The Fresh Loaf

A Community of Amateur Bakers and Artisan Bread Enthusiasts.

Size/Shape of starter container

alan856's picture
alan856

Size/Shape of starter container

This may seem silly - but most starter vids I see are almost always in a tall jar or container.  I'm trying a stiff rye starter it is a REAL PITA to stir that sticky mess in a tall container.

Is there any reason why a starter could not be matured in a somewhat wide container/bowl so stirring and mixing could more easily be done? 

When it has matured I'd like to use the "scraping"  method and just keep a small amount in a jar in the fridge - then feed just 200 grams or so for a bake.

phaz's picture
phaz

À long as it's easy to measure it doesn't matter. Enjoy!

alan856's picture
alan856

THANKS! That is sorta what I thought - just wanted to be sure.

phaz's picture
phaz

If, and its a big if, you are baking on a regular basis (every 3 or 4 days) - you can just use most of it and  set aside an equal amount to mature till its needed again - simple. Enjoy!

alcophile's picture
alcophile

I had some old freezer containers and I used a 1-pint container like this one:

  Mobil Freezer Container

I use this for about 100–150 g of 100% hydration rye starter. It is very easy to stir the starter when refreshing with flour and water.

Dave Cee's picture
Dave Cee

I've been using these for a few years. Several different sizes and shapes.

My starter is kept in the fridge between (infrequent) bakes. Best wishes. Dave

alan856's picture
alan856

Wow - the starter blowing out the top is impressive! What flour and what water ratio are you using for that?

Dave Cee's picture
Dave Cee

10% whole wheat flour

10% dark rye flour

Purified water

75% hydration