Does sourdough starter get better with age? (2024)

Bakers often liken their sourdough starter to a pet. They give it a cute name (“Doughy Parton”), express slight exasperation about feeding schedules, and brag about a bond strengthened by time.

Having a sourdough starter that’s years — sometimes decades! — old instills a sense of accomplishment and pride, and some bakers love to share their starter origin stories. But does an older starter actually make better bread?

For most bakers, the answer is a clear no.

Maurizio Leo, author of the award-winning bread cookbook The Perfect Loaf,still uses the first starter he ever made; it’s now 12 years old. And while he’s sentimental about that starter, he says its age doesn't really impact his bread. Flour Powerauthor Tara Jensen agrees; she emphasizes that your starter’s health is more important than its age. “When it comes down to the performance of the starter in a dough, I’d rather use a starter that’s a few weeks old and been well kept than an older starter that’s been neglected,” she says.

King Arthur baker Martin Philip puts it more bluntly: “Starter age is unimportant to me.” He adds, “Once the starter reaches a state of relative stasis and reliability, I don’t care if it’s eight or 80. I just want to make stuff with it.”

Does sourdough starter get better with age? (1)

Photography by Danielle Sykes; food styling by Liz Neily

It’s worth taking a closer look at sourdough starter itself and how it evolves over time. It’s a bit like the Ship of Theseus, the philosophical thought experiment that asks whether an object is technically the same object after having all its original components replaced. The same principle is at play in sourdough starter — because starter is continually replaced with new doses of flour and water to feed the flourishing community of microbes that it contains, it doesn’t stay stagnant. Instead, “starters tend to evolve along with you and your feeding practices,” explains Baker’s Hotline member and sourdough specialist Barb Alpern.

As Jennifer Latham, author of Bread Baking with Kidsand former lead bread baker at Tartine, recounts, “At Tartine I was taught that the age or origin of your starter didn’t really matter because it would always adjust to the conditions it was being fed in.” So basically, if you have a starter that’s ten years old, it doesn’t matter what it was like a decade ago, or even a few years ago. What’s going to impact your bread the most is how your starter thrives in the conditions it’s currently in (and of course, how well you’re feeding and maintaining it).

That doesn’t mean you can’t preserve certain characteristics of a starter, though. Jennifer recounts how Thomas Teffri-Chambelland, a former microbiologist and author of Sourdough Panettone and Viennoiserie,gifted her a starter that contained a specific microbe required for panettone dough (which needs a specialized environment because it’s high in fat and sugar and low in water). He told her that as long as she fed it with the right regimen of very dry feedings and sugar water baths, she could retain this microbe in her starter by sustaining an environment in which it thrives and has an advantage over most other flora that might be introduced. Jennifer theorizes that “if you collect a certain microbe and keep it alive through feeding, it probably won’t die out just because new microbes are introduced.” As she mused, “I wonder if some of the anecdotal evidence of older starters having better flavor or baking capabilities comes from a greater biodiversity in them.”

Does sourdough starter get better with age? (2)

Danielle Sykes

Jennifer likes to expose her starter to new environments in the hopes of introducing “something new and fun,” as she puts it. She travels with her starter and always leaves the lid cracked in new locations, from Big Sur to Sebastopol, California, to allow new microbes to wander in. Maurizio does something similar: “Over the years, I’ve integrated bits of other bakers’ starters from around the world into mine. It’s a way to introduce new microbes, speed evolution, and get the strongest starter possible!”

This approach reflects the deeply personal relationship many bakers have with their starter —just like they do with their pet. “My starter has been with me through countless bakes and many life changes,” Maurizio reminisces. Tara adds, “I think origin stories are important, and often the narratives we tell about the age of our starters involve other stories about family, friends, and places we love. … It’s a beautiful thing for something to be tended to for 20, 50, 100 years.”

Here at King Arthur, our Classic Fresh Sourdough Starter is descended from one that’s been lovingly nurtured in New England for decades. Once you feed and maintain it in your own home, it will eventually adapt to your own region and climate, becoming uniquely yours. At the same time, though, you can know that thousands of bakers before you — including many of us at King Arthur! — have made wonderful sourdough bread with a bit of this same starter.

Does sourdough starter get better with age? (3)

Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne

While the age of your starter won’t make your bread any better — turns out, only good sourdough practices can do that — it’s a link in the long legacy of sourdough, one of the oldest forms of baking that exists. Whether your starter is a week or a decade old, you can become part of that lineage as well.

Get baking with more essential sourdough knowledge:

  • Our beginner’s guide to sourdough is here to take you from beginner to baker in no time
  • To find your go-to bread, check out our list of 14 super sourdough recipes
  • What to do if you make good bread, but want to make it great

Cover photo by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne.

Does sourdough starter get better with age? (2024)

FAQs

Does sourdough starter get better with age? ›

Even though every sourdough starter has a unique microbiome, those that are cared for in the same manner and in the same location yield almost identical results and flavor despite their age.

Does sourdough starter get stronger with age? ›

For most bakers, the answer is a clear no. Maurizio Leo, author of the award-winning bread cookbook The Perfect Loaf, still uses the first starter he ever made; it's now 12 years old. And while he's sentimental about that starter, he says its age doesn't really impact his bread.

Does sourdough starter get stronger? ›

Over a six day period, the starter strength is more than doubled. This ground-breaking video includes innovative new methods for measuring the true strength of a sourdough starter.

How long does it take for a sourdough starter to be good? ›

How long does it take for a sourdough starter to be ready? In general, I've found it takes about 7 days from when you first mix flour and water to when a sourdough starter is ready to be used to bake bread.

How do I know if my sourdough starter is strong enough? ›

A “ripe” starter is one that's fermented for some number of hours and is ready to use in a recipe, whether to make a levain or mix directly into a dough for sourdough bread-making. Generally, when a starter is ripe, it has risen, is bubbly on top, has a sour aroma, and has a looser consistency.

How old is the oldest active sourdough starter? ›

Blackley's sourdough starter, created from 4,500 year-old yeast, is considered the oldest sourdough starter, per Oldest. Other starters like the Saint Honoratus Wheat also are quite old. A bakery called Chrissi's Farmhouse Bakery uses it and said, “This noble starter dates back 900 years.

Can you overfeed your sourdough starter? ›

Premature discarding and overfeeding will weaken your starter and elongate the process. Don't discard and re-feed a weak starter before it shows increasing bubble activity or height from the previous feeding. If you don't see more bubbles or a faster rise each day, skip a feeding, and give it more time.

Should you stir your sourdough starter? ›

It will look like a sticky, thick dough. Scrape down the sides and cover with a tea towel secured with a rubber band. Place the jar at room temperature for 24 hours, until you begin to see the mixture bubbling up. It is important that you stir the sourdough starter every day in the morning and in the evening.

Do you have to discard sourdough starter every time you feed it? ›

Do I have to discard my sourdough starter? It would be best if you discarded some portion of your starter each time you feed it unless you want to continue to let it grow. Eventually, you need to discard the used “food” (flour and water) that's been used to sustain your starter during the last fermentation period.

How many years can a sourdough starter last? ›

As we have seen, a sourdough starter can last indefinitely with proper care and maintenance. So, don't let your starter go to waste – nurture it, experiment with it, and let it be your trusted companion on your sourdough journey for years to come.

Why is my sourdough starter bubbling but not rising? ›

If your starter gets completely covered on top with bubbles but does not rise, it is healthy but may just be a wet mix. Try reducing the water in your next feeding and see if you have different results. Also, the type of flour you are using can impede the rise of your starter.

Can you leave sourdough starter too long? ›

I wouldn't go more than 24 hours without feeding a very young sourdough starter (it may survive longer than this unfed however you will leave it open to the risk of mold). Mature sourdough starter aged more than 6 months old should be able to survive unfed on the counter for around 3-4 days without any risk of mold.

How do you fix a weak sourdough starter? ›

In order to strengthen your sourdough starter try and give it flour only for one or two feeds. This will make the mixture stiffer. If your starter is quite runny, it should be easy to stir the extra flour into the mixture. If it seems a little stiff, it will loosen up as it eats and ferments the flour.

Should sourdough starter be covered tightly or loosely? ›

Ideally, your sourdough starter should be loosely covered with a lid or paper towel to keep out bugs (like fruit flies) and other debris. A loose lid will also stop it from drying out too much.

Should sourdough starter have big or small bubbles? ›

As long as your starter is doubling (or even tripling) in a timely manner after being fed, the size of the bubbles don't really matter too much. What you're looking for is activity and fermentation. Bubbles of any kind are an indication that this is happening inside your jar.

Does sourdough starter get more sour over time? ›

The longer you go in between feedings, the more acetic acid your starter will develop. This acid creates a more sour flavor.

How do you keep a sourdough starter strong? ›

Discard a portion of the starter and feed it with fresh flour and water every 24 hours. Twice-Daily Feeding: In warmer environments or if you prefer a faster fermentation process, you can feed your starter twice a day, approximately every 12 hours. This helps maintain a more active and vigorous starter.

How can a sourdough starter be 20 years old? ›

As long as the starter is being fed regularly and rising and falling as it's meant to, a starter really can't be too old. Of course, it could also have been preserved in a dried form or even stored in the fridge. If the starter isn't dried and has not been fed regularly, then it could become moldy and no longer viable.

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