Expert Advice on Keeping a Sourdough Starter

Ready to start making your own sourdough bread? Six bread experts share their best advice for starting your starter!

Alicia Kennedy
Published in
4 min readFeb 21, 2020

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Photo: Alicia Kennedy

Getting into sourdough baking is intimidating. It’s why I’ve only tried to make my own starter once, and I promptly failed. The Mason jar bubbled over with unwieldy, slightly stinky gunk and I just didn’t know how to recover — nor did I have the patience. And so it went into the garbage, a forgotten kitchen failure from which I thought I’d never recover. Fresh bread would be something I’d leave to the pros, forever.

But I have found myself curious once again about whether I can become a person who bakes her own fresh bread every week, and I believe I’m ready to take on a starter. Luckily, I am able to get tips from those who know what they’re doing. I talked to bakers with sourdough starters in Canada, the U.K, New York City, Philadelphia, Houston, and Puerto Rico for their expert insight into how to make a starter and keep it alive.

Have no fear

It seems fitting to start here: “Don’t stress about it,” says Phoebe Connell, co-owner of wine bar Lois in New York’s East Village and the snack line Aida. “It is amazing how easy it is to grow and keep a starter.”

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Tenderly
Tenderly

Published in Tenderly

A vegan magazine that’s hopefully devoted to delicious plants, liberated animals, and leading a radical, sustainable, joyful life

Alicia Kennedy
Alicia Kennedy

Written by Alicia Kennedy

I’m a food writer from Long Island based in San Juan, Puerto Rico. Subscribe to my weekly newsletter on food issues: aliciakennedy.substack.com

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