How to Refresh a Sourdough Starter

PRACTICAL • CLEAR • SIMPLE

Refreshing a sourdough starter does not need to feel complicated. In most cases, it simply means taking a small amount of old starter, feeding it with fresh flour and water, and giving it the time and conditions it needs to become active again. A well-kept starter is also the basis for breads and bakes that many people find easier to digest than faster, more industrial versions. This article shows how to refresh it in a way that feels clean, practical, and easy to build into everyday life.

Before You Begin

This guide is for refreshing a sourdough starter you already have. If you are starting from zero, take a look at our Starter-from-scratch guide.

A few things make sourdough much easier from the start:

  • work clean
  • use room-temperature water
  • keep the lid loosely on top, not tightly sealed
  • avoid direct sunlight
  • mark the starting level with a rubber band
  • watch for the rise, not only the clock
  • chill it once it is ready if you are not baking yet

Once these basics are in place, the process becomes much easier.

What a sourdough starter actually is

A sourdough starter is a fermented mix of flour and water that contains wild yeasts and bacteria. That live culture is what helps naturally leaven dough, instead of relying only on commercial yeast. A closer look at what a sourdough starter is(The Ultimate Sourdough Starter Guide — Maurizio Leo) helps explain the basics.

That is one reason starters feel a little alive in the kitchen. They change with temperature, flour, hydration, timing, and how often they are refreshed. Once you understand that, the whole process becomes much easier to adapt.

Where to get a starter

If you do not have one yet, the easiest option is often to ask someone who already bakes sourdough.

A gifted starter can be a lovely way to begin, and it also saves time. Another option is to buy one from a trusted baking source. You can also build one yourself from scratch with our Starter-from-scratch guide.

For many people, the easiest and most confidence-building start is simply to get a spoonful from someone who already has a healthy starter.

Why people keep one

A sourdough starter lets you bake naturally leavened breads, buns, cakes, granola, crackers, pancakes, and more. And once you already have one, refreshing it is usually much easier than people expect.

That is part of what makes sourdough so appealing. It can feel a bit old-fashioned, a bit alive, and a bit personal. Once you understand your starter, you can work with it instead of worrying about it.

The healthy side of sourdough

This part is worth keeping honest and realistic.

Sourdough fermentation can change bread in useful ways. Reviews on nutrient availability and sourdough fermentation (Exploring the Nutritional Impact of Sourdough Fermentation — Z. Alkay et al.), nutritional benefits of sourdoughs (Nutritional benefits of sourdoughs: A systematic review — L. Ribet et al.), and digestibility and fermentation effects (Sourdough fermented breads are more digestible than those started with baker’s yeast alone — C.G. Rizzello et al.) suggest that sourdough processes can improve mineral bioaccessibility and, in some cases, support digestibility.

That does not mean every sourdough bread is automatically easy for everyone to digest, or automatically healthier than every other bread. It depends on the flour, the recipe, the fermentation, and the person eating it.

But in real life, a well-fermented sourdough often feels better for some people than faster breads. And if you care about a more supportive kitchen overall, whole grains (12 Gut-Friendly Foods Worth Keeping in Your Kitchen), a more gut-friendly plate (How to Build a More Gut-Friendly Plate), and a gentler way to eat more fiber (How to Eat More Fiber Without Digestive Discomfort) all fit naturally alongside sourdough baking.

What you need

You do not need much, but a few things make the process easier and more predictable.

Equipment

  • a clean glass jar, such as a marmalade jar
  • a lid that can sit loosely on top
  • a spoon or spatula
  • a digital kitchen scale
  • a rubber band to mark the starting height
  • hot water for cleaning the jar, spoon, and lid before use

Ingredients

  • a small amount of old starter
  • flour
  • room-temperature water

A scale is one of the most useful tools here, because sourdough behaves much more predictably when you feed by weight instead of guessing by eye.

A quick note on flour quality

If you can, choose flour you trust and enjoy using. Good flour does not need to be fancy, but quality does make the process easier and the result more satisfying.

Organic flour can be a nice option if it fits your budget and what is available to you. And once you get more into sourdough, it can be useful to understand the differences between wheat wholemeal, wheat 1050, wheat 550, spelt wholemeal, spelt 630, rye 1150, and wholegrain rye. Flour choice changes texture, fermentation speed, flavour, and hydration, and our Guide to Flour Types for Sourdough Baking (Guide to Flour Types for Sourdough Baking) goes deeper into that.

Work clean from the beginning

Clean working matters more than people often think. A starter is supposed to ferment, but that does not mean you want unwanted contamination.

That is why it helps to start with a very clean jar, spoon, and lid. Rinsing or scalding them with hot water before use is a simple habit that keeps the process cleaner and more stable.

The three main styles you can refresh

The same basic idea applies to all starters, but the texture and ratios can change depending on what kind of starter you keep.

1. Liquid rye starter

Rye starter is usually more fluid than wheat starter.

A practical rye refresh can look like this:

  • 10 g old rye starter
  • 50 g room-temperature water
  • 50 g rye flour

If you are in Germany, rye flour 1150 is a very practical choice here.

2. Liquid wheat starter

A liquid wheat starter is usually refreshed at roughly equal parts flour and water by weight.

A practical version can look like:

  • 10 g old wheat starter
  • 50 g room-temperature water
  • 50 g wheat flour

This gives you a liquid wheat starter that is easy to stir and practical for many recipes.

3. Lievito madre or stiff wheat starter

Lievito madre is firmer and more dough-like.

A practical version can look like:

  • 10 g old starter
  • 50 g wheat flour
  • 25 to 30 g water

That gives you a stiffer style of starter. A closer look at liquid and stiff starter styles (Baking Sourdough Bread with a Stiff Starter — Maurizio Leo) helps explain why they behave differently.

Can you change one type into another?

Yes, in many cases you can.

For example, if you only have rye starter but want to move toward wheat starter, you can refresh it with wheat flour again and again over several feeds. After a few rounds, it behaves much more like the new flour system you are maintaining.

That does not make every starter identical, but it does make home baking much more flexible.

Step-by-step: how to refresh your starter

Step-by-step: how to refresh your starter

Step 1. Clean the jar and tools

Start with a clean jar, spoon, and lid.

Step 2. Add the old starter

For a small everyday refresh, add about 10 g of old starter to the jar. This is roughly one tablespoon, depending on the texture.

Step 3. Add water

Add room-temperature water. Not very cold, and not hot. Just normal room-temperature water is enough.

Step 4. Add flour

Add the flour that matches the style you want to keep:

  • rye flour for rye starter
  • wheat flour for wheat starter
  • less water if you want a stiffer lievito madre

Step 5. Mix well

Mix until there are no dry pockets left. For a liquid starter, it should be smooth and thick. For a stiff starter, it will feel more like a paste or very small dough.

Step 6. Mark the level

Put a rubber band around the jar right after mixing. That gives you an easy visual marker for how much the starter rises.

Step 7. Cover loosely

Put the lid on top, but do not close it fully. Just place it on and turn it slightly so it stays loose.

The starter develops gas as it ferments. It needs space and a little airflow, so a tightly sealed jar is not ideal. A useful guide to loosely covering a starter instead of sealing it shut (How Do I Feed My Sourdough Starter? — Maurizio Leo) fits very well here.

Step 8. Keep it out of direct sunlight

Direct sunlight can create a hotter little climate inside the jar, and that can push fermentation too fast.

The easiest solution is often to put the jar somewhere mild and out of direct sun, or loosely cover it with a towel.

Step 9. Let it ferment at room temperature

A practical room range is often somewhere around 18 to 25°C. That is a wide range, yes, but in real life most people cannot control temperature perfectly.

That is why it usually works better to watch your starter than to obsess over the exact number.

Step 10. Watch for the rise

Your refreshed starter should begin to rise, loosen, and become more bubbly.

Once it has more or less doubled, it is usually getting close to ready. A good sign is when the top is still slightly rounded upward, like a little mound. If that little dome has already collapsed, the starter has gone past its best active moment.

A useful guide to using a starter when it has doubled and is still active (I Have Sourdough Starter. Now What? — King Arthur Baking Company) lines up well with that.

When is sourdough starter ready to use?

A refreshed starter is usually ready when it is bubbly, active, and has clearly risen. In many kitchens, that may happen in around 4 to 8 hours, but it can take longer depending on temperature and strength.

That is why a rubber band helps so much. It shows you:

  • where the starter began
  • how much it rose
  • whether it is still climbing
  • or whether it has already started falling

Watching the starter usually works better than the clock alone.

What if it does not rise well?

If your starter is not doubling within several hours, it may simply need strengthening.

That usually means refreshing it again for a few days in a row and keeping conditions a bit more stable. A practical guide to strengthening a starter with regular feedings (How to feed sourdough starter — King Arthur Baking Company) can help there.

That does not mean the starter is ruined. It often just means it needs a bit more consistency.

What to do if you are not baking right away

Once your starter has been refreshed and is active, you do not have to bake immediately.

You can store it in the fridge. In the fridge, fermentation slows down a lot. It does not stop completely, but it becomes much slower. For many home bakers, a refrigerated starter is often still fine for around one week to one and a half weeks before it really wants another refresh.

If it has already been refreshed and then spends only two to three days in the fridge, it can still be active enough to use. But usually, the sooner you use it, the better.

How to tell whether fridge starter is still good

This is where all your senses matter.

Look at it

You may see a liquid layer on top. In German, this is often called Fusel.

If that liquid is there, do not use the part of the starter that has already mixed heavily with it for your next refresh if you can avoid it. Take cleaner starter from underneath instead.

But if the colour has changed a lot, or you see obvious mold, fuzzy growth, or anything pink, orange, green, or strange-looking, do not keep using it.

Smell it

A healthy starter often smells pleasantly tangy, a little honey-like, earthy, or softly acidic.

If it smells extremely sharp, harsh, rotten, or clearly unpleasant, it has probably gone too far. If it still smells like a balanced mix of mild acid, earthiness, and a bit of sweetness, it is usually still in a good range.

Watch how it behaves

If it wakes up, rises again, and becomes bubbly after feeding, that is a very good sign.

A simple real-life feeding rhythm

This part matters a lot, because sourdough only becomes practical when it fits into your day.

For example, if you leave for work in the morning:

  • refresh your starter before or after breakfast
  • leave it at room temperature while you are out
  • check it when you get home
  • then either mix your dough
  • or move it into the fridge

That kind of rhythm works well for many people because it fits around real schedules instead of fighting them.

And if your bread dough then needs a longer rest, that can actually make things easier, not harder. Morning refresh. Evening mix. Bake the next day.

Do you always need a second build before the final dough?

Not always.

Some bakers take a refreshed starter, feed it again in a smaller build, rest it for two to four hours, and then mix the main dough. That is one option.

Another very practical option is to use the refreshed starter directly when it is active and ready. That is often easier to integrate into daily life, especially for home baking.

The best method is often the one you can actually repeat.

Sourdough recipes to try

The bottom line

Refreshing a sourdough starter is much simpler once you stop treating it like a mystery. Use a small amount of old starter, feed it with fresh flour and water, keep it clean, let it rise, and learn to recognise when it is active and ready.

The goal is not to control every detail perfectly. It is to understand your starter well enough that sourdough baking fits into your real life and feels easy enough to come back to again and again.

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