The Fresh Loaf

A Community of Amateur Bakers and Artisan Bread Enthusiasts.

Starter Too Sour

ilovetodig's picture
ilovetodig

Starter Too Sour

I have a starter that is about 3 weeks old (refrigerated after 3 days), but the bread I made from it is too sour.  Should I toss all but about a cup and start feeding it for a day or two, then make my bread or what?  The original recipe was 2 cups flour, 2 cups water, 1 teas. sugar and 1 teasp. yeast.  How much water and flour should I add?  Any suggestions will be appreciated.

flournwater's picture
flournwater

First of all, there are a lot of folks on this forum who would give their life for a REALLY sour starter so perhaps you've got a marketable formula there.  Be specific about the type of flour, sugar and yeast you used.  You may help someone who has a problem directly opposite the one you describe.

Sorry, I have no idea how you'd "sweeten" a sour starter.

 

tgrayson's picture
tgrayson

According to Reinhart, if you want very sour bread, you only double your cutlure before using it.  If you want less sour, then triple or quadruple it.

diverpro94's picture
diverpro94

Sorry I might be repeating TG a bit. I read on www.sourdoughhome.com that if you want more sourness use less starter and more fermentation/rise/proof time; whereas if you want less of a sour taste use more of the starter and less fermentation/rise/proofing. Doing so adding less and more starter might change up the timing of your recipe.

-Diver

bakerking's picture
bakerking

When my starter was new (Sept.), it took almost 2 weeks to develop, the first loaves were way sour. I prefer a milder taste and my starter has mellowed. I am just baking 4 loaves of San Joaquin Sourdough that spent 2 nights in the fridge instead of 1. It will be interesting to see if they are more tangy.

Merry Christmas

Steve