Mastering Your Sourdough Starter - A deep dive into Flavor and Acidity

Тәжірибелік нұсқаулар және стиль

With this video you will learn all you need to know about the flavor and acidity of your sourdough starter. We will closely look at different sourdough starters and their role in the fermentation of your bread.
We will look at the products produced during fermentation, mainly ethanol, CO2, lactic acid and acetic acid. Then we will deep dive into different sourdough starter types and compare their respective fermentation. Afterwards I will give you some tips on how you can bake with local flours.
Links:
Support me by buying me a pack of flour: thbrco.io/support-me
Get my starter: thbrco.io/my-starter
Purchase a pH meter to measure acidity of your dough: thbrco.io/ph-meter-advanced (affiliate link, I will earn some money in case you decide to buy it)
Also big shoutout to Jan-Pieter van den Wittenboer who helped me with the pH experiments!
Chapters:
0:00 Intro
0:24 The microorganisms
1:17 The fermentation
2:00 Different starter types
3:33 The fluffiest dough
5:50 Achieving a more sour bread
7:10 My preferred starter
#sourdoughstarter #sourdough

Пікірлер: 282

  • @simplybeautifulsourdough8920
    @simplybeautifulsourdough89202 жыл бұрын

    This is very helpful, but I think I'm going to have to watch it about six times because it's early in my brain has not unfogged yet.🤣 Thank you very much for taking the time to make it!

  • @the_bread_code

    @the_bread_code

    2 жыл бұрын

    My pleasure. Thanks for the idea Nancy 🤗

  • @simplybeautifulsourdough8920

    @simplybeautifulsourdough8920

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@the_bread_code Seeing it broken down and the "why" helps me bake better bread. I think a lot of people mistake the the words "dairy notes" with a mild flavor. This is likely where some confusion occurs. Of course, sour cream, yogurt, and quark are all a bit sour. So there's that. 🤔

  • @the_bread_code

    @the_bread_code

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@simplybeautifulsourdough8920 so the dairy notes of the liquid starter can be perceived as less sour. The acetic acid has a very strong flavor to it. Lactic acid is more mild.

  • @simplybeautifulsourdough8920

    @simplybeautifulsourdough8920

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@the_bread_code Ah! So the dairy notes are an additional level of flavor, in addition to the sour?

  • @the_bread_code

    @the_bread_code

    2 жыл бұрын

    ​@@simplybeautifulsourdough8920 Yes. A different kind of sour. Not so strong, more mild.

  • @yananpu576
    @yananpu5762 жыл бұрын

    Thank you, Professor. I feel as if I am sitting in a lecture hall in a university of bread. I learned so much from your channel.😃

  • @alexandersolla
    @alexandersolla2 жыл бұрын

    This is probably the most helpful thing I have read about flavor influence! Thank you!

  • @carolschedler3832
    @carolschedler3832 Жыл бұрын

    I just named my first sourdough starter “Hendrik” 😁 Thank you for sharing all your experience with us!!! He is five weeks old now .🎉. Thank you Hendrik!

  • @clarabartha1737
    @clarabartha173710 ай бұрын

    Possibly one of the sweetest guys - and smartest - on the internet.

  • @jamescolannino8694
    @jamescolannino86942 жыл бұрын

    Your channel is amazing. I got really serious about sourdough a year and a half ago, but had a really hard time and gave up after a while. Your channel is giving me the confidence to try again. Thank you.

  • @zacharysherry2910

    @zacharysherry2910

    5 ай бұрын

    Sourdough literally ferments itself whether you stress or not

  • @jdxtube68
    @jdxtube682 жыл бұрын

    Outstanding! Content on sourdough starter is something I have never heard elsewhere before. Thanks from Australia.

  • @edwardlevitan5416
    @edwardlevitan54162 жыл бұрын

    I converted a regular starter to stiff about a month ago and I find it is much easier to manage. I skipped the liquid starter step and went directly from a rye regular to white bread flour stiff. The bread doesn’t taste sour to me at all. It makes great bread. I took a piece with my on vacation in my checked luggage on an airplane. That evening I mixed a dough using my friends American AP flour that afternoon. Continued the bulk fermentation in the fridge over night and baked a beautiful bread the next evening for dinner. The stiff starter is so much more forgiving and easier to work with, except for the need to knead it. Thank you Hendrik I have learned a tremendous amount from you on my year long sourdough journey. PS. I have some sourdough pizza cold fermenting right now after feeding that starter one more time with the same unknown AP flour.

  • @strangerintheselands251
    @strangerintheselands251 Жыл бұрын

    Wow. This is superb. Once you get the mechanics of properties, you can play around however you like, really. If you don't get the principles, though, you are bound to stick to recipes and have no room ... for nothing really. Super helpful, Cheap German.

  • @dbpike
    @dbpike Жыл бұрын

    I moved from Canada to Spain last May and brought my starter and recipes with me. Sadly my starter died… RIP. For the last 10 months, my attempts at bread have ended up as pancakes. Flour? Water? Temperature? Relative Humidity? Sunburn? I experimented with all to no success. However after creating a new starter with Spanish microbes and trying a stiff starter, I had my first success! After downloading (and supporting ) your book and following your great channel, I’ve learned a few things: 1) I am spoiled coming from Canada with easily accesible, high gluten flours that can withstand the bacteria of a regular starter. 2) I was using bottled water but switched to tap water. Water in the Valencia region is extremely hard. So it probably raised the pH. 3) As you indicated, the stiff starter made a great open crumb even with the local Harina de Fuersa (bread flour). However there was no tangy flavour supporting your lesson. 4) Spanish microbes, like all things here, have a different rhythm of life. It is me that needs to adapt, not my starter! My goal now is to slowly adjust the starter to find a good balance. Thanks for all of your work. It is appreciated!

  • @SPQRCenturion1976
    @SPQRCenturion1976 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for these instructions and guidelines, they are very helpful. I surely do appreciate your time and effort in your videos. Keep up with good work dude.

  • @einbisschenbullerbue
    @einbisschenbullerbue2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much! This finally shed some light on the mystery why sometimes my bread is quite sour (we love it!) and why at other times I just cannot figure out why it ends up being so different. I guess it's due to my non-measure approach...I just mix it together without a lot of fuzz 😉 - THANK YOU!!

  • @isabelab6851
    @isabelab68512 жыл бұрын

    Great video as usual. I for me, the takeaway is to make liquid to regular to stiff to get the sweet notes. That said, my starter has been loving California coolness! New bread making experience for me. But with the solid foundation that you and Kristin provided, I can adapt and make great bread.

  • @ikvangalen6101
    @ikvangalen61012 жыл бұрын

    You’re the breadmatician! I very much like the approach on this! Thanks for your effort!

  • @dereli0480
    @dereli04802 жыл бұрын

    Very interesting video. One question: for how many cycles would you recommend to go through to go from normal to fluid to stiff? Thank you!

  • @Jahloveipraise
    @Jahloveipraise2 жыл бұрын

    I couldn’t find a suggestion category in discord. But i was browsing through the fails/success and saw some beautiful scoring and was thinking it would be super cool if there was a section for decorative scoring where we could post our scores or discuss tips on how to score better. Just got on the discord channel tho. It is such a great community, i appreciate you making a positive constructive outlet for bakers around the world to discuss and share our adventures. As always thank you Hendrik!

  • @the_bread_code

    @the_bread_code

    2 жыл бұрын

    Great idea. Thank you 🙏🏻

  • @Daniel-me2do
    @Daniel-me2do8 ай бұрын

    This was amazing. Science helps breaks it all down. #chemistry. Well done.

  • @em34327
    @em34327 Жыл бұрын

    I made a starter dough last night and it was already done in the morning! That’s extremely rare, I woke up and it was bubbly and over spilling, I did the float test and it was ready, I made a sourdough bread and it was great

  • @DeannaWalsh
    @DeannaWalshАй бұрын

    Thanks! I’m fairly new to sourdough. I was wondering why some people’s videos are showing a soft, wet starter versus what I have. I have a fairly thick starter. It is like “the blob” and it seems to work well for me. I have a very simple way of using it and I don’t have to work with the dough much. I just make regular soft sourdough because my oven and my home cannot tolerate the very hot oven. So I’ll do things a little differently and it’s working out.

  • @Marianna2877
    @Marianna28772 жыл бұрын

    This is very helpful. Yes, the strong gluten flour, in fact many good flour are very expensive in Asia, I've been trying to make a nice bread for over two years but never taste or look the same unless I'm using instant yeast. Until last month that I bought the French flour what is WAY more expensive, but the results is very satisfying. Now I'm trying many different bags of local flour to see which one have better gluten texture and this chart help me to understand why my dough is always sticky or very sour, some even taste like beer.

  • @maboo736

    @maboo736

    Жыл бұрын

    I live in SE Asia and my starter is super active by day 3 because of the warm climate. Always try to get the highest protein in flour. Perhaps try mixing in All Purpose flour? It helps to lessen the sourness and give bread a more mellow flavour but still a decent rise.

  • @Marianna2877

    @Marianna2877

    Жыл бұрын

    @@maboo736 thank you. It took me a while to try many different flour, and I noticed, the one that work better is more expensive. But at least I didn't waste the flour and times. And I'm also very happy.

  • @Buget-Holodeck
    @Buget-Holodeck2 жыл бұрын

    You are a bread wizard.

  • @wesnoble510
    @wesnoble5107 ай бұрын

    Nice explanation. One thing that would be interesting to overlap is the seed quantity- essentially the ratio of leftover to new flour amount combined with different water amounts. In my case I’m realizing that by maintaining the regular starter method for a few days I almost completely lose the acidity. I’m guessing the yeast outcompetes the bacteria and then nearly vice versa. Maintaining the balance over time is tricky.

  • @cacherivera
    @cacherivera2 жыл бұрын

    OMG, before you made this video I did the same with the starters: regular, to liquid and now to stiff, and everybody says my bread is awesome! Thank you for all your info. I love your videos.

  • @afonsoribeiro1002

    @afonsoribeiro1002

    2 жыл бұрын

    how many times did you feed your starter in the liquid form before changing it to a stiff starter??

  • @cacherivera

    @cacherivera

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@afonsoribeiro1002 I kept it liquid for about a month. Once the flavor had changed for good I changed it to stiff. I was looking for a mild flavor that would produce a very fluffy bread. Achieved.

  • @afonsoribeiro1002

    @afonsoribeiro1002

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@cacherivera Nice gonna give it a try

  • @karolpauk4336

    @karolpauk4336

    Жыл бұрын

    @@cacherivera And the stiff starter will keep this diary mild flavor for good? why? how is this possible if you've changed the hydration?

  • @christineboyce988
    @christineboyce988 Жыл бұрын

    Guten Tag. After studying what you wrote about liquified starter and the post of the young woman researcher who tested the yeasts and bacteria prevalent in their lab. Since I make sourkraut, vinegar and yogurt I suspected that I had too much vinegar mixed in to my starter and it just didn’t work. Also, your information on using unbleached flour to routinely feed the starter was a great eye opener. My new starter is active and I’m baking with it today. Oh, also keeping a separate small jar to see the rise is genius. I use it for my yeast bakes too. No more under or overproofing. Happy New Year! Gutes Backen und Herzlicher Dank !

  • @myavaphillips2912
    @myavaphillips29124 ай бұрын

    You are a genius but unfortunately most people like me just can’t comprehend starting with regular starter,converting to a liquid starter then back to regular starter but maintaining the taste of the liquid starter ,so why change your starters and the lastly but always use the stiff starter even though the liquid will give you more sour notes only if you ferment longer. I know you are amazing and for scientific bakers the info is used but just regular home bakers can’t compute all this information so I feel very sad I still do not know any more about just how to bake a great loafof bread😞 I don’t have any idea what to do. But I do love you and appreciate you and all your research.

  • @MauzyrockRC
    @MauzyrockRC2 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the terrific breakdown! Before I saw your vid here, I was wrapping my head around A French dude who made a school for only natural levain bread. He was going deep into PH using a ph/thermometer to surveil dough. Interesting that we can observe bacterial or yeast activity to gain info on dough. I love this! Thanks again!

  • @the_bread_code

    @the_bread_code

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you. That works too. Ph is individual and depends on your starter and flour composition 😎. If you are a true bread nerd it can be great 😂

  • @sabinamauri7423
    @sabinamauri7423 Жыл бұрын

    I have just separated my starter in 2, to test the liquid version. I think it is also becoming acid because I keep to much of it when I refresh, I recently discovered that only a teaspoon is enough . Let's see how this change will affect taste

  • @DrDMM23
    @DrDMM232 жыл бұрын

    Dude you are simply great! In Egypt we don't have high protein flours or bread flours AT ALL. My SD never has an open crumb. I just started a stiff starter. Can't wait to see how it turns out. Danke!!!

  • @MC-tw1jg

    @MC-tw1jg

    2 жыл бұрын

    How did it go?

  • @UnPetitPique
    @UnPetitPique Жыл бұрын

    Awesome, thanks so much, I learned a lot from this. Also explains my sour starter. Thanks!

  • @Losantiville
    @Losantiville Жыл бұрын

    On loaf number 7, not great, knew This was my problem. Learning what to ask is definite improvement!

  • @ronaldconiglio9942
    @ronaldconiglio99422 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for making the flowcharts available.

  • @jamesthomas1628
    @jamesthomas16282 жыл бұрын

    The chart is very helpful. Would be interesting to have a similar chart for the liquid starter and the stiff starter.

  • @the_bread_code

    @the_bread_code

    2 жыл бұрын

    Great idea 👍

  • @IPMan-me6lo
    @IPMan-me6lo Жыл бұрын

    My first starter I made, would'n really start on day four, so I add two or three teaspoons of Stout Beer. Day five, it seems the starter liked beer, he starts to grow, and he gets a very nice flavor. After looking your video, I know now, it has to do more with the consistence too.

  • @smolbunz
    @smolbunz Жыл бұрын

    How do I remember all this ?? 😅 great video though, I love this channel! This is my main bread channel I go to when I need some help with my bread baking.

  • @the_bread_code

    @the_bread_code

    Жыл бұрын

    Sorry! I know it's a bit much haha.

  • @joecaner
    @joecaner2 жыл бұрын

    I am use regular starter then. I keep my starter in the fridge and I feed it the evening before I bake. I take it out the morning of to let it proof. I add the starter to the bread flour and water mix and let that proof. I then add freshly milled rye and hydrated toasted seeds, mix and let it proof again. The results go into bread pans to rise in the fridge before baking. I am getting good rise and sour flavor. I've used the same steps for whole wheat, but I have become quite partial to seeded rye sour dough bread.

  • @angelkoch7233
    @angelkoch7233 Жыл бұрын

    Much love from southern Alberta Canada

  • @rko1095
    @rko1095 Жыл бұрын

    My starter is 3 parts bread flour, 1 part rye flour and 1 part whole wheat flour. I use distilled water instead of tap water as tap water contains Chlorine or Chloramines (Chlorine and Ammonia) which can hurt your yeast and bacteria. If you can't get distilled water (usually from your grocery or pharmacy) you can just leave tap water in an open container overnight to degas the water. The last thing I add as a little sugar to the mix to give the yeast and bacteria some extra food. I make a stiff paste in a mason jar and store it in the refrigerator. I feed it every week or so by removing half of the starter and adding flour, water and sugar in the same portions. When I want to make a loaf, the night before, I take about half a cup of my starter out and put in into another jar with half a cup of bread flour, a teaspoon of sugar and enough distilled water to make a thick paste. I leave the lid on loosely and put it on the counter overnight. By morning it has risen to about triple its size and is ready to be used in my bread.

  • @oldkingcrow777

    @oldkingcrow777

    Жыл бұрын

    I don't worry about using tap water, but if I'm in a purist mood I'll use filtered from the Zero filter. Life is amazingly good at continuing. The chlorine in most taps, and mine at least, isn't nearly concentrated enough to beat out the starter which was essentially pure culture at the time of drying. The chlorine didn't stand a chance 😂 That said, if I lived in Flint, Michigan I would probably go for bottled/distilled 😂😬

  • @beaverschaeren5036
    @beaverschaeren5036 Жыл бұрын

    I 'm totally new to sourdough, and I found already your you-tube channel very interesting. I watched and learned alot at this time! Not fully understand everything but it will come.... hopefully 😅🙈👌 so thank you, Hope to see much more new videos 🍀🌹💖

  • @cubanmama4564
    @cubanmama45642 жыл бұрын

    Wow! You are such a great teacher! I so enjoy the scientific explanation. Thanks for being an engineer.

  • @drmarxx
    @drmarxx2 жыл бұрын

    Now the big question is how to adjust your recipes for stiff and liquid starters. Do you use the same recommended percentages for a starter? Also you have to take hydration into account. Thanks

  • @the_bread_code

    @the_bread_code

    2 жыл бұрын

    Correct and great question. So for 500g of flour I'd be using 50g of liquid starter. I'd also treat the 50g like water. Your dough becomes more wet by applying it. Hope that makes sense.

  • @stupidhandles

    @stupidhandles

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yes! Hydration of dough is overall hydration so you need to adjust for the type of starter. One way is to start with your overall gross weight of flour, say you make a batch of 1kg flour (for ease of maths as an example) 80% hydration means 800ml of water. Make your starter from these, so stiff, take 100gm flour and 50ml water from your over all, so you dough mx will be 150gm starter 900gm flour 750mp water This is a simplified way of what I do, I use a liquid starter so have to reduce the amount of water for the dough. I find it easiest to work out gross amounts and work back. For amount of starter I base it on 20% total flour weight if using a normal 1:1 ratio starter, so that works out as flour at 10% of flour for starter. So for stiff 10% flour means 100gm flour and 50ml of water, for liquid at 1:5 flour to water 100gm flour and 500ml water, which mean you only add 300ml for water in the above example for 80% hydration. (Liquid starter I start off half the amount the day before, then around 6-8hours before mixing dough add the second half to the starter and mix your dough when the starter is good and active) (1kg flour is probably an impractical measure, I just used it as a easier way to explain the ratios, I usual do batches of 830gm flour and 664ml water, of that 80gm flour is used in starter and correct ratio of water for which starter type, I bulk ferment then split into 2lafs for final proving and bake)

  • @drmarxx

    @drmarxx

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@the_bread_code maybe another video on how to use liquid and stiff starters in recipes… Love your videos. Thank you for your replies.

  • @stupidhandles

    @stupidhandles

    2 жыл бұрын

    Further to the above, my mother starter is 1:1 I keep it in the fridge so it only needs feeding once every week to two weeks,) I add a spoon full of this mother starter to the starters I will bake with. This way I find most practical and you never have starter discards with this method

  • @drmarxx

    @drmarxx

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@stupidhandles Super clear Dave, thank you for the time you took to 'splain to me…

  • @lisanagel214
    @lisanagel2142 жыл бұрын

    Wow...very interesting...i have seen so many variations in thickness of the starter and now I know why!! I use stiff version and it is very forgiving!

  • @jamessilva8331
    @jamessilva83312 жыл бұрын

    I needed this today! Thank you my German friend :)

  • @the_bread_code

    @the_bread_code

    2 жыл бұрын

    My pleasure 🙏🏻

  • @Tooold2bartend
    @Tooold2bartend7 ай бұрын

    Your videos are amazing! Mind blowing detail! Would you do a video on transferring from regular, to wet to stiff starters? (if already done, I apologies, still getting through the back log of vids!) thank you.

  • @user-pr9uk9jg5y
    @user-pr9uk9jg5y2 жыл бұрын

    Das war jetzt mal wirklich erleuchtend. Vielen Dank

  • @the_bread_code

    @the_bread_code

    2 жыл бұрын

    Sehr gerne!

  • @silvermoon3486
    @silvermoon34866 ай бұрын

    Great 👍🏼 video. 😮. There are so many KZread tutorials that use stiff starter & some liquid, it’s confusing because you don’t know the percentage of protein the flour is. Hummm🤔🤷‍♀️👍🏼❤️👍🏼

  • @playing2winitall
    @playing2winitall2 жыл бұрын

    Hello Hendrik, thank you for your channel. Just a reminder that you stated you would have another giveaway for your starter.

  • @UnPetitPique
    @UnPetitPique5 ай бұрын

    Thanks a lot for this. I've watched it twice now and find it extremely interesting! You have become very quiet, I hope all is well?

  • @Deeber65
    @Deeber652 жыл бұрын

    I'm curious about something: Has anyone tried using a precise but smaller mix of two starter types (stiff AND liquid) in their bread batch? So, less of each type but still totaling the overall "standard" amount of starter. Not sure how that might work -- but wondering if that would result in a more pronounced sour flavor (from liquid starter) but with the fluffy attributes of a stiff starter. Thoughts??

  • @janwillemvanleeuwen7121
    @janwillemvanleeuwen71218 ай бұрын

    Your videos are really so helpful, thanks for that. Okay, I'm almost there. After doing research, more clarity is starting to come into my head. I still have one question. Your ideal starter is when you go from a regular, to liquid, to a stiff starter. But how long do you ferment the liquid starter (with de regular starter out of the fridge) for before switching to a stiff starter?

  • @xijoe5957
    @xijoe59572 жыл бұрын

    Vielen Dank fuer das Video. Aber waurm wird die fluessige Sauerteig saurer als das normale, wenn die fluessige das Wachsen von Accid bacteria hemmt?

  • @michaeld8532
    @michaeld85322 жыл бұрын

    Great video. Thought I'd try a liquid starter, liking the sound of the flavour. Normally feeding my starter 1:5:5, with Dark rye, I et a healthy rise of the starter, but not furious as some starters seem to be. I took 10gms of my normal starter, added 50gms dark rye flour, and making a mistake, added only 100gms water, achieving a 1:5:10. with a temperature of 28C...A hot and balmy evening in Australia! After 6hrs, the starter is bursting out of the Weck, the entire walls and domed top is dotted with bubbles, and disrupting the starter show a very substantial network. The starter is not that liquid as to a runny consistency and tastes fruity with a slight taste of cheese acid, or probably lactic acid rather than ethanoic acid. I've never achieved such a result. I'm going to discard and feed the same ratios again tonight and bake with 14% flour tomorrow. Thanks for the tip, even if I got it wrong!

  • @irishredrose5145

    @irishredrose5145

    Жыл бұрын

    😊

  • @teretongoy6688
    @teretongoy66882 жыл бұрын

    Thank you... Very helpful especially for a new sourdough bread lover.

  • @pamelapiller3002
    @pamelapiller30029 ай бұрын

    Thank you! I want sour sourdough, so i am going to try the liquid! San francisco sourdough is my goal! Thank you!

  • @barrychambers4047
    @barrychambers40472 жыл бұрын

    This is frickin' genius, Hendrik! Where did you learn this stuff? 🤪

  • @rogercoomber9598
    @rogercoomber95982 жыл бұрын

    Very interesting, will have to try the stiff starter as the best flour I can get is 11.5% here in 🇳🇦

  • @the_bread_code

    @the_bread_code

    2 жыл бұрын

    Stiff starter will work great 👍

  • @AZZapper11
    @AZZapper112 жыл бұрын

    I really like your conclusions. To me is a question of Oxygen. Anerobic (alcohol) or Anerobic (Vinegar) and all in a High Protein (more than 12%) or low Protein (Less than 10%). So I always ask my self, how much vinegar (acidity) am I making.

  • @billgeoghegan4822
    @billgeoghegan48223 ай бұрын

    Very informative and clear. Thank you.

  • @davidcardinal9900
    @davidcardinal99002 жыл бұрын

    Great video. Was having trouble with pancakes, you just help solve it. Thanks!

  • @dfhepner
    @dfhepner2 жыл бұрын

    This was interesting, but I remember when you interviewed the gentleman from the sourdough library, he said that the stiff starter produced more of the sour flavor. The most that I got from this was that a stiff starter favored the yeast for rise.

  • @khawlahpeace1222

    @khawlahpeace1222

    11 ай бұрын

    I’m here also to ask this because I’ve read everywhere the stuff starter adds more sour flavor hope he chimes in here to help us

  • @kevinu.k.7042
    @kevinu.k.70429 ай бұрын

    This is an old video... But I hope these comments are useful to someone. Nothing I am writing here contradicts the findings of the video. In bread baking Acetic acid is mainly produced by LABS, not acetic acid bacteria. More is produced when the dough is being fermented at lower temperatures (24C) and stiffer leavens or doughs. Yes, it's counter intuitive. Yeast ferments better than LABs in stiffer doughs and at lower temperatures. However in these condition the yeasts produce more fructose which enables more acetic acid production by the LABs. LABs produce acetic acid without oxygen BTW. There is virtually no oxygen in a bread dough after the fermentation starts. Yeast uses up the little that was there almost immediately. Acetic acid bacteria are well controlled as they require oxygen and there is little oxygen in bread. Acetic Acid Bacteria are present, but there is not so much research on it. A study in China found that it increases loaf volume and makes for a softer crumb and gives a fuller flavour profile other than vinegar which is one of the end products of very complex metabolic pathways involving Yeast LABs and AABs. Vinegar is only a bug bear in bread when there is too much of it. Otherwise the processes which end in vinegar create a lot of non vinegar flavours and like LABS the AAB's give a deeper flavour profile. See Deborah Wink. Because of the differences in yeast and LAB activity art different temperatures we can control the acidity of the final dough using temperature. At 24C the yeast is more active than the LABs and 26C they are about even and at 30C the LABs are more active. I ferment at 24C, which is a popular temperature in French Artisan Bakeris, ti get lower acidity. Those who like higher acidity might choose 30C. You use low starter quantities in your doughs. Which is fine. Measuring starter inoculation *by flour weight* it can be added at 15% - 30%. These rates are more typical. Calculating starter by it's flour weight is the usual method for home baking and it gives home bakers much more flexibility when scaling in natural leavens made with different amount of water. It is commercial bakers who tend to calculate their starters by total weight to make it easier on the bakery floor, but it makes it harder to read a formula and see precisely what is going on without reaching for a calculator. We come across it in home baking when commercial bakers decide to teach home baking and stick with the system they know. BTW A 'starter' is what you have before feeding it to go into a dough. What we add to the dough is called a natural preferment, or natural leaven. The starter is what we use to build the leaven. It's great you are covering subjects like these. So few people do and understanding the principles of baking enables bakers to be much more in control of the process. 👍

  • @MichaelRei99
    @MichaelRei992 жыл бұрын

    I must go back and watch the cheap flour video. I’m going to try the stiff starter bread.

  • @umutk.7525
    @umutk.7525 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks . These video is really helpfull to me , very clear expression

  • @MottiTadmor
    @MottiTadmor6 ай бұрын

    Hendrik, first of all, I love you 😍, watched all your videos and I love your humor, explanations and everything about your channel. I have a very mature, active and healthy starter I feed once in a while with organic rye, I took a little bit of it to make another starter with the aim to get a liquid starter, followed your formula but my starter ended up as water on top and starter at the bottom, is it a gradual process? Did I do something wrong? Thanks a lot 🙏🏻

  • @AndersSvensson_norrkoping
    @AndersSvensson_norrkoping2 жыл бұрын

    Unik information! Thanks! How long Time do your stiff starter take to peak comparing to your regular starter? My stiff starter taket a looong time to peak! :)

  • @the_bread_code

    @the_bread_code

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yep. A looot. I just only go by nose. Once I notice it smells a bit sour, that's when I use it. Typically 8-16 hours after feeding. If it's towards the 16 hours, I use a bit less stiff starter for the main dough. If it's early, I use more.

  • @deborahlee3621
    @deborahlee3621 Жыл бұрын

    Great info. I just made a loaf that was too sour. Now I have tools to avoid that. Thanks!

  • @candygrimmgithensmull8357

    @candygrimmgithensmull8357

    4 ай бұрын

    I want more sour! Please tell me what flour you use and how you feed! Thanks

  • @hmm5122
    @hmm5122 Жыл бұрын

    Amazing simple lecture for starter , I have a request , do you have and good description for quantities of starter for my bakery , we are in Middle East using factory yeast and I decide to change , thank you

  • @bullshark1152
    @bullshark11522 жыл бұрын

    Thanks.. as I don’t like to sour I will test a stiffstarter.

  • @TheLatestDishWithDallyn
    @TheLatestDishWithDallyn2 жыл бұрын

    I hope you can help me. I watched your video twice and not grasping how to get a more sour loaf. I am using a regular starter (1:1:1) that is about a year old. I recently started feeding it every two weeks with 2/3 rye to 1/3 bread flour. I cannot get a sour flavor. Please tell me, in layman's terms, how to get a more sour sourdough. Thanks so much in advance.

  • @rochellaostrowski1007
    @rochellaostrowski10076 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much! I just bought your ebook for Kindle! I was hoping to find some easy to reference recipes using your tips but could not. I still love the book but do have this question-if using the stiff starter, do I have to make any adjustments to the rest of a recipe to account for the lower hydration of the starter?

  • @kaptnkirk2740
    @kaptnkirk27409 ай бұрын

    Vielen Dank! Einen konkreten Zeitplan hätte ich mir noch gewünscht. Also: nach wie vielen Fütterungen wandle ich den normalen Starter in den Flüssigen um und wann in den festen?

  • @doublewyde420
    @doublewyde4202 жыл бұрын

    Your custom starter sounds tasty thanks for the explanation

  • @okalamaris
    @okalamaris2 жыл бұрын

    I was fighting to shape my dough yesterday but it kept falling like a slime. Gluten was disappeared. Now i know WHY😱🤬. THANK YOU.👏👏👏👏

  • @perjanuschas8050
    @perjanuschas8050 Жыл бұрын

    The most interresting and informative video yet. Now how do I use this information to my advantage? I have been using a 1:1 when feeding my starter, and after a while it started smelling like tutti-frutti. A mixture of apples and pears, maybe with a hint of apricot and banana. You said yours smell like dairy? does that mean cheese and sour-cream? I think I prefer tutti-frutti over that. The breads don't smell of tutti-frutti though, but have a very pleasant taste. I may try to convert to stiff, and jump over the fluid version, as no matter what, I can't find flour that behaves like the non-stick dough you manage to create. I'll try the fluid version for kicks and grins, but my flour quality dictates baking that version in a bread baking pan... even the regular 1:1 version becomes very soft, and doesn't create as much ovenspring as yours do.

  • @mattiapanfili4763
    @mattiapanfili47637 ай бұрын

    Great job! You’re amazing…may I ask you if you have any experience with preparing sourdough starter for Panettone recepie? Thanks

  • @geurthakfoort
    @geurthakfoort4 ай бұрын

    Gluten tag! Maybe a strange question but Do some bakers actually keep multiple type of starters and create a “blend” for a specific flavor/ type of bread?

  • @jonathansessay7607
    @jonathansessay76072 жыл бұрын

    😄 Great as always

  • @Docjouls
    @Docjouls8 ай бұрын

    I love your bread engineering and science, Hendrik. I live in hot and humid Singapore, where I experience humidity as high as 84% and temperatures as high as 35C. Should I follow your recipe but reduce the timing by 1/3 because the starter should be more active and energetic? I also have a fermentation fridge where the temperature is between 18C and 20C. How should I tweak your recipes for hot and humid Singapore? By the way, I am learning sourdough bread for an Austrian friend who will bunk at my place for 4 months...

  • @arne.munther
    @arne.munther2 жыл бұрын

    You must have read my mind. Was wondering about what water ratio meant to the taste of the breads.

  • @MrDaddiecool
    @MrDaddiecool2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you Hendrick, very interesting. I was thinking that the sourness in the actual bread would then depend on the length of fermentation rather than the pH of the starter. Isn't the actual bread dough just like a new, bigger starter?

  • @the_bread_code

    @the_bread_code

    2 жыл бұрын

    That's correct. But some starters will create acidity faster. If you look at a given volume increase you will see a different level of sourness 😎

  • @oldkingcrow777

    @oldkingcrow777

    Жыл бұрын

    Life trips me out sometimes, and I stopped believing in "coincidence" long ago. As I read his response to the original comment I hear thr video say regardless of the starter "the longer you let the loaf ferment, the more the acidity will build up" 😂

  • @strangerintheselands251
    @strangerintheselands251 Жыл бұрын

    You could cool down the dough to prolong fermentation, allowing the yeast to continue their work, and switching off the the bacteria eating away at you gluten, no?

  • @gabea.2123
    @gabea.21232 жыл бұрын

    I find that the liquid starter takes longer, even significantly longer, to rise a loaf; so is the more sour flavor coming from the starter or from the longer fermentation? If I use a small amount of regular (or even stiff) starter so that they all ferment for the same amount of time, will the flavor be the same? Also, I find that my liquid starter has a very strong smell, not even close to dairy. It would be great to have a way to test what kind of acid you get in a liquid starter, not just in theory, but by doing some chemical analysis in a lab to validate if you're really getting acetic or lactic acid. Thanks!

  • @joannestretch
    @joannestretch Жыл бұрын

    for a liquid starter what would be the minimum % of protein (gluten) so that it works well as u say must have a stronger flour

  • @patriciaarrance790
    @patriciaarrance7902 жыл бұрын

    Hi there from Kelowna BC Canada first of all thank-you for the detail and science on your channel . I have Been baking sourdough for two years noe since the Covid crisis. Can you give me the name brand of your ph tester ? Keep up the great work done on this channel.

  • @toppefall
    @toppefall2 жыл бұрын

    Was about to ask whether it could be a fun experiment to combine liquid and stiff starter in a dough to get a high yeast high lactic acid combo with less acetic acid bacteria, but I guess you somewhat achieve the same by turning your liquid starter into a stiff starter?

  • @arlo6345
    @arlo63452 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for this very informative video. If you had to produce a naturally fermented bread that had a pH of 5.0 or higher, how would you do that? It sounds contrary to what sourdough is, so I wonder if it can be done.

  • @oldkingcrow777

    @oldkingcrow777

    Жыл бұрын

    Im decades away from even humbly considering myself knowledgable on sourdough, but my gut logic says you could get a super fermented starter going, then when it's time to make the bread, make it a super hydrated loaf (but prepare for those unique difficulties) so the starter allows it to ferment quickly enough for your needs, but the hyper saturation with the water balances out the pH

  • @vorna6664
    @vorna66642 жыл бұрын

    Awesome video! :) But some questions came up watching it, especially with the graph of vol. growth and pH over time: How do you explain that the pH-value of the starter with the 25°C is decreasing faster than the 21°C one? Doesn't it somehow contradict the rule of very mild starter feeding should be done at about 27°C while a lower temp is gonna lead to a more sour taste? The next question (And maybe already kind of an answer to the first one lol :D): Do you think it is correct to see the pH-Value as one and only factor that determines how sour it tastes? I very often heard and read that it is actually the ratio between lactic acid and acetic acid what is important for the taste. Commonly the ratio is between 3:1 and 4:1. A ratio near 3:1 leads to mild flavor, while an increasing amount of acetic acid vs. lactic acid leads to a more sour flavor. No smart-assery, just exchange of ideas between nerds :D

  • @the_bread_code

    @the_bread_code

    2 жыл бұрын

    Great question! Please keep all the questions coming, it's good to have a healthy discussion. 1) Regarding the temperature. I could not find a relation between a colder temperature and a more sour taste. I have testing 21°C vs 25°C in an experiment last year. Maybe the difference is not big enough. 2) Correct! Lactic acid is actually more sour on the pH scale, but when tasting it, it seems milder. Quite an awesome thing if you ask me. So assuming you have 2 doughs, one with only lactic acid, one with acetic acid, both have the same pH in the end. Then the acetic dough will feel a lot more sour when tasting it!

  • @vorna6664

    @vorna6664

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@the_bread_code 1) Yeah I agree, the difference may be not that big for one feeding only. I definitely encountered a difference when baking the recipe 'Mildes Weizensauerteigbrot' from plötzblog. The starter is refreshed 2-3 times at 27°C and also bulk fermentation is being done at this temp. That makes the bread tasting very mild already. When I used the rest of my starter for a 2nd bread some days later - same routine - I ended up with a bread with absolutely no sour flavor at all. It tasted really boring. I unfortunately have no pH meter but it would be really interesting to know what pH-value it had. 🤔 2) Awesome that makes totally sense to me. Thank you! 🙃

  • @zsbalak
    @zsbalak Жыл бұрын

    Which one you recommend for pizza? I would like to 48 hours ferment the dough on cold temp, 10-13 Celsius.

  • @kimyoung2748
    @kimyoung2748 Жыл бұрын

    I love sour flavor in my sour dough bread. I have found one bakery that creates that flavor. So I am going to make my bread from a liquid starter.

  • @mohjl7752
    @mohjl775211 ай бұрын

    I already change my regular starter to liquid starter for 3days,but it still taste vinegary and sour i feed it twice in a day for 5g starter 30g bread flour 150g water . Have any solve for my vinegary starter(it too sour break my sourdough gluten at all)

  • @GroundedRoots
    @GroundedRoots Жыл бұрын

    Great explanation!

  • @maramelkherbawy6109
    @maramelkherbawy6109Ай бұрын

    I have been making the regular starter for 5 days but day six I didn’t feed it and now it is day seven I put it in the fridge can I still feed it and use it or not?

  • @katiehill8357
    @katiehill83572 жыл бұрын

    Awesome video! I love this so much!😊✨

  • @katiehill8357

    @katiehill8357

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for sharing all this cool stuff!

  • @Lagolop
    @Lagolop2 жыл бұрын

    What do you consider a high amount of gluten. I use mainly AP flour (usually with some whole flour). Our AP is typically ~12%. Also, I use a regular starter. Can we simply use THIS starter but when we feed prior to baking, use different ratios starter:H2O:four to achieve different flavour notes?

  • @oldkingcrow777

    @oldkingcrow777

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah I've chosen bread flour since its ideal, but I've noticed even from thr same brand, the difference is usually max 2%. Like 11.2% for AP, 12.5% for bread. I think as humans we minimize things when it comes to numbers on paper, but I'd wager that every percent +/- makes a large difference when it comes to micro flora

  • @buschej
    @buschej2 жыл бұрын

    When mixing starters to get the properties of all three, this would be like a three day prep to bake - normal to liquid, to normal, to stiff? Otherwise if you leave it in one form eventually the ratio would start to return to be the dominant trait of the three as time passed?

  • @TheMakeitart
    @TheMakeitart5 ай бұрын

    Thank you for this video. I starten my sourstarter 1 of februari. Yesterday I mixed a thick starter, but it is very slow. The 1-5-5 rices to more then double in 8 hours ,.. but the thick one took about 24 hours to reach double size and are still ricing. What can you tell/read out about that ?

  • @stsheep
    @stsheep Жыл бұрын

    Thanks a lot for the very useful video. However, i'm confused by one point. The liquid starter has more dairy flavor, but at the same time has higher acidity? I thought that a higher acidity will lead to a vinegary note (sour) rather than a dairy note...am i missing something?

  • @sandriagutierrez2605
    @sandriagutierrez2605 Жыл бұрын

    Very helpful! Thank you

  • @lukat4979
    @lukat49792 жыл бұрын

    can you explain last 1 minute of video? So the best properties I can achive with converting starter to liquid and than back to stiff, resulting in less vinegar note?

  • @the_bread_code

    @the_bread_code

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yes. Your bacteria that produce acetic acid will be wiped out 😅. Sounds bad coming from a German 🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @lukat4979

    @lukat4979

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@the_bread_code for how long? Do I need nex feeding time do it again? Do you have some references where I can read more?

  • @the_bread_code

    @the_bread_code

    2 жыл бұрын

    ​@@lukat4979 www.the-bread-code.io/recipe/2021/10/24/all-you-need-to-know-stiff-liquid-regular-starter.html hope this helps!

  • @mrsbryant
    @mrsbryant7 ай бұрын

    How much protein do you need if you are baking with a liquid starter

  • @prakashperera
    @prakashperera2 жыл бұрын

    very informative thanks a lot

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