Video: Back in the Swing with Sourdough & 2 Recipes — Under A Tin Roof (2024)

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Written By Kayla Lobermeier

Hello, dear reader! I hope that you are well on this March Friday. The weather is still chilly here and a bit rainy lately. I am hoping the warm breeze returns and all of this rain brings about beautiful daffodils and tulips! I do thoroughly enjoy rainy days; they remind me of traveling in the pacific northwest while I was pregnant with my first son, Tad.

How have you been spending your winter months? I apologize if you feel like all I have been sharing lately are food recipes. It’s because that is what I have been having the most fun experimenting with! This spring I’ll be sure to get back into my normal content, but for now, if you are enjoying all of the food recipes… I have another TWO for you! I recently got back into the swing with making sourdough, and it has been so amazing.

Susan of Hillside Sourdough reached out to me on Instagram a few weeks ago asking if I would be interested in trying some of her dry sourdough starter. I had never heard of this before. The only way I knew how to make sourdough was from scratch, which can seemingly take forever to get the cultures right.

Video: Back in the Swing with Sourdough & 2 Recipes — Under A Tin Roof (1)

Video: Back in the Swing with Sourdough & 2 Recipes — Under A Tin Roof (2)

Video: Back in the Swing with Sourdough & 2 Recipes — Under A Tin Roof (3)

how I feed my sourdough starter:

NOTE: I have recently begun adding spelt flour that I’ve milled myself to feed my starter, and wow! It makes the starter so much more active than all purpose flour. I am not quite ready to begin writing about this yet, as I need more experience, but you can certainly try feeding different types of flours to your starter to see how it reacts.

Video: Back in the Swing with Sourdough & 2 Recipes — Under A Tin Roof (4)

Video: Back in the Swing with Sourdough & 2 Recipes — Under A Tin Roof (5)

making sourdough crackers:

INGREDIENTS:

  • 1 cup sourdough starter discard/unfed

  • 1 cup flour

  • 1/2 tsp salt

  • 4 tbsp lard, room temperature

  • olive oil and flaky sea salt for topping

DIRECTIONS:

  • In a large bowl, combine the sourdough starter, flour, salt, and lard. With your hands, form into a nearly smooth dough.

  • Divide the dough into two pieces and wrap with plastic wrap or bees wrap. Chill in the fridge for 30 minutes.

  • Preheat your oven to 350* F.

  • Remove the dough from the refrigerator. Roll out each half into a 12x12 square, or until it is thinner than 1/8-inch thick. Prick the dough all over with the tines of a fork.

  • Cut into squares or circles, about 1-inch diameter. Brush with a bit of olive oil and sprinkle with flaky sea salt.

  • Bake for 25 minutes or until golden brown and no longer moist. Allow to cool on the baking sheet and move to a wire cooling rack when cool enough to handle.

  • Store in a container with an airtight seal for about 1-2 weeks.

Video: Back in the Swing with Sourdough & 2 Recipes — Under A Tin Roof (6)

Video: Back in the Swing with Sourdough & 2 Recipes — Under A Tin Roof (7)

making no-knead sourdough bread:

RECIPE VIA HILLSIDE SOURDOUGH:

directions:

  • In a large bowl, combine the starter and water with a fork.

  • Add the flour and salt. Mix together with a fork until a dough ball has formed. Continue to knead with your hands until the dough has become a semi-smooth and a bit shaggy ball. It is no-knead, so it does not have to be completely smooth.

  • Cover the bowl and allow to rest 30 minutes.

  • After the resting period, stretch and fold the dough to form it into a ball. Cover the dough with a clean dish cloth or plastic wrap and let rise in a warm place overnight or 8-10 hours. *I tend to make mine in the late afternoon and leave it until the next morning.

  • In the morning, turn the dough out onto your counter. Fold into a neat ball, cover, and let rest 15 minutes.

  • Place the dough into a bowl or banneton (bread basket) and cover, allowing to rise for another 1-2 hours.

  • Turn out onto the counter. Dust the top of the bread with flour and score with a serrated knife or lame.

  • Preheat your oven to 425* F. Place a dutch oven inside and preheat it for 30 minutes (you can also use any type of oven safe dish with a lid). When it has finished preheating, place the bread inside. Bake covered for 35 minutes. Remove the lid and continue to bake, uncovered, for another 15 minutes.

  • The bread is finished when it sounds a bit hollow when tapped. Remove from oven and allow to cool before slicing.

Video: Back in the Swing with Sourdough & 2 Recipes — Under A Tin Roof (8)

I hope that you enjoyed learning a bit more about making sourdough bread and crackers! These recipes are incredibly simple and perfect for a beginner! If this is your first time baking with sourdough, it is good to note that no-knead style breads need a much longer rising time than a loaf with instant yeast. You will want to watch and follow the signs of your bread. If you have never made any sort of bread before, I would suggest you take a look at my other bread tutorials to get an idea of how the process works!

Please be sure to check out and subscribe to our new YouTube Channel @underatinroof! We just got started and would love if you followed along with us there.

Thank you Hillside Sourdough for the wonderful bag of dry San Francisco Starter!

My dress and apron are curtesy of Little Women Atelier. I am wearing the Beth Dress with Long Sleeves in Rust and the Half Apron in White.

xoxo Kayla

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Video: Back in the Swing with Sourdough & 2 Recipes — Under A Tin Roof (12)

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Kayla Lobermeier

Kayla Lobermeier is an author, blogger, recipe developer, photographer, homesteader, and co-owner of the brandUnder A Tin Roofwith her mother, Jill Haupt. She lives in rural Iowa with her husband, children, and parents on their multi-generational family farm.Under A Tin Roofis a small flower farm and online lifestyle company focused on sharing the joy of seasonal, slow living with others who enjoy gardening, preserving, and cooking with wholesome ingredients. Kayla has been sharing her family’s journey into a simpler and sustainable lifestyle for almost a decade,andshehas been featured in publications such asWillow and Sage Magazine, Where Women Cook, Heirloom Gardener, Folk Magazine, In Her Garden, Beekman 1802 Almanac,andGardenista.She has taught cooking and gardening lessons through Kirkwood Community College andhashosted farm-to-table suppers at her family farm. You can usually find her sipping on a hot cup of coffee, reading up on the domestic lives of the Victorians, and snuggling with barn cats. Visit Kayla atwww.underatinroof.comor on Instagram and YouTube @underatinroof.

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Video: Back in the Swing with Sourdough & 2 Recipes — Under A Tin Roof (2024)

FAQs

Can you bake sourdough in a tin? ›

This technique helps create a beautiful open crumb because the gluten forms stronger bonds when the dough is less hydrated. Prepare the tin by greasing a sheet of baking parchment lightly with butter, ghee, coconut oil or lard (not olive oil.) Then line the tin with the baking parchment.

Can you bake sourdough in a metal pan? ›

Either a 9 by 4 inch Pullman pan or 8 by 5 inch Loaf pan will work for most standard sourdough bread recipes. Water pan: A metal pan works best, avoid using ceramic, glass or clay since adding water or ice cubes to the pan could cause them to break due to thermal shock.

Why do you bake sourdough with a lid? ›

The key is that the vessel has a tight-fitting lid, which makes it excel at holding in moisture. For best results, be sure to preheat the vessel fully. A hot pot makes the bread jump (what we call “oven spring”) well and the dough's rapid rise in temperature means a quicker release of moisture.

Can you stir sourdough with metal? ›

Things that WON'T kill your sourdough starter

METAL: Stirring your starter with a metal spoon or placing it in a metal bowl won't kill your starter.

Should you use parchment paper when baking sourdough bread? ›

Bake on two pieces of parchment paper to help prevent burning. As you might have noticed in my Beginner's Sourdough recipe, I typically use parchment paper (I love this natural, non-stick option) to help drag dough into the blisteringly hot Dutch oven.

Can I bake sourdough on a cookie sheet? ›

If you're not using a baking stone, turn them out onto a parchment-lined (or lightly greased) baking sheet and slash them. Scoring (a.k.a. slashing) a risen loaf just before putting it into the oven helps it retain its shape by giving it a pre-designated spot — the slash — to expand.

How long to bake sourdough bread at 450 degrees? ›

Bake Time!
  1. When your oven is at temperature, take your sourdough out of the fridge. ...
  2. Gently score your bread with a lame, clean razor blade or knife. ...
  3. Carefully take your dutch oven out of the oven. ...
  4. 30 Minutes with the lid on at 230C/450F plus.
  5. 10-15 Minutes with the lid off at 210C/410F.
May 29, 2023

Why is there no metal sourdough? ›

Never allow any form of metal such as a spoon or lid to come into direct contact with the stored, un-used sourdough starter as it will cause a chemical reaction that will contaminate and blacken the implement and eventually in time will kill (loose all activity) the starter and a blackish blue or pink liquid will ...

Why do you spray sourdough with water before baking? ›

Wetting the dough causes the surface to steam. Covering it traps the moisture. This partnership stops the bread from drying out on the surface in the hot air of the oven and forming a premature crust. Your bread rises more and produces a richer colour, becoming glossy on the surface.

What does overproofed sourdough look like when baked? ›

What to look for in an over proofed loaf. Similar to the signs of over proofed dough, an over proofed loaf will be very flat, without much rise or retention of shaping. Over proofing destroys the structural integrity of the bread, so loaves that have gone over are unable to hold their shape in the oven.

What temperature do you bake sourdough bread at? ›

Preheat your oven with the rack at the bottom third to 450°F (230°C). Place your Dutch oven inside, with the lid and bottom side-by-side. Take one basket out from the fridge and uncover it. Your dough might not have risen considerably in the fridge, but that's fine.

What not to do with sourdough? ›

Here are the big errors to avoid when working with sourdough.
  1. You Bake Too Soon. ...
  2. You Use Unfiltered Tap Water. ...
  3. You're Impatient. ...
  4. You Don't Let Gluten Develop Properly. ...
  5. You Don't Let the Bread Proof Long Enough. ...
  6. You Don't Score the Surface of the Bread Properly. ...
  7. The Baking Time Is Too Short. ...
  8. The Bread Doesn't Rest Long Enough.
Apr 1, 2022

How to tell if sourdough starter is bad? ›

Typical signs of food spoilage and mold include pink, orange, or green colors, white fuzzy spots, or sometimes areas that are darker with white areas on top. If you see any of these signs, I would recommend throwing your starter away and creating a new one.

What is the black hooch on my sourdough starter? ›

This thin liquid (called “hooch”) is merely alcohol and water generated by your starter's wild yeast as it feeds. Hooch is a visible cry for help: Your starter is hungry. Once you get it back on a regular regimen of care, it should recover just fine.

Can you bake sourdough on a baking tray? ›

If you do not have a baking stone, a cookie sheet will also do the trick. I use this method for my sourdough bread bowls and sourdough mini loaves. I recently experimented with this method on my regular no-knead loaf.

Can you bake sourdough in Pyrex? ›

It is possible to bake sourdough bread in pyrex or glass. You will need to take into account the type of sourdough bread you're baking, the oven safe temperature of your pyrex dish, as well as the baking time of the bread.

Should I bake in a bread tin? ›

If you are just starting out, it's much easier to bake in tins and it's also much easier to see how much your loaf has risen, so it would be my recommendation to bake in a tin before you bake using a banneton. If you want a bread that's guaranteed to hold its shape, bake in a tin!

What can I use instead of a Dutch oven for bread? ›

Option 2: Use an oven-safe pot and a tight lid or sheet pan. Next up: baking crusty bread with an oven-safe pot and a sheet pan! If your pot has a tight-fitting, oven-safe lid, feel free to use that instead of a sheet pan.

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