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Not-So-Serious Sourdough Artisan Bread

(My Go-To, No-Stress Recipe)

by Lex

This is my tried-and-true artisan sourdough loaf. No complicated steps. No perfection required. No weighing your flour like you’re in a lab (okay fine, we are weighing it — but relax).

And let me just say this now:
Going a few grams over will not ruin your bread. Try your best, but we are not defusing a bomb.

Ingredients

  • 100g active sourdough starter
  • 520g unbleached bread flour
  • 360g spring water (DO NOT USE TAP!!!)
  • 13g salt

That’s it. Four ingredients. No yeast packets. No mystery additives. Just the basics — the way bread was meant to be.

Step 1: Mix Water + Starter

Combine your water and starter and whisk until mostly combined.

There may be floating chunks. We are not aiming for a smoothie here. It’s fine.

Step 2: Add Flour + Salt (Hands Required)

Add your flour and salt.

Now get your hands in there. Yes, hands. I am way too impatient to gently mix with a spoon. We’re making bread, not frosting.

Mix until no dry flour remains. You’ll have a shaggy, messy dough. Perfect.

Let it sit for 30 minutes, covered with tea towel (or I like shower caps)

(This is when I like to clean up my counter and kitchen scale because flour somehow ends up everywhere.)

Step 3: Stretch and Folds

After 30 minutes:

  • Wet your hand
  • Grab one side of the dough
  • Stretch it up as far as you can without ripping
  • Fold it over itself

Rotate the bowl and repeat until you’ve gone around about 4 times.

That’s one set.

Step 4: Repeat

Repeat stretch and folds 3 more times — every 30 minutes — for a total of 4 rounds. Covering in-between.

Now let me be honest: this is what I try to do.

I absolutely forget sometimes and go an hour between rounds. It’s fine. Sourdough is forgiving. It is not that serious.

Step 5: Bulk Ferment (AKA The Waiting Game)

This is the hardest part for me. It’s mostly just… waiting.

I bulk ferment for about 8–12 hours because I keep my house cold, so over-fermenting isn’t usually an issue.

If your house is warmer, start checking around 6–8 hours.

Signs it’s ready:

  • It looks puffier
  • It has bubbles
  • It jiggles slightly when you shake the bowl

And honestly? If you’re unsure, ask ChatGPT. Random dough pictures are basically my entire ChatGPT history.

Step 6: Shape the Dough

After bulk fermentation:

  1. Gently turn your dough onto a lightly floured surface.
  2. Stretch it into a rough rectangle.
  3. Fold in the sides and roll it up like a burrito.
  4. Use your hands to gently drag it toward you on the counter to create surface tension.

You want the top to look smooth and tight — even if the bottom is a little chaotic. Pinch it closed underneath if needed.

Rustic is welcome here.

Step 7: Cold Ferment

Place your shaped dough into a linen-lined basket (or a bowl with a well-floured towel). Clean up that messy bottom if needed.

Put it in the fridge for 12–72 hours.

I usually prefer 24–36 hours.

  • Longer = more sour flavor (which I love)
  • Too long = risk of overproofing and a flatter loaf

It’s a balance. But again — not that serious.

Step 8: Preheat Everything

Near the end of your cold proof:

  • Preheat oven to 450°F
  • Place your Dutch oven inside and let it preheat for about 30 minutes

A hot Dutch oven = better oven spring.

Step 9: Flip + Score

Keep the Dutch oven in the oven while you:

  • Take your dough out of the fridge
  • Flip it onto parchment or a silicone mat
  • Score it with a sharp knife or razor

One confident slash. Don’t be timid. Bread respects confidence.

Step 10: Into the Dutch Oven

Carefully remove the Dutch oven.

I like to sprinkle a little rice on the bottom for a slightly softer crust.

Place the dough inside. Lid on. Back into the oven.

Step 11: Bake

Bake for 45–55 minutes with the lid on.

If you want a crunchier crust, remove the lid for the last 10 minutes.

Internal temp should be 200–210°F.

Step 12: The Hardest Step — Waiting

Remove from the Dutch oven and place on a cooling rack.

Wait about 2 hours before slicing.

Now… I know.

If you’re impatient and slice it early, I’m not judging you. I’ve done it. Multiple times. I haven’t noticed a life-changing difference.

It’s bread. Not a personality test.

Enjoy

Slice it. Slather it with butter. Make a sandwich. Eat it plain standing at the counter.

And if you’re looking for more sourdough ideas — sandwich loaves, discard recipes, bagels — check out the rest of my sourdough recipes on my page.

Your starter deserves a full-time job.

 

 

Items I use:

  • Ultimate Starter Kit– The exact one I bought is no longer available but this is one looks to be the most extensive at the best price
  • Dutch Oven– My tried and true
  • Glass Mixing Bowl– I love a Glass Bowl to see my Bubbles
  • Proofing Baskets– These are my favorite but there are some in the “starter kit” if you buy that instead
  • Food Thermometer– Sourdough is too much work to cut into raw bread. Temp that ish
  • Kitchen Scale– A must for any baking, stop using cups. There is one in the “starter kit” if you buy that instead
  • Silicone Baking Mat– This is the one I have but there is one in the “starter kit” if you buy that instead.
  • Shower Caps– to cover my dough while proofing, I also use these on my room temperature starter (use a real lid for the fridge)
  • Cake Stand– This is honestly how I store my bread to keep it freshest
  • Bread Bags– For Gifting to Friends and Family

 

Not-So-Serious Sourdough Artisan Bread

(My Go-To, No-Stress Recipe)

Ingredients
  

  • 100 g active sourdough starter
  • 520 g unbleached bread flour
  • 360 g spring water (DO NOT USE TAP!!!)
  • 13 g salt

Method
 

  1. Mix Water + Starter
  2. Combine water and starter in a bowl and whisk until mostly combined. Small chunks are fine.
  3. Add Flour + Salt
  4. Add flour and salt. Mix with your hands until no dry flour remains. The dough will look shaggy and messy — that’s perfect.Cover and rest for 30 minutes.
  5. Stretch and Folds (Round 1)
  6. Wet your hand. Grab one side of dough, stretch it up, and fold it over itself. Rotate and repeat 4 times total.
  7. Repeat Stretch & Folds
  8. Repeat the stretch-and-fold process 3 more times, every 30 minutes (4 total rounds).Don’t worry if timing isn’t perfect — sourdough is forgiving.
  9. Bulk Fermentation
  10. Let dough rise for 8–12 hours (less if your kitchen is warm). It's ready when it is puffy, bubbly, and slightly jiggly
  11. Shape Dough
  12. Let dough rise for 8–12 hours (less if your kitchen is warm).
  13. Cold Ferment
  14. Place dough in a floured basket or bowl. Refrigerate for 12–72 hours (24–36 hours ideal)
  15. Preheat Oven
  16. Preheat oven to 450°F
  17. Preheat Dutch Oven
  18. After the oven finishes preheating, add the dutch oven and preheat for about 30 minutes
  19. Score Dough
  20. Remove dough from fridge, flip onto parchment, and score with a sharp blade.
  21. Bake
  22. Place dough in hot dutch oven and bake for 45-55 minutes covered, until internal temperature hits 200–210°F
  23. Cool
  24. 200–210°F
  25. Slice & Enjoy

STAY INFORMED, STAY INSPIRED.

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