I have tried and tried to make sourdough the ‘traditional’ way, in the way Nourishing Traditions describes in its sourdough recipe.  I have let my starter sit out and fed and stirred it faithfully, time and time again, only to have it get moldy and fail after a period of time unless I kept it in the refrigerator.  Maybe it’s because I live in the humid South, who knows the reason.  But I have never been able to get sourdough to the point where I could bake with it and have it out on the counter so I could produce enough to use it daily.  Keeping it in the fridge just resulted in too many jars to be able to keep up with the demand of daily baking, it soured so slowly.

That is, until I tried the method Lozt Nausten, one of the moderators on the CTF forum, recommended in her wonderful sourdough bread recipe.  If you are gluten-free and you need a regular bread, I strongly suggest you look at her four versions of sourdough, including the grain-free and egg-free versions.  I have tried every version of her recipe and have enjoyed them all.

Using kefir made with apple juice instead of water to make the sourdough starter speeds the process up considerably and gives the starter a major boost of beneficial bacteria to ward off mold.  You can use the starter in as little as 24 hours if you want a very mild flavor. Allowing it to go longer while feeding it daily creates a stronger sourdough flavor.

You can use any fermentable flour to make sourdough.  Nuts and starches, like coconut, almond, tapioca starch and the like, will not ferment and can not be used for the starter but they are fine as an ingredient in the dough.  If you need a grain-free starter, you can use bean flours to make your starter.  In fact, on Lozt Nausten’s blog, you’ll see a grain-free recipe that uses bean flour to make the starter.

Sourdough pizza crust, ready to be baked

To make your starter, combine equal amounts of a flour of your choice and apple juice kefir.  2/3 cup flour and 2/3 cup apple juice kefir makes 1 cup of starter.  Leave it on the counter for 24 hours.  If you need a mild sourdough, use it to bake at that point.  If you want a stronger flavor, feed it more and let sit longer.

If you need to take a break from using the starter, stash it in the fridge and feed it once a week.  I use my starter to make pancakes, pizza, bread and much more.  In the coming weeks, we’ll be going over a variety of recipes and techniques to help you add sourdough to your meals.

KerryAnn Foster runs Cooking Traditional Foods, the longest running Traditional Foods Menu Mailer on the internet. KerryAnn has ten years of traditional foods experience and is a former Weston A. Price Foundation chapter leader.  Read about KerryAnn’s journey to health through multiple miscarriages, celiac disease, food allergies and intolerances, obesity, adrenal fatigue and heavy metals.

Founded in 2005, CTF helps you feed your family nourishing foods they will love.  With two choices of Menu Mailers, multiple eBooks and Print Books, KerryAnn makes traditional foods easy, accessible, affordable and family friendly for everyone.

KerryAnn founded Nourished Living Network, a network for traditional food and natural living bloggers, in 2011. NLN provides support, publicity and networking opportunities for bloggers all across the traditional foods spectrum. Our Recipe Gallery features recipes from the twenty-four member blogs and growing.

{ 9 comments… read them below or add one }

Jennie@ Pure Homemaking May 18, 2011 at 10:11 am

This is very interesting. I have never even thought of doing apple juice kefir out of milk kefir grains. Water kefir sure, but not milk. I would think that it would damage the grains. Would the apple juice kefir work if I did it with my water kefir grains, adding the juice for the secondary ferment? I am very intrigued by this.
Jennie@ Pure Homemaking recently posted..An Intro to Dairy Kefir-A guest post I did at another blog

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KerryAnn May 18, 2011 at 5:42 pm

Jennie, I use water kefir grains to make my apple juice kefir.

I literally pour the apple juice in with the kefir grains and let it sit on the counter for 24 hours then strain and use it to make the sourdough starter. You can also do it with grape juice on occasion to make a sparkling grape juice. My family loves it.

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Jennie@ Pure Homemaking June 1, 2011 at 6:05 pm

So, I’ve had this going for over a day now and all I got was a bit of hooch on top. I added a bit more flour and apple juice kefir. Do you think it maters that I did a secondary ferment with the apple juice and used WWPF and not white flour? It wasn’t fluffy at all. It had some bubbles on the top but was pretty thin and had a very sour smell-pretty gross smell actually.
Jennie@ Pure Homemaking recently posted..Hot off the press- Dairy is OUT for soaking grains

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KerryAnn June 1, 2011 at 9:03 pm

It should smell alcoholic-ish. It doesn’t bubble until day 2-3 sometimes, but it still works just fine for making sourdough breads. It should be thin since it’s an equal mix.

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carrie August 23, 2011 at 4:20 pm

Do you just use homemade apple juice and grape juice, or can I use store bought organic juice?

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KerryAnn Foster August 24, 2011 at 12:10 pm

Carrie, I use either. I do keep store-bought apple juice on hand for when apples are not in season and it is the cheaper option.
KerryAnn Foster recently posted..Crock-Pot Roasted Chicken

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Raelynn September 28, 2011 at 4:46 pm

Hi KerryAnn,

I’ve been reading about almond flour/meal being fermented using probiotics to form “cheese”, my point is, if it does react with the probiotics, then why could it not be used in the sourdough starter??

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Marla February 19, 2012 at 6:37 pm

Thanks for the post! I enjoy following your blog.

I made a starter per the Nourishing Traditions recipe. I used part of it then put the rest in the fridge. I took it out today to get ready to make some bread and found that the jar was too close to the back of the fridge. It has a big chunk of ice in it. Do you think it’s still good or should I start over?

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KerryAnn Foster February 19, 2012 at 7:51 pm

Freezing it won’t kill it, it just means it might take longer for it to become active again. Go ahead and use it, just allow it an extra day or two if you can.
KerryAnn Foster recently posted..Freezer Cooking: ‘Bourbon’ Chicken

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