I've been stocking up on some baked goodies the last few days, since Stu's brother Jeremy will be coming to stay with us in a few days for the holidays. I wanted to have a few things prepared to make for easy breakfasts and lunches - thus decreasing the amount of time I will be spending in the kitchen! Not that I don't enjoy my time in the kitchen...but never-the-less, I like to be prepared. So here we are.
A few weeks ago, I began to 'grow' my new sourdough starter. Last year, I began one from a starter packet...and everything I baked with it tasted like rocks. Except for these crackers and this cake, that is.
So after winter was over, I dumped the 'ol starter and told myself I'd start another one next year....which is now this year...hence the reason I'm writing this.
Taking some tips from my Nourishing Traditions cookbook, this time I began my starter without buying any starter packets. I simply mixed organic rye flour with warm water, covered it with cheesecloth, fed it a little bit of rye flour and water each day for a week...and a sourdough starter was born!
Here's my actual directions for a Homemade Sourdough Starter:
- Mix two cups of rye flour with two cups of warm water in a mixing bowl
- Cover with cheesecloth
- Each day for a week, transfer the starter to a new bowl and feed the starter 1/2 cup of rye flour and 1/2 cup of warm water
- Tip: If you aren't going to use the starter and want to slow it down so you don't have to feed it every day, simply cover it up and stick it in the fridge. Take it out a day before you want to use it and feed it accordingly.
Okay.
Now that we're growing our starter...I must say, this starter is so much better than my last one. I've made a few things already and am very pleased to announce that it works wonders! After allowing the dough to sour for a day or so, the dough actually looks like it's been yeasted - all bubbly and soft. It's a Christmas miracle!
The resulting baked goods were light, soft, and wonderful. No rocks of dough here!
I am giving you this homemade starter recipe so that you can begin this beautiful sourdough journey with me. I'm going to be posted a few sourdough recipes these next few weeks, and if you begin growing your starter now, you can hop right on this feremented bread train!
I know. Like you don't have anything else to do, right? No presents to wrap. No meals to cook. No laundry to do. No houses to clean. The only thing you have to worry about it growing your sourdough. Lucky you.
Here's the first of a few recipes that I am eager to share - homemade sourdough tortillas. These tortillas are very, very easy. I promise.
You will need:
Original recipe from Gnowfglins
- 3 cups of organic whole wheat flour (I used soft white wheat - aka - pastry flour), freshly ground is best!
- 3/4 cup water
- 3/4 cup sourdough starter
- 1/4 cup olive oil
- Pinch salt
Step One: Combine the water, flour, salt, and sourdough starter in your mixer or food processor. Keep adding flour, slowly, until the dough forms a nice ball without sticking too much to the sides of the mixer. Once you get the dough to a soft ball form, allow the mixer to knead the dough for 2-3 minutes (if you don't have a mixer, just do this by hand!) Transfer the dough to a well-oiled bowl, cover, and let this hang out on your counter for 12-24 hours.
Step Two: When you're ready to cook up your tortillas, heat up a griddle, cast iron skillet, or cooking pan of choice to medium-high heat. I don't bother with greasing or spraying my griddle. I like to use my large griddle so that I can have multiple tortillas going at the same time - it helps to speed up the process.
Step Two: Remove the dough from the bowl and transfer onto a greased surface. Gently divide the dough into walnut sized balls (this recipe will yield a dozen or so, depending on size).
Step Four: Grease your hands with a little olive oil and working with one ball of dough at a time, use your fingers to smoosh the dough out into a tortilla. I suppose you could use a greased rolling pin, but I find that using my fingers alone works fine. Sure, the shape isn't a perfect circle - but that's okay! It's homemade, remember?
Step Five: After rolling out the tortilla, gently and carefully move it to the hot skillet. Cook it for about 30 seconds per side, until a little golden and bubbly.
Step Six: You can either eat these immediately, or cool them off and store them in the fridge or freezer for later use. I have found that they reheat very easily and even stay soft. Yay!
The first meal we ate these with was fish tacos and they worked perfectly. I can't wait to cook up some gyros and curried chicken salad in them, too - they will work perfectly! We're also big breakfast burrito people, so I am excited to whip up a potato, bacon, and egg scramble to stuff inside - I know Stu and Jeremy will love that. They be lovin' them some burritos.
So, I realize that a few days before Christmas may not be the ideal time to take up cooking with sourdough. But heck, after Christmas, we are faced with three long months of winter before gardening begins. There couldn't be a better time to get all up in this sourdough's business.
Or you could always just come and steal some out of my fridge.
Either way.
This post part of Simple Lives Thursdays!
Where do you store the starter while it's working it's magic?
ReplyDeleteGreat timing. I live way up in Canada and getting good tortillas is impossible. That's not an exaggeration either. I've been wanting to make some and someone real nice bought me a tortilla press (it's under the Christmas tree!). When we get back from holidays I will start this process. Question for you, if the starter is in the fridge, how long does it last in the fridge without "feeding it"? Do I need to take it out of the fridge once a month to keep it "going"?
ReplyDeleteI recently started following your blog and I must say it has been a delight. Thanks for the recipes - appreciate a good one anytime I can get it. :-)
ReplyDeleteThanks for this. You have no idea how long I have been pondering on how to make my own sour dough. This recipe seems so easy and approachable. I look forward to the recipes you come up with this winter. Thanks for sharing. Bless You!
ReplyDeleteLyda - I store my starter on the kitchen counter, where it's warm, but not hot. Anywhere room temperature should work. Are you going to try this? I wonder if fermenting the flour will help you be able to process it better without it affecting you as much?
ReplyDeleteFrance@beyondthepeel - If you keep your starter in the fridge, I would feed it once a week or so. I'm sure you could go longer, but to play it safe, I'd at least give it something every week.
Laura - thank you!
Erin J - Oh please, go get started on your own sourdough! Then we can experiment together! :) It's for sure a different approach to baking, but it's so rewarding and fun to see how this all used to work before commercial yeast was available. Good luck!
Thanks for linking your great post to FAT TUESDAY. This was very interesting! Hope to see you next week!
ReplyDeleteBe sure to visit RealFoodForager.com on Sunday for Sunday Snippets – your post from Fat Tuesday may be featured there!
http://realfoodforager.com/2011/12/fat-tuesday-december-27-2011/
Thanks for posting this! I've been wanting to make soaked or sourdough tortillas for a while now, but hadn't seen a good recipe until now. I'm excited to try this!
ReplyDeleteSounds great - can't wait to try this recipe.
ReplyDeleteWhen is the starter good to start using? Do I need to wait until the end of the first week? I'm going to start it today :)
ReplyDeleteJenni
Jenni, you probably need to wait until the end of the first week. Did you? :) How did they turn out?! It's about time for me to get my starter going again...since it's almost fall and all!
DeleteJust found your blog and im loving the recipes! Learning about soaking grains is totally new to me so I'm soaking, hahaha (pun intended) in the info!!
ReplyDeleteSo my question is: If I refrigerate my starter it how much do I feed it weekly to keep it healthy?
Also with the traditional soaked whole wheat bread can I use some 6 grain flour in that recipe, and how much?
Thanks!
Ruth
Ruth, I feed my starter a cup of fresh rye flour each week while storing it in the fridge. As far as the soaked bread goes, I see no problem with supplementing in some of the 6-grain flour for the whole wheat, though I have no idea how much would still yield the same wonderful result. I'd start with maybe supplementing in 30% and if that yields a good result, maybe you could bump it up to 50% of whole wheat and 50% of the 6 grain.
DeleteHope this helps!
Shaye
DeleteMy starter is one week old and I'm trying to figure out if it's alive! The first 2 days it expanded and bubbled really well etc. but now it bubbles less. I've read others who say it needs to be refreshed and you have to dump some of the started and oh my sooo complicated! Am I doing something wrong? The first two days it had a strong smell but now it doesn't. Is my house too cool? Would that make it sluggish?
Thank you for all your help in advance!
Ruth
If you keep the starter out on your counter, you'll want to "feed it" a half-flour, half-water ratio (ie: 1/2 cup water, 1/2 cup flour) each day. If you don't need to use it and just want to keep it dormate, just put it in the fridge and feed it once per week or so. I'm sure your starter is still alive, just feed it some more flour and water each day and it should keep bubbling for you!
DeleteI am in the process of growing a starter, and today is day 7. It isnt bubbly and yeasted looking, however, and a couple days ago when I fed it and switched bowls, it had like a dark pool of water on the top of it. It wasnt like that today, and I have continued to feed it and am stumped if this is normal. It is really runny, and has a couple dimples on the top, where it might have started to foam, but barely. I was hoping to make your sourdough loaf today, but am concerned that my starter isnt alive. What would you do? Any suggestions?
ReplyDeleteThe dark pool of water on top is totally normal. They call it 'hooch'...which is sort of funny :) It does sound like your starter is alive, just keep feeding it!
DeleteSo once you've feed your starter for a week you can use it? Then do you store it in the fridge and use ir as often as needed? I'm confused.
ReplyDelete