Rehydrate Dehydrated Sourdough Starter
November 25, 2023
Hello and happy Saturday! I hope y’all had a great Thanksgiving Day! Below you’ll find my instructions for how to rehydrate your sourdough starter along with answers to frequently-asked questions. A kitchen scale is necessary for accurate measurement of ingredients. Too little water/too much flour can make your starter so dry that it may die. Too much water/too little flour can over-hydrate your starter and it will won’t be able to rise.
How to Rehydrate & Care for Your Gluten-Free Sourdough Starter
1. Into a clean, wide-mouth mason jar, place 10-20 grams of dehydrated starter and 50 grams of filtered water and stir very well.
2. Add 50 grams of brown rice flour or buckwheat flour and stir very well.
3. Cover the jar loosely with the lid or with a cheesecloth or tea towel held fast with a rubber band (this will allow the starter to “breathe” and get oxygen) and allow the jar of sourdough starter to sit in a warm place (a cold oven with the oven light on in a cold kitchen or on the counter in a warm kitchen) for 12-24 hours.
4. Stir, discard (throw away) 50 grams of starter, add 25 grams of your chosen gluten-free flour (brown rice flour or buckwheat flour) and 25 grams filtered water. Repeat this step every 12-24 hours for 3-7 days until the starter begins to rise/peak and develops bubbles 4-6 hours after being fed. At this point, your starter is ready to use!
Frequently Asked Questions
*
1. Can I use other gluten-free flours or gluten-free flour blends besides brown rice flour or buckwheat flour?
– While brown rice flour and buckwheat flours are most commonly used for gluten-free sourdough starter and work the best, you can use other flours. I don’t recommend using a flour blend because these often contain xanthan gum or guar gum and this shouldn’t be used in the starter. Other flours to try that may work (I can’t guarantee as I haven’t used these): millet flour or sorghum flour.
– Don’t use a starch such as tapioca flour, potato starch, cornstarch, cassava flour, or arrowroot powder.
*
My starter isn’t bubbling after 7 days.
– That’s ok! Sometimes it’s too cold in your kitchen for your starter to be very active. Try placing the jar of starter in a cold oven with the oven light on and allow it to sit for 6-12 hours and see how it reacts.
– You can still bake with it after 7 days even if it isn’t bubbling much or rising much after being fed.
*
How do I measure if my starter has risen 4-6 hours after feeding?
– I place a rubber band around my wide-mouth mason jar at the level of the starter once I have fed it. After 4-6 hours it has usually risen above that rubber band line.
*
I’m not gluten-free; will this starter work for me to bake with wheat flour?
– Yes! This gluten-free sourdough starter will work great with wheat flour. You may see better results since the gluten becomes very developed in sourdough starter.
– Don’t use wheat flour if you’re gluten-free.
*
My active sourdough starter has grown mold on it! What do I do?
– Throw it away! Your sourdough starter has died. Time to make a new sourdough starter. Molded sourdough starter is not safe to eat or bake with.
*
My sourdough starter has dark liquid on top of it. Is it still good?
– Yes! This dark liquid is called hooch. It means your sourdough starter is hungry. Pour out that liquid and gently scrape off the top of the starter and throw away the liquid and the scrapings. Feed your sourdough starter as normal and stir well.
*
My sourdough starter isn’t enough for the recipe I want to use. What do I do?
– The solution is very simple: feed it extra. Usually I’ll feed it the amount I will need later. My recipe calls for 200 grams of sourdough starter, so I will feed it 100 grams of buckwheat flour and 100 grams filtered water (instead of my usual 50 grams each of flour and water) and allow it to peak over 4-6 hours before using it. This way I have enough for my recipe and still have some left over to keep the starter healthy and growing.
I trust these instructions will be helpful for you as you are on your journey with sourdough! If you have any questions that haven’t been answered above, feel free to comment below!
As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases you make from clicking links on my website. You are not up-charged for any purchases.
Related
You may like these too
Make-Ahead Meals for the Freezer – Gluten-Free & Dairy-Free
Hello and happy Monday! Are you looking for some tried and true gluten-free and dairy-free recipes t
September 9, 2024
Celiac-Safe Travel: Arepa Mia in Avondale Estates, GA.
Hello and happy Monday! Welcome to another Celiac-safe travel review. Today’s spotlight is on
September 9, 2024
Celiac-Safe Travel: Qdoba
Hello and happy Sunday! Welcome to another Celiac-safe travel review. Today’s spotlight is on
June 23, 2024
Celiac-Safe Travel: Red Robin
Hello and happy Wednesday! Welcome to another Celiac-safe travel review. Today’s spotlight is
March 28, 2024
1 Comment
Comments are closed.
Pingback: Everything Sourdough in One Post - The Wrote Oat