and airy, open crumb. Blurred kitchen items and a white tiled wall are in the background.

Tools you’ll need

  • Dutch oven or cast-iron combo cooker: traps steam for great oven spring. I use a cast-iron combo cooker which is fantastic. It works as a Dutch oven, trapping steam. Mine is from Lodge Cast Iron though other brands make similar cookers.
  • Proofing basket (banneton) You’ll need a bowl for the dough to hold its shape while it proofs.
    I use a traditional banneton batard basket but you can use a bowl lined with a floured towel.
  • Kitchen scale: for accuracy.
  • Bench scraper: handy for shaping.

Baker’s schedule (example)

You can adjust these times to suit your day.

TimeStep
8 amFeed your starter and create levain
1 pmAutolyse (mix flour and water)
2 pmAdd levain and salt
2:30-7:30 pmBulk ferment with folds
7:30 pmShape, then cold-proof overnight
Next morningBake

If you run into problems, see my Sourdough Troubleshooting Guide or watch my step-by-step video.

Method (overview)

  1. Feed your starter so it’s ready to go.
A person mixing dough with a wooden-handled pastry blender in a large white bowl on a speckled countertop.
  1. 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.
A person kneads sticky dough in a white bowl, using both hands, on a speckled countertop.
  1. 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

  1. 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

A pair of hands stretches a soft, risen dough inside a large white bowl on a light textured surface.
  • Grab one edge of the dough, stretch it up, and fold it back over the centre. Turn the bowl and repeat on all sides.
A person stretches and folds sticky bread dough inside a large white mixing bowl on a textured countertop.
  • Each fold helps align gluten and build structure while keeping the dough elastic.

Coil folds

  • Lift the dough from the middle with wet hands so the ends tuck under themselves. Turn the bowl and repeat on all sides.
  • This gentle method builds strength without losing air and is great for higher hydration doughs.

Bulk fermenting continued

A smooth, round ball of dough rests in the center of a large white bowl on a textured gray surface.
  1. 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.
A white bowl contains risen bread dough with bubbles on the surface, sitting on a textured, light-colored countertop.
  1. 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.

  1. Lightly flour your bench. Tip the dough out gently.
Two hands stretching dough on a light, textured surface, highlighting its elasticity and smoothness—perfect for mastering a beginner's sourdough bread recipe.
  1. Gently stretch the dough into a loose rectangle.
Two hands stretch a piece of soft, risen dough on a speckled light brown countertop, gently pulling the dough outward to work with its texture.
  1. Do a pamphlet fold and fold the bottom third up, then the top third down.
A piece of raw, flattened dough rests on a textured beige surface, ready to be shaped or baked.
  1. Turn the dough dough 90 degrees.
Two hands stretch a ball of dough on a lightly textured, beige countertop.
  1. Roll the dough up, gently pressing down with each roll to keep tension as you go.
Two hands are shaping or kneading a ball of dough on a lightly floured, textured countertop.
  1. Pull it toward you gently to build surface tension and tuck in the sides.
Two hands shape a loaf of bread dough in a cloth-lined bowl on a light, textured surface.
  1. Place seam-side up in a floured basket. Stitch the top lightly to help it hold height.
  1. 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

A close-up of unbaked bread dough in a cast iron pan, with several diagonal slashes across the surface, ready to be baked.
  1. Flip your dough into it (seam-side down) into your dutch oven and score the dough with a razor or sharp knife.
A round loaf of rustic bread with a split crust rests in a cast iron skillet on a stovetop, ready to be baked. A black pot is visible in the background.
  1. Bake covered for 20 minutes, then uncover and bake another 15 to 20 minutes until deep brown.
A round loaf of artisan sourdough bread with decorative scoring rests in a black cast iron skillet on a light countertop. The crust is golden brown and slightly charred on one edge.

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.
A sliced loaf of artisan sourdough bread, made from a beginner's sourdough bread recipe, sits on a wooden board, showing its golden crust and airy, open crumb structure with a blurred kitchen background.

A Beginner’s Sourdough Recipe

Elien Lewis
This easy sourdough bread recipe is so straight forward. All you need is a little patience and time.
4.79 from 100 votes
Prep Time 25 minutes
Cook Time 45 minutes
Proofing Time 1 day
Total Time 1 day 1 hour 10 minutes
Course Sourdough
Cuisine American
Servings 8 people
Calories 223 kcal

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

If you’ve made this before, This recipe used to make a larger loaf (460 g flour, 330 g water), but I’ve now made it slightly smaller so it fits more neatly in a standard banneton or Dutch oven. It’s just a more manageable size for everyday baking. I’ve also simplified my shaping method. (The older, more technical version is still on my YouTube video here.)

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.
If you prefer to start the levain the night before, feed it at a higher ratio like 1:3:3 or 1:4:4 so it rises more slowly overnight.
If you’re troubleshooting your bread, see my Sourdough Bread Troubleshooting Guide.

Nutrition

Serving: 1servingCalories: 223kcalCarbohydrates: 44gProtein: 9gFat: 1gCholesterol: 1mgSodium: 3885mgFiber: 2g
Keyword Bread, Sourdough
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177 Comments

  1. After 3 failed attempts (hockey pucks) I found your recipe and your instructional video. All I have to say is thank you thank you thank you. It came out perfect this is my go to recipe from now on.

  2. I’ve tried this twice already and the dough is always extremely wet and slack when it comes to shaping. I almost have to pour it into the banneton and hope for the best. My starter is very active and has made bread successfully before so that’s not it.

    1. That sounds like your starter has too much acid, which can really make the dough so hard to work with, it turns it quite sloppy and liquid. I avoid this by regularly refreshing my starter, and keeping the seed starter amount really small, and making sure to use it before it peaks

  3. I just made this sourdough, and it was the first time I had real success! The dough is definitely underseasoned, it needs at least 2tsp of salt. But apart from that, perfect recipe and explanation!

  4. That makes sense thanks Elien. What decides whether you feed the remainder and place it back in the fridge, rather than feed it and keep it out for the next bread. Is that dependent on when you are making your next loaf? If you feed it and keep it out, do you need to then continue to feed it twice a day so it has enough food to keep it going? – as I understand your instructions, it goes in the fridge to slow the action down. I’m finding the whole process fascinating and am looking forward to my next loaf!

    1. Yeah it depends on when I next bake. One example is if I feed it in the morning 1:2:2 and bake in the afternoon, I may feed it 1:3:3 or even 1:4:4 after that and leave it to rise all night, so I can use it earlier the next morning. The fridge slows it down, but so do large feedings 🙂

  5. Hello Elien – I’m on my 2nd loaf of your Easiest No Knead Sourdough load, but have ended up with 2 starters in the fridge now. I’m thinking one of them could be discard – instead of which I’m breeding monster starters! From my seed starter which had been in the fridge I took 65g, added 130g flour and 130g water for my loaf. I then fed the remainder of the seed starter 1:2:2 and replaced it in the fridge for a future bake. Made my autolyse, and put the new starter aside to rise. I then used 150g of that to add to my autolyse for my loaf which left me with 150g of the new starter. Which I then fed 1:2:2 and put that in the fridge – giving me 2 starters in the fridge for a future bake. Should I not have fed one of these, but used it as discard, and if so, which one? Is there a time frame I should use the discard in? – I have been making chocolate chip cookies and pancakes. Thanks in advance.

    1. Hey,
      I take the starter from the fridge and feed it, for example the 65 g with 130g flour and 130g water, and discard whatever is left. You fed this discard, and that’s where I do it differently.
      Then after I take 150g for my bread, I’ll feed the remainder and place that back in the fridge in a clean jar, or feed and keep it out for the next bread. That way I always have just one jar of starter on the go at a time. The 65/130/130 amounts are really just examples too as they make quite of starter. Feel free to lessen this so it works for you 🙂
      There isn’t really a time frame in which to use the discard, it’ll accumulate more acid as it matures but that’s not a bad thing in discard recipes.

  6. Hi Elien,

    Thanks so so much for sharing your recipe! One of the easiest to follow that I’ve found! I’ve made two loaves now and keep having the same problem. The dough seems similar to yours in the coil and foil part – looks great, but after the bulk ferment it feels very fragile and wobbly, and seems to spread out very easily – it definitely doesn’t hold together in the shaping part like yours does….do you have any tips? My starter seems very active -doubling in just 5 hours. Is there another way to test if it’s not ready? I’ve heard of the float test but haven’t tried that yet? Or am I over or under fermenting the dough? I’ve also just been using strong white bread flour as unfortunately it’s all I can find during lockdown. Perhaps this is the problem? I’m determined to get this right!! haha

    1. Hey it actually does sound like it could be over fermented. An over fermented dough is definitely more fragile and can spread as the gluten structure has weakened.
      I would try it again and watch it during the bulk ferment. It shouldn’t double or anything, just bulk out a bit. And when prodded with a wet finger it should make an indent that slowly fills back about half way. Over proofed dough will leave the dent without filling back out. 😊

  7. Thanks for your amazing instructions in all things sourdough. My starter is really active – maybe less than 5hrs to double with a 1:2:2 feed. We have already had the delicious pancakes with the discard along the way – perfect recipe.

    I was wondering if you have experimented with mixing in other flours with your standard sourdough recipe. I have some spelt flour and believe it has different properties to strong white flour. I was thinking that I might try a 25% substitution to start and see how it goes. Curious if you had tried it?

    Thanks again for creating such great content – also working up the courage to turn a section of our front lawn into a no-dig patch… but one thing at a time!

    1. Hey subbing in 25% spelt is a great idea, that’s about the amount that I use too when I use spelt ☺️

  8. HI Eileen,
    I found your starter recipe on Pinterest and followed it to make my very first sour dough starter. I made your easy sour dough loaf. I was concerned at the end because my stitching wasn’t going well as I felt my dough way very sticky on the bottom. I made it work and baked it yesterday morning and it’s some of the best sour dough I’ve ever eaten. Thank you for sharing this and the detailed you tube video!!! My son loves pancakes so we are going to try those in the morning and then I’ll try croissants and pizza dough! Thank you again. Love from California.

  9. Thank you for your incredible detail, Elien. Can you tell me what size basket you use for this loaf? I’m thinking ahead to Mother’s Day and am going to request a couple of baskets so if you have advice on a couple of basic sizes and/or anything I should look for, it would be very much appreciated. I’m currently using a cake tin. Thanks again.

  10. After the bulk ferment, my dough is still so sticky and runny I can hardly shape it.

    1. Hey, head to my starter page and make sure your starter is healthy and ready to make bread, and that it’s being used at the correct time. A starter past its peak can make dough difficult to work with, because there can be too much acid in it – make sure you’re using it at peak or before – this can take some time of watching your starter each day to see where the peak is and how long it takes to get here. 🙂

    2. What if you are having this problem (dough is way too wet, windowpane isn’t really happening, and shaking is impossible) and you know your starter was perfect when added in?

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