Fermented Sourdough Bread Recipe - Deliciously Organic (2024)

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I’ve wanted to share a fermented sourdough bread recipe for a very long time, so I’m thrilled to write this post for you!

As I’ve mentioned before, a grain-free diet isn’t meant to be lifelong. Once you’ve taken the proper steps to heal, you can slowly add properly prepared grains back into your diet with the help of your nutritionist or holistic practitioner.

Fermented sourdough bread can often be tolerated by those with gluten sensitivities and can be a good first bread to try after you’ve been avoiding grains for a long period of time.

Fermented Sourdough Bread Recipe - Deliciously Organic (1)

The process of slow fermentation allows the bacteria to break down the carbohydrates and gluten and also neutralizes the phytic acid, making it easier for the body to digest. And, sourdough bread contains healthy resistant starch and doesn’t raise blood glucose levelsas much as conventional wheat bread.

Making a sourdough starter and then a fermented bread can often seem incredibly intimidating, so I hope I can take the fear out of it for you. This week I’ve been showing the step-by-step process over on my Instagram stories, and plan to offer more future IG stories so you can become familiar with the process.

Fermented Sourdough Bread Recipe - Deliciously Organic (2)

This recipe comes from my friend Min Kim. She’s a master at making gorgeous sourdough loaves – you need to check out her Instagram feed! I first learned how to make sourdough using her recipe and she was kind enough to allow me to publish her recipe here for you.

She has an ebook, True Sourdough Bread, with step-by-step photos and a bonus sourdough pizza recipe. The book is just $4.95, and you can purchase and download here. Min teaches sourdough classes in Solana Beach, CA. So, if you’re in the area, you check out the schedule at Biodynamic Wellness to find out when she’s teaching.

To make a sourdough bread, you’ll need a sourdough starter. Here is an easy homemade recipe. You can also purchase theCulture’s for Health Sourdough Starter and follow the directions written on the box.

Fermented Sourdough Bread Recipe - Deliciously Organic (3)

Here’s a list of the materials you’ll need to make your sourdough:
16-ounce (or lager) mason jar
Digital scale that measures in grams and can zero out
Large glass or ceramic bowl
Dough whisk
Large wooden spoon
2 Brotform (proofing basket) you can use round or oblong
Dutch oven (at least 5 1/2 quart or larger) or Cast Iron Combo Cooker
Clean, lint-free towels
Oven mitts
Oven thermometer
Scoring tool or razor (optional)
2 large plastic bags (like the kind you can put a turkey in)

Here is a video I made over on Instagram that shows you step-by-step how to make this recipe.

All right! Here’s the recipe for fermented sourdough bread!

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Fermented Sourdough Bread

Fermented Sourdough Bread Recipe - Deliciously Organic (4)

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  • Prep Time: 40 minutes
  • Cook Time: 35 minutes
  • Total Time: 51 hours
  • Yield: Makes 2 loaves
  • Category: Baking

Ingredients

Units

For the Levain:

Build the Dough:

Stretching, Folding and Bulk Fermentation:

  • Organic white flour for dusting

For the Bake:

  • About 60 grams rice flour for dusting bowls

Instructions

For the Levain:

  1. The evening before you make bread, mix together 25 grams starter, 70 grams water and 70 grams flour in a 16oz mason jar or small bowl with straight sides. Mark the level with tape or a rubber band. Cover the mixture with a clean towel and leave on the counter at room temperature. The mixture will be ready in 10-12 hours and will double or even triple in volume.
  2. Note: During hot months, this can take 6-8 hours depending on the temperature of your kitchen. You can use ice water to slow this process in the summer. Using water that is 130ºF will speed this process into 4-5 hours, but for best flavor, I recommend allowing for a longer ferment time.

Build the Dough:

  1. Pour 725 grams of water into a large glass or ceramic mixing bowl. Drop a tablespoon of levain into the bowl and see if it floats. If it floats, add the rest of the levian to the water and whisk to combine. If it doesn’t float, wait another hour and try again. Add 200 grams of whole wheat flour and 300 grams of organic all-purpose flour to the water mixture and combine with a dough whisk. Add the remaining 500 grams of all-purpose flour and mix with your hands, making sure there are no dry clumps of flour.
  2. Note: The temperature of your water in relation to your ambient room temperature is very important. In the wintertime, it’s helpful to use warmer water and in the hottest months, ice water would be appropriate.
  3. Cover and autolyse (let sit) for 30 minutes.
  4. Add 25 grams Celtic sea salt or Himalayan salt and 50 grams of water and mix by hand until incorporated. Cover the dough with a clean cloth and let rest for 30 minutes.

Stretching, Folding and Bulk Fermentation:

  1. Stretch and fold the dough four times (watch the video above and start at the 1:02 minute mark). Place a clean cloth over the dough and let it sit for 30 minutes. Then, stretch and fold the dough again, place a clean cloth over the dough and let sit for another 30 minutes. Repeat two more times for a total of four times.
  2. During the second fold, herbs, olives, nuts, etc. can be added. Cover the dough with a clean cloth and allow it to rest for an hour.
  3. Lightly dust a wooden board or a clean counter top with flour. Turn the dough out onto the floured surface. The dough will be sticky, so it helps to have wet hands. Using a bench knife or a large chef’s knife, cut the dough in half and make two rounds of dough. Cover with a clean cloth and let sit for another hour.
  4. Dust two brotforms with flour. If you don’t have a brotform, you can use a basket lined with a dishtowel (if doing this, make sure the dust the dishtowel with flour). Don’t skimp on the flour or your loaves will become difficult to remove when it’s time to bake them.
  5. Now it’s time to shape the dough into a boule. You will do a series of four folds: bottom to top, top to bottom, left to right and right to left, before flipping over and shaping into a round. Then, gather the ball and place it upside down in a brotform (seam side up). (Watch this video and start at minute 1:16).

For the Final Rise:

  1. Cover the dough loosely with a clean dish towel and allow to sit at room temp for another hour, then lightly tuck dish towel on top of the dough and place in refrigerator.
  2. After the dough has been in the fridge for 12 hours (or the next morning), place each of the bowls with dough in a large plastic bag (I use plastic bags that you can bake turkeys in) to keep the dough from drying out and absorbing flavors from your refrigerator. After placing the loaves in the large plastic bags the loaves will remain in the fridge for another 24 hours for a total of 36-40 hours.

For the Bake:

  1. Place a Dutch Oven with a lid in a cold oven. Preheat the oven to 500ºF with your pot inside for one hour. Pull a loaf out from the refrigerator. Lightly dust the top (which is actually the bottom) with rice flour. Flip the loaf out onto a small cutting board. You can now score the top with a razor or lame, if desired. Carefully remove the hot pot from the oven, slide the loaf into the pot, place the lid back onto the pot and place in the oven. Be very careful. The pot is very hot!
  2. Bake for 20 minutes. Carefully remove the lid (again, be careful because it’s very hot), reduce the temperature to 465ºF and bake for another 10-15 minutes until the bread is golden brown on top. You can also test for doneness with an instant read thermometer. If you put the thermometer in the middle of the loaf and it reads 190º-210ºF then it’s fully cooked.
  3. Remove the loaf of bread from the pot and allow the bread to cool for at least one hour.The bread will continue baking during this time.
  4. For your second loaf, you will return the pot to the hot oven and raise the temperature back up to 500º and let it heat up for 15 minutes before removing your second loaf from the refrigerator and repeating the process.
  5. Note: Because all ovens vary, you will definitely want to purchase an inexpensive oven thermometer and place it in the back to make sure that your oven temperature is consistent and accurate.

Nutrition

  • Serving Size: 1

Keywords: fermented sourdough bread

Fermented Sourdough Bread Recipe - Deliciously Organic (2024)

FAQs

How do you know if sourdough is fermented enough? ›

Under fermented bread will not spring up in the oven. It's dense, gummy and often pale (depending on the degree of under fermentation). Dough that has not been bulk fermented long enough will also be difficult to shape, sticky and will often spread once tipped out the banneton. Good sourdough takes time!

What happens if you ferment sourdough too long? ›

The loaf is also inclined to over spring resulting in a crumb with big, random, holes or channels running through the loaf. If you over-ferment the dough you run the risk of the gluten structure degrading and the loaf turning into a puddle of goo before your eyes, never to be retrieved and destined for the bin.

What is the difference between fermented bread and sourdough bread? ›

The flavor and texture between sourdough and slow-fermented breads is also different; slow-fermented breads tend to be less tangy and softer than sourdough breads.

Is fermented sourdough bread healthy? ›

According to some studies, sourdough bread acts as a prebiotic, which means that the fiber in the bread helps feed the “good” bacteria in your intestines. These bacteria are important for maintaining a stable, healthy digestive system. Sourdough is also lower in gluten than other forms of bread.

What does over fermented sourdough look like? ›

While there is a bit of leeway with timing, there is a point where the bread has been left to ferment long enough that it loses its spring. The biggest signs that dough is over-proofed usually involves a sticky, wet dough that won't hold it's shape.

What's the longest you can ferment sourdough? ›

Ideally, you don't want to allow sourdough bread to cold ferment for longer than 72 hours. Even up to 48 hours, you do risk some loss of gluten structure unless you manipulate the amount of starter down.

What does overproofed sourdough look like? ›

Note: As loaves begin to overproof they lose their height and shape. The crumb becomes more dense. The holes become more ragged and irregular in shape. The crust begins to thin and separate from the crumb.

Can I still bake over fermented sourdough? ›

Overproofed sourdough is preventable but also salvageable. Reshape the dough, bake it as a pizza or flatbread dough, or bake it and turn it into breadcrumbs for granola.

Is it okay to eat sourdough bread every day? ›

Is it healthy to eat sourdough everyday? You could eat sourdough every day, but it isn't necessarily healthy to do so. A healthy diet is characterized by balance and moderation. Whether or not it is healthy for you to consume sourdough every day depends on the rest of your diet.

Should sourdough smell fermented? ›

Yes. The lactic acid bacteria in your starter creates acetic acid, which is essentially a type of vinegar. This odor is very common.

Does sourdough bread ferment in your stomach? ›

During the long, slow fermentation of sourdough, phytic acid is broken down. This may well help with digestibility, especially because, unlike cows who have a compartment in their stomach for fermenting grass, we don't have a built-in fermentation process in our stomach to break down the acid.

What is the healthiest sourdough bread to eat? ›

When choosing a sourdough loaf, look for ones that have whole wheat, spelt or rye, Rizzo adds. Some studies suggest that Einkhorn wheat, a type of "ancient grain," may offer more nutritional benefits. When comparing nutrition labels, try to opt for the one with fewer ingredients and less sodium and sugar.

What is the disadvantage of sourdough bread? ›

Potential Drawbacks

Therefore, sourdough bread is not a safe choice for people with celiac disease or a wheat allergy, and it is not an ideal choice for people who are eating gluten-free or avoid wheat for any other reason.

What is the healthiest flour for sourdough bread? ›

Compared to whole wheat flour, rye flour is said to be the most nutrient- and amylase-dense option for a sourdough starter. Overall, it has a lower gluten protein content than wheat flour, which means it produces slack, sticky, and dense doughs.

How long should I let my sourdough ferment? ›

Typically, bulk fermentation will take between 6 to 8 hours, but could be longer or shorter by manipulating starter amount and temperature. Ideally, you don't want to allow sourdough bread to cold ferment for longer than 72 hours.

How long should I let my sourdough starter ferment? ›

How long does it take for a sourdough starter to be ready? In general, I've found it takes about 7 days from when you first mix flour and water to when a sourdough starter is ready to be used to bake bread.

Can you fix over fermented sourdough? ›

Overproofed sourdough is preventable but also salvageable. Reshape the dough, bake it as a pizza or flatbread dough, or bake it and turn it into breadcrumbs for granola.

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