This is the starter with a little hooch on top. It's been sitting in the fridge a few days.I took the dregs of the bottle and poured them in a pyrex storage bowl, mixing in 1/3 cup all-purpose flour and 1/3 cup water. Whenever I feed the culture, I use this amount of flour and water.
I put a cover loosely on the bowl, and set it out on the counter for 24ish hours. I then poured off the "hooch" (the liquid that forms on top of the mixture--technically it's the yeast's waste), and fed the culture with flour and water. I waited 24ish hours, poured off the hooch, and fed it again. I repeated this for about seven days total.
After seven days, I tried to make a pizza dough; it really didn't rise much at all, so I continued the daily feedings for another three days.
On the tenth day, I made my first loaf of bread. Its rise was okayish, so at this point I considered the culture established enough to put in the fridge to hibernate between loafs.
Not surprisingly, the starter smells like beer.
A top view of the starter. You can see a bubble or two.So now, 18-24 hours before I want to start making a batch of bread, I take the culture out of the fridge, and feed it flour and water. I put it on the counter for 18-24 hours, divide it (half in the mixing bowl), and feed it again to replenish what I took out. At this point, there will be a little hooch, and lots of bubbles throughout the starter (the hooch and the bubbles are signs that the yeast is alive and metabolizing). I leave it on the counter for another 18-24 hours, and then back in the fridge till next time. It will develop more hooch as it sits in the fridge (maybe about a quarter inch or so on top of the culture?). Apparently one needs to feed it about weekly to keep the yeast alive, but I've been making bread about once a week, eliminating the need to do a maintenance feed.
I'll post later about my bread-making process. It's really, really easy to make a sourdough culture from live beer yeast. And it will make bread that tastes like the beer from which you made the culture.
Glad to see that you've taken the plunge! Looking forward to following this.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Doug!
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