Lifting the Lid
on Starters
One of the key stumbling blocks for bakers new to sourdough is making your own starter. If everything goes to plan, it should be simple, but most people soon realise things usually don’t go to plan, and the results can be frustratingly hit or miss.
Some of the best advice we were given here at Crumb was to begin with an established starter so at least you know what a good sourdough starter looks and feels like, so at least you have a benchmark if you fancy trying to make your own later. But in truth, Crumb has never had such impressive results from other starters, homemade or otherwise, which is why The London Leavening Standard has pride of place in The Baker’s Dozen.
As an experiment, we have left the starter for over a month without feeding, and it has still provided perfect results, though it is best practice, if you are not baking regularly, to discard 300g of the starter every week or so, and replenish with fresh flour and water, but that is the only maintenance it will ever need (unlike some of the finnicky liquid starters that many other bakers use, which require careful feeding 24 hours before you plan to bake)