Sourdough Starter
- The Starter
- 1 bunch organic red grapes
- 500 g unbleached strong white bread flour
- 1 liter water
- The Food
- 100 g unbleached strong white bread flour
- 150 ml water
- Wash the grapes and wrap them in a muslin or fine cheese cloth.
- Loosely tie the open end with a string or elastic band and lightly crush the grapes inside with a rolling pin.
- Combine the flour and water in a large plastic, ceramic or stainless-steel bowl.
- It is best if you can find one with a lid.
- Squeeze some of the juice from the grapes into the flour and water mixture, before completely burying the little bag inside the mixture.
- Cover with the lid or a plate and leave for 10 days to two weeks at room temperature, around 20 C or 68 F.
- The grapes should start to ferment and the bag should balloon slightly with the gases being given off by the grapes.
- Pull the bag out of the mixture and squeeze any juice back into the white mixture.
- Throw away the grapes and the bag.
- Stir the starter, which should now be slightly pink and have a sour, grapey smell.
- Now you should pour away about a third of the initial starter mixture and stir in one batch of its food.
- In the beginning, you will have to feed your starter twice a day (best done at regular intervals) for two weeks.
- Just before you feed the starter, make sure you also throw away 200ml of the basic mixture.
- This might seem like a waste but if you don't you will have far too much starter!
- After two weeks, your starter should really be alive and kicking.
- Taste a bit and it should have a slight fizz to it.
- If the starter doesn't taste fizzy, keep feeding it until it does.
- A slightly lower room termperature can slow things up a bit.
- When it tastes fizzy you are ready to start making bread.
- To keep your starter going (it is a living thing, after all) you should only need to feed it once a week and leave it in the fridge, unless you are making bread more than once a week.
- If you are not making bread very often, you can leave feedings for two weeks.
- Make sure you keep it in the fridge, which slows the starter down.
- If it is kept at room temperature, it will need to be fed every day.
- Between making bread, give the starter at least a day to recover.
starter, red grapes, white bread, water, white bread, water
Taken from www.food.com/recipe/sourdough-starter-72036 (may not work)