Making Pizza with Sourdough Archives - Pizza Today https://pizzatoday.com/tag/making-pizza-with-sourdough/ 30 Years of Providing Business Solutions & Opportunities for Today's Pizzeria Operators Mon, 01 Sep 2025 09:15:20 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://pizzatoday.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/20x20_PT_icon.png Making Pizza with Sourdough Archives - Pizza Today https://pizzatoday.com/tag/making-pizza-with-sourdough/ 32 32 How to Make a Sourdough Starter | Knead to Know https://pizzatoday.com/news/how-to-make-a-sourdough-starter-knead-to-know/149711/ Tue, 05 Aug 2025 19:49:01 +0000 https://pizzatoday.com/?post_type=topics&p=149711 A Step-by-step Guide to Making a Sourdough Starter (and Maintaining One) Sourdough isn’t for everyone. Making it, eating it, maintaining it. There are plenty of preferments that can add great complexity, flavor and texture to your dough – and extend its shelf life. I’ve made dough with most of these, but once I started experimenting […]

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A Step-by-step Guide to Making a Sourdough Starter (and Maintaining One)

Sourdough isn’t for everyone. Making it, eating it, maintaining it. There are plenty of preferments that can add great complexity, flavor and texture to your dough – and extend its shelf life. I’ve made dough with most of these, but once I started experimenting with sourdough, there was no turning back. The difference is that while other preferments (such as a biga or poolish) are created by combining commercial yeast with flour and water, sourdough is a natural yeast.

Since sourdough is a living thing, there are a lot of factors that can alter how your dough turns out. Everyone’s starter will be a little different – even if you use the exact same flour and water. This is because sourdough feeds off the natural bacteria in the air and the sugar in the flour to create wild yeast. Just like all dough making, time and temperature are important considerations.

Before you try to make dough with sourdough, learning how to create and maintain your sourdough starter is essential. How well you do this will directly affect the quality and outcome of your dough. This means what you feed it, how often you feed it and the environment where it lives all contribute to its flavor and the activity of the yeast. All of this might sound intimidating for those beginning their journey with sourdough, but starters are incredibly resilient.

Broken down, a sourdough starter (also called a natural leaven, leaven or starter) is simply a mix of flour and water that hosts a stable blend of beneficial bacteria and wild yeast. All you need to make your own is flour, water and time – all things you already have in your shop! Maintaining a healthy starter requires regular feedings. A feeding is when you take out the majority of old starter and replenish it with fresh flour and water. I like to feed mine twice a day with equal parts flour and water. Your starter will stay healthier and more consistent the more often you feed it.

Since you only add two ingredients to a starter, the quality of each is important. If you live in an area that does not have drinkable tap water – or you’re in a city that uses chloramine or chlorine to clean the water – you might want to use bottled or filtered water in your starter. The flour you use also will impact the taste of your starter and pizza dough as well as the fermentation process. Using a flour that is higher in nutrients and sugars, such as whole-grain flour, will expedite the fermentation process. A white flour will form a stronger gluten net and has increased gas-trapping ability. By combining the two flours, you can get the best of both. Also: Make sure there aren’t any additives in your flour; they can kill the wild yeast and create mold.

One of the many great things about sourdough starters is that they are hard to ruin. If you forget to feed your starter for a day or even two, they almost always pop back to life once you refresh them. If you’re not a daily baker, you can put your starter in your fridge or even dry it out, then refresh it the day before you plan on making bread or pizza dough. The flavor, texture and digestibility that sourdough starters provide make the extra effort more than worth it.

It takes five to nine days to make your starter. As soon as you feed it, the yeast and bacteria in your culture will begin to metabolize the sugars in the flour, creating carbon dioxide gasses as a byproduct. These gasses cause the starter to rise throughout the day. Once they’ve eaten all the fresh food, the lactic and acetic acid begin to break down the gluten, causing the starter to fall and create a sour or vinegary smell. This is why I like to use my starter right before it peaks, when lots of gas is being produced and the fermentation activity is strong. It gives the final product a fresh, almost floral taste as opposed to a more acidic, sour flavor. Since the yeast is beginning to die when the starter falls, using it after its peak creates a very dense and flat crust that won’t brown in the oven.

The Sourdough Starter Guide (see table below) is a recipe to help get you started. Once you have an active starter and are regularly feeding it, the quality of your dough will become consistent. Keep in mind that the amount of fresh flour and water you feed your starter before making dough will depend on the quantity you need for your recipe. For example, if you are making a batch of dough with a 50-pound bag of flour and are using 8 percent starter, you would need 4 pounds of starter. To create this, you would feed your starter with
2 pounds of flour and 2 pounds of water.

I like to create starter out of freshly milled, whole-grain flour since it is rich in nutrients, bacteria and yeast. You will be able to see signs of activity much more quickly than if you use white flour alone. The temperature of the room and water you use also will affect the fermentation. Yeast proliferates more quickly in a warm environment than a cold one.

Audrey Kelly owns Audrey Jane’s Pizza Garage in Boulder, Colorado.

 

Sourdough Starter Guide

Tools 2 large glass jars with lids (placed loosely on jars)
Kitchen scale
Small rubber spatula
Rubber band or marker

 

At each feeding Place a clean jar on your scale and scoop in some portion (outlined below) from the jar containing your starter.
Add fresh flour and water; mix well to incorporate completely.
Cover the jar loosely and let rest until the next feeding.
Day 1 Place an empty jar on your scale and zero out the scale.
Add 125 grams whole-grain flour and 125 grams warm water (about 80 degrees F).
Stir together.
Place lid loosely on the jar (you want a little air to be able to get in and some gasses to escape).
Mark the mixture’s height on the jar with a rubber band or marker.
Set the jar aside on the counter, out of direct sunlight but not in a cold area.
Day 2 Place a different clean jar on scale and zero out.
Add 75 grams of the starter mixture you made the day before to a clean jar.
Add 50 grams of whole-grain flour and 50 grams of white bread flour.
Add 100 grams of warm water.
Stir it all together and place a lid loosely on top.
Mark the mixture height on the jar with a rubber band or marker.
Set aside.
Day 3 Repeat the same process as Day 2.
Days 4, 5 and 6 You will start to see some activity in your starter, and it will take on a sour smell.
Repeat the process from Day 2 and 3 – but instead of doing it only once a day, you will do it twice a day, 12 hours apart.
Days 7, 8 and 9 Repeat the process twice a day but use less starter in the mix. Instead of putting in 75 grams of starter, use only 20 grams. At this point, I also use less whole-grain flour and use more white bread flour. The less old starter you use, the more fresh starter food (and, thus, fermentation) there will be. By this point, your starter will be ready to use in your dough recipe.
Place a clean jar on kitchen scale and zero out.
Add 20 grams of starter.
Add 20 grams of whole-grain flour and 80 grams of bread flour.
Add 100 grams of warm water.
Place lid loosely on jar and set aside until next feeding.
Mark height of the mixture on the jar with a rubber band or marker.

August 2025 Issue of Pizza Today Magazine, Pizzeria of the Year, Mattenga's Pizzeria, San Antonio, TexasRead the August 2025 Issue of Pizza Today Magazine

In this issue, we announce Pizza Today’s 2025 Pizzeria of the Year. Find out how the owners turned a failing pizzeria purchase into a fast-growing pizza business. Learn how to make a sourdough starter. It’s Green Season! Green Chile, that is. Explore menu ideas that add New Mexican flavors to your pizza. Find out which strip mall locations work best for pizzerias – and how to maximize traffic. Discover why pizzerias are going with custom mobile apps to capture sales and return visits. Tap into addictive bar menu options to increase check averages. Go to the August Issue.

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Knead to Know: Making Pizza with Sourdough — Beauty and the Yeast https://pizzatoday.com/news/knead-to-know-making-pizza-with-sourdough-beauty-and-the-yeast/145477/ Mon, 20 Mar 2023 20:15:35 +0000 https://pizzatoday.com/?post_type=topics&p=145477 Art and Science of Making Pizza with Sourdough “The future of dough lies in its past. Sourdough is back and its here to stay for two reasons: more complex flavor and better digestibility. Its a twofer thats hard to beat!” Peter Reinhart, James Beard Award-winning Baker and Author of Pizza Quest When I was young […]

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Art and Science of Making Pizza with Sourdough

“The future of dough lies in its past. Sourdough is back and its here to stay for two reasons:
more complex flavor and better digestibility. Its a twofer thats hard to beat!”
Peter Reinhart, James Beard Award-winning Baker and Author of Pizza Quest

When I was young and crazy, I endured the grueling training to become a Naval Aircrewman. This hellish school consisted of an amazing array of tortures like being pushed from helicopters into floating knots of parachute cord in the Gulf of Mexico. One morning our instructors lined us up on the beach in our bathing suits. I knew this was going to get ugly when I saw several rubber-clad Navy divers in boats loitering out in the roiling surf. Our instructor smiled and told us that this was a rip tide area. He then ordered us to jump in, swim out 20 yards and swim back. I, like the others, felt the
undercurrent pull my legs out to sea as I tried to swim back.

Exhausted, I eventually stopped as the current took me out to the rubber boats where the screaming crew threw nets dragging us to a safer surf. Later, as we all bellyflopped on the beach huffing, we were told that sometimes you must work with nature to succeed and if we had swum back diagonally to the shore, we would have made it. Now, after 23 years of owning a pizzeria, I know that sometimes you need control and sometimes you must work with nature. There’s no better example of this than making pizza with sourdough.

Doughba Fett

As restaurant owners and managers, we all strive to make the best product around. Our tolerance for uncontrolled behavior and actions is minimal. Sometimes our control leads us to create a product that is very predictable while running through dough shifts that are merely transactional. With sourdough pizza, we give in to nature, to the little bacteria and, like the tides of the ocean, we work with nature to get the best benefit of taste and digestion.

What is sourdough? Well, the short answer is that you rise your dough using natural yeasts and bacteria. Once you set a convenient sourdough schedule, you’ll see the oven spring puff of the cornicione (crust) and taste the heightened acidity and complex flavors. This will be your expression, your artistic edge. So, what is sourdough again? Here is the long answer.

Yeast lives everywhere, and the key is to capture the living yeast with flour and water. When flour and water are mixed, they trigger enzymes that break down the flour starches into simple sugars, producing carbon dioxide (gas) and ethanol alcohol. Once this yeast colony is fed continuously, it will rise and fall under the right conditions of time and temperature. It is then added to a batch of pizza dough where the gas makes the dough rise and the alcohol evaporates in the oven later.

Commercial yeast is named Saccharamyces Cerevisiae and is used because it is predictable, reliable, easy to package, and control. As it ferments, it converts sugars in the flours to alcohol and carbon dioxide. This makes the dough rise in the oven. It also generates a small amount of acid which the yeast does not like because it slows the yeast growth. As the dough ages, the acid slows the yeast activity down and eventually the yeast cells die.

“Sourdough,” or wild yeast can tolerate the acids that kill commercial yeasts. As you build your starter, you build a culture of millions of living wild yeast and bacteria cells which produce a distinct acidic flavor, hence “sourdough.” This starter grows by removing and replacing the starter with flour and water which is called “feeding.” Sourdough flavor has different tastes and tang depending upon where you live and how you grew your starter. (Fruit skins, nuts, milk, potatoes, morning dew or just the air where you live.) Like commercial yeasted pizza dough, sourdough starters and mixes can be slowed down with refrigeration.

 

Puff Daddy

There are three stages to build a natural yeast culture to use to make pizza.

First Phase: This is when you build the yeast strain with flour and water. As mentioned before, you can use fruit skins and/or different rye or whole wheat flours to make this faster because they contain more yeasts and sugars. This can take from four to six days.

Second Phase: This is making the “Starter,” “Mother,” or “Sponge” from the first seed culture above. This will be your base to keep feeding as well as nurturing its growth by taking away and adding flour and water to see the bubbling growth.   

Third Stage: This is making the “Levain” to add to the final dough. A small amount of starter is added to flour and water and set aside in a warm environment for up to two days to increase fermentation activity. It will act as the basis for a rise in each sourdough batch.

 

Austin Flours

Flour: All flours can work well with a natural starter depending upon the flour grind, mixing, temperature, PH levels, and holding time, but especially the combination of protein level as compared to the hydration you add.

Water: Adding flour to water will create gluten. This consists of a web of strands containing the proteins glutenin and gliadin. The water allows these protein strands to stretch, and mixing creates the structure of the gluten net. Pizza, as opposed to bread, needs a strong gluten net. But not too strong to stretch a pizza … and the hydration needs to be high enough for a good oven spring. Also, it must support toppings and the ability to slide the pie into the oven. Other factors are also in play with water, such as temperature, bulk holding, mixing speed, and when you add salt.

Salt: Salt slows down and controls fermentation growth. Because of this, there are more sugars left inside the pizza dough when ready to bake, which adds flavor, color, and wheat-like aroma. Salt also tightens the gluten net ensuring that the carbon dioxide is captured when baking. Most pizza aficionados will tell you that 2 percent salt is enough to regulate fermentation as well as giving your pizza dough time to develop flavor. Some pizza pros, especially in Naples, who do not use refrigeration, put 3 percent in their mix to facilitate a longer fermentation time. Some pizza makers use a bread bakers trick called the autolyze method and do not add salt to the already-mixed flour and water for between 20 to 60 minutes. This lets the hydrated gluten strands relax and thus strengthens the gluten net.

 

Simple Sourdough Starter and Levain

To make a simple sourdough starter, begin with an open mind. Know that this will take from four to six days. My first starter was made using the recipe from Peter Reinhart’s book, American Pie. Remember that your starter is different from the final Levain. The starter is your basis, the levain is a very active ingredient built from the starter to add to your batch of sourdough.

Day 1. Add 3/4 cup of water to 1 cup of flour, preferably whole wheat, or rye. Mix until well hydrated. Cover with a towel, paper towel or cheesecloth. Place on a countertop at room temperature or warmer.

Day 2. There will no or not much growth. Take out half the dough and throw it away replacing it with ½ cup high-gluten (pizza) flour and ½ cup water. Mix again and cover. This time, mark the container with tape or a Sharpie where top line of the dough is.

Day 3. There will still be very little or no growth. Repeat the process of Day 2.

Day 4. There should be a distinct growth of the dough and depending upon the temperature of the room, it may have doubled in size. If the dough has not doubled in size, repeat the process from day 2 and 3. If your starter has doubled in size, continue to train the starter.

To train your starter

Throw out half of the active starter and add 1 cup high gluten flour and 1 cup water. This will look like pancake batter and rise and fall as you feed this starter at the same time each day. The fragrance will change from ripe to sour to yogurt throughout the day. This regular feeding will build a sweet lactic acid character and the fermentation will become predictable after a few days. Start feeding your starter two times each day for two days to insure a very active starter. Now is time to either store your starter in the refrigerator to slow the fermentation process down or make a levain, which is a portion of the starter added to the final dough to rise your crust. You may scale up your levain to reach your ultimate need.

For the Levain

It is important to create a very active levain for a great rise in your final pizza. The percentage of starter in your levain build depends upon when you are going to bake with the levain next and the temperature the levain is kept at. A good rule of thumb is 20 percent starter in your levain for a 12-hour levain hold before final bake. You may need a smaller portion of flour and water for a 24-48 hour levain until you see the yeasts activities develop and the levain smelling sweet and looking bubbly.

Test your Levain

To test your levain, fill a cup of water and place a small amount of levain- it should float. Now you can add from six to 30 percent of your levain to your final batch depending upon the length of time you’ll hold the dough. (So, if you are mixing a 25-pound bag of flour, you’ll need at least 1.5 pounds of levain.) To save the levain, you can add flour to it to create a dry paste and refrigerate for later building.

John Gutekanst owns Avalanche Pizza in Athens, Ohio.

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