DIY Sourdough Starter with Vinegar
Submitted by nancythecook
Quick sourdough starter using commercial yeast and a splash of vinegar for instant tang. Skip the 7-day wild-yeast wait and get a working starter in 24 to 48 hours.
YIELD
90 servingsPREP
15 minCOOK
15 minREADY
30 minA shortcut sourdough starter for home bakers who don’t want to wait a week capturing wild yeast from the air. By using commercial active dry yeast as the fermentation engine and a tablespoon of vinegar for instant acidic tang, you get a working starter in 24 to 48 hours instead of 7 to 10 days.
Purists will say this isn’t “real” sourdough since it skips the wild yeast cultivation, and they’re not wrong. But the resulting starter still develops complex flavor over time as it sits in the fridge, and it produces bread with that distinctive tang most home bakers are after.
The waiting period is the only patience this method requires. The starter is finished when activity stops (no more bubbles), the mixture flattens out, an amber liquid appears on top (called “hooch"), and it smells distinctly sour. Once it hits this stage, refrigerate and use as you would any sourdough starter.
Stored in a sealed jar in the fridge, this starter keeps for months. Feed it weekly with equal parts flour and water if you want to keep it active for regular baking.
Pro Tips
Use a non-reactive container (glass, ceramic, or food-grade plastic). Aluminum or copper reacts with the acid and can taint the starter.
Cover with cloth (a kitchen towel or cheesecloth), not a tight lid. The starter needs air exchange during the souring phase.
Keep at room temperature (around 70 to 75°F / 21 to 24°C) during the souring. Cooler temps slow fermentation, warmer can produce off-flavors.
Use lukewarm water, not hot. Water over 130°F (55°C) kills the yeast on contact.
Variations
Use whole wheat or rye flour for the initial mix for a more complex, earthier starter flavor.
Skip the vinegar for a slower but more traditional fermentation. The starter will still develop tang over time, just more slowly.
Use apple cider vinegar instead of white vinegar for a fruity, slightly different acidic note.
Ingredients
Directions
Pour the water into a crock or a wide mouth gallon jar.
Pour in the yeast and let it dissolve.
Stir. Add vinegar, sugar and flour. Mix.
Cover with cloth and set in a warm place to sour.
When activity STOPS, the mixture flattens out.
An amber colored liquor comes to the top.
And it SMELLS. THAT’S IT! Mix it up. It will look like whipping cream.
Put it in a GLASS JAR with a screw type lid; place in refrigerator.
IT WILL KEEP FOR MONTHS.
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