Baking bread with sourdough feels a bit like magic. With just flour, water, and a little patience, you create a living sourdough starter that gives your loaves flavor, character, and a wonderfully crisp crust. In this blog, I’ll guide you step by step through making your own sourdough starter with rye flour — perfect for anyone just starting out with sourdough baking.
Rye flour is ideal for making a sourdough starter. It’s packed with nutrients and natural yeasts, which often makes the starter active more quickly than when using wheat flour. Especially for beginners, a rye sourdough starter is a reliable and forgiving choice.
What you’ll need
Water (preferably lukewarm)
A glass jar (approx. 500 ml)
Spoon or spatula
Mix:
Stir until you have a thick, smooth paste. Scrape down the sides of the jar, place the lid loosely on top (not airtight!), and set it in a warm spot at about 20–24 °C (68–75 °F).
You may already see a few small bubbles, or nothing may seem to be happening yet — both are completely normal.
Add:
Stir well, cover loosely again, and let it rest.
Now things really start happening. The starter may smell sour, bubble actively, or even collapse temporarily. All of this is part of the natural sourdough process.
Repeat daily:
Discard half of the starter
Add:
50 g rye flour
50 g water
Keep stirring and feeding daily. At this stage, if you like, you can gradually replace part of the rye flour with wheat flour.
Your starter is ready when it:
This usually happens around day 5 to 7.
Your sourdough starter is officially alive! In the coming days, it will only get stronger and develop more character. With a little care and regular feeding, you can enjoy it for years. In my next blog, I’ll share everything you need to know about maintaining your sourdough starter: how often to feed it, what to do if it becomes less active, and how to store it when you’re not baking.
You can find our bread‑baking supplies under the Bread & Pizza category.
Bonjour, Et d'abord merci pour cette publication. J'ai une question : Quelle équivalence entre de la levure chimique, de la levure de boulanger de la levure fraîche et du levain naturel, ? En terme de poids. Merci d'avance. Cordialement Michel Hubaut michubaut@protonmail.com
Bonne question ! Pour la proportion entre levure sèche et levure fraîche, j’utilise : 👉 1 part de levure sèche = 3 parts de levure fraîche Par exemple : • 7 g de levure sèche = ±21 g de levure fraîche Pour le levain, c’est un peu différent, car ce n’est pas un remplacement direct mais un processus de fermentation naturel. En général, on peut utiliser : • 100 g de levain actif pour remplacer environ 5–7 g de levure sèche (selon le temps de fermentation et la recette) • Et en pratique, on utilise souvent entre 10 % et 50 % de levain par rapport au poids de la farine La levure chimique n’est pas vraiment comparable à la levure ou au levain : • Elle agit immédiatement, sans temps de repos • On utilise généralement ±10–12 g pour 500 g de farine, mais le résultat est différent (plutôt type gâteau que pain) 💡 En résumé : • Levure sèche ↔ levure fraîche : 1 : 3 • Levure ↔ levain : dépend du temps et de la recette • Levure chimique : fonctionnement différent, pas une vraie équivalence