I live near San Francisco and I am in love with the local sourdough bread. It is very expensive and I'd like to bake my own bread. I am wondering though, is it possible to make sourdough starter from regular breadmachine yeast?
6 Answers
Yes you can create sourdough from regular yeast, but it's not necessary. Ordinary flour comes with a trace of yeast. In the San Francisco area, that yeast is famed. Just mix flour and water 50/50 to make a batter-like mixture and leave it in a jar on the counter. Put a lightly fitting lid on the jar.
Add more flour and water every 12h (give or take). You should be doubling the initial amount each time, so 1 teaspoon, 2 teaspoons, 4...
After a couple of days you'll see bubbles developing in the sourdough. Once you're at that stage, you can reduce the amount of care. 'Refresh' the sourdough once a week: mix, take out 1/2 of the sourdough, add the same amount back (50/50 flour/water as before), mix. According to the Wikipedia, this can be kept at room temperature.
Sourdough is a mixture of flour, water, yeast and bacteria. When unattended for some time, 'water' forms at the surface. This liquid contains some alcohol that adds to the flavor of the dough. It's part of the sourdough and should be mixed in when refreshing the dough.

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Ah, two points that are unclear. I assume (based on experience) that your "yes you can" applies to baking sourdoughs that *contain* bread machine yeast, not producing a starter using it? Also, when you talk about refreshing weekly, you're referring to sourdough starter that is refrigerated, right? – BobMcGee Sep 04 '11 at 16:09
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@BobMcGee, you can start a sourdough from regular yeast, it'll give you a jump-start. The bacteria will get in there and will form the water on top (alcohol actually). You're right, about the sourdough refreshing, that sourdough should be in the fridge. – BaffledCook Sep 04 '11 at 22:30
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@BobMcGee, I've updated the text. Note that sourdough is quite resilient and it takes some abuse before it goes 'off'. – BaffledCook Sep 06 '11 at 13:41
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As for experience, I'm more a Mother Dough guy. I've kept one Mother going for over a year, and my current Mother has been with me for some months now. I've started a Sourdough once, as described, but I tried to improve that one without success. – BaffledCook Sep 06 '11 at 13:44
You cannot produce sourdough with just bread machine yeast; it lacks the lactobacillus bacteria in sourdough starter, which produce the lactic acid that sours the bread. However, you can use bread machine yeast and sourdough starter together to produce a dough with sourdough flavor, but which a bread machine can handle (see my answer to "bread machine sourdough").
Fortunately, sourdough starter is dead easy to obtain, and is so easy to care for that it makes those pet Sea Monkeys look high maintenance! As BaffledCook suggests, you can prepare your own sourdough starter from scratch. You can also ask bakeries if they will share a little of their starter. Finally, sourdough starter is available by mail order from a variety of sources, including the King Arthur flour online catalog.
Edit: my current recommendation for mail-order starters is Breadtopia's. I recently used some after losing my starter, and it is by far the fastest I've seen. Rise times are just 2/3 what most recipes call for (factoring in temperature), and it creates an airier bread.
Siah,
The short answer: bread machine yeast is not the right way to start sourdough. Use the natural yeast present in the Bay Area air.
The long answer:
Since you live near here (I live in SF), starting a sourdough couldn't be easier if you have a little patience. I have a sourdough we call "H.P.", as in "Lovecraft", because is it a big, scary, sticky white shoggoth. H.P. has been going for 6 years and has produced countless batches of bread, bagels, pizza dough, pancakes, and waffles.
I'll tell you how H.P. started.
First, buy some unbleached, low-heat milled organic flour milled on the West Coast. Bob's Red Mill, Arrowhead Mills, and Butte Creek Mill all work for this. Guisto's is the best, but they don't sell to home cooks. Second, mix 1.5 cups with 1.5 cups of unchlorinated, filtered water (see below). Leave this out on the counter, at room temperature, for 3 days.
After 3 days, throw away half the goo and add 3/4 cup flour and 3/4 cup water. Leave out for another 2 days. Repeat for another 2 days. Then split and mix again, put in a jar with a loose lid (a mason jar not screwed all the way down works well) and place in the fridge. Leave for 2 weeks.
After this, you should have a sourdough. Split it and replentish it with flour and water every 3-4 weeks minimum, or once a week maximum (unless you're going to get into serious multi-stage production baking). If you find that your sourdough doesn't have much rise, add 1/8 tsp commercial baking yeast (any kind) to it once to improve the yeast strain.
A note about water: most Bay Area tap water has chloramine in it, which improves the water quality but will kill your sourdough. You need to use purified unchlorinated water.
Recommended books on Bay Area sourdough:
- The Cheese Board: Collective Works: http://www.powells.com/biblio/2-9781580084192-2
- Sourdough Cookery: http://www.amazon.com/Sour-Dough-Cookery-Rita-Davenport/dp/0912656638/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1315282072&sr=8-3
- The Sunset Book of Breads: http://www.amazon.com/SUNSET-BREADS-editors-Sunset-Books/dp/B000UVJWJY/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1315282192&sr=1-2
Sunset Magazine also has a recipe for making sourdough in a bread machine. Since it appears to rely on yogurt for the bacterial culture, I don't think much of it, but try it if you dare: http://www.myrecipes.com/recipe/sourdough-starter-10000001151410/

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I'm in Singapore. First time I tried making a starter it took about 3 days before I saw the first bubbles and was a week before I tried making my first loaf. It was weak and had no rise but it was making the bread sour so I knew it had Lactobacilus bacteria in it. After a few failed no rise attempts I cheated and added some commercial yeast to it, turned out great. So I put a pinch of yeast into my starter culture and its been working great since then but I felt guilty for having done that thinking the bread wasn't truly authentic.
So started a second starter. Knowing that there's yeast in flour already I decided to start with a teaspoon each of 2 different brands of regular all purpose flours and a teaspoon of Red Mill oat bran from a pack I had in the fridge. The idea was to try to vary the source of the flours hoping that there would be yeast and bacteria from one of them. And wow, the very next day it was bubbling. In my first try there were no signs of life for 3 or 4 days. After that I just fed it with AP flour. Its going strong now but no rise so I'm still adding yeast to the dough when mixing but I keep the starter in its natural state.
The starter will take at least a week before it can be used to make bread. From the Peratos guys in Belgium they say that in the early days of a starter there are about 20 strains of bacteria. As the days go on some will start to die off and after 2 weeks there are just 3 strains left. It does seem to track my experience. The starter bubbles, second to 4th or 5th day it smelled like puke, and at one stage looked very watery. Thought it was fading or something but I kept at it. Halved it and added new dough and after a week to 10 days it was producing a very thick gluey starter and smelled doughy. Mine is in its second week and its not rising but more or less the bacteria is established. Now am wondering if wild yeast can get a foothold in such a strong culture.

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I like to start with a small packet of grapes that are 2-5 days past the date and have liquid from being kept in the plastic bag to create a starter, it only takes a few days from that stage
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Shane, welcome! Please note that Stack Exchange is not like the average web forum you may be familiar with - one of the basic principles is “answer the question”. The asker is not looking for ways to create a starter, but specifically asks about yeast. Could you please [edit] your post accordingly? The [tour] and the [help], especially [answer] should help you. – Stephie Dec 04 '18 at 05:52
Since you are impressed with some local strains of sour dough (for good reason) you might also try to reconstitute one of those local cultures by starting with some of the actual bread, You can do this using baked bread as not ALL of the culture is normally killed during baking, but you may want to try a few parallel starts as not all starts will take off.
Start by getting some of the desired sourdough bread and cut it into cubes about 1 inch, no crust. You will need 7 cubes per attempt.
Use these cubes with @BaffledCooks directions, in place of the flour for the first 3 days of the process (1 cube, 2 cubes, 4 cubes, then switch to flour).
On day 4 you should be able to tell which samples are taking off by the bubbling action in the sample. From there you now have duplicated the culture at your favorite bakery. Of course other ingredients bring flavors to the mix, but with this you should be able to get very close to your favorite sourdough.

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1Properly baked bread reaches an interior temperature of about 190F. I have a hard time believing a usable quantity of sourdough starter will survive that, given that 161F is used in pasteurization, and 165F is suggested as the cooking temperature to kill pathogens. HOWEVER, bread molds on the exterior of the bread will be quite happily alive, as they arrived post-baking. – BobMcGee Sep 04 '11 at 16:01
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1@Bob, The key word is "Properly". One of the effects of all those little bubbles that they create a measure of insulation where the heart of the bread may (MAY) not reach full temperature and some of the yeast commonly survives the process. (This is, for instance, how prisoners (reportedly) make wine in prison). I personally prefer my King Arthur starter but thought this a worthy contribution based on OP's admiration of local sourdough. – Cos Callis Sep 04 '11 at 17:26
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Bacteria won't survive that, even if yeast does. The easier way is just to ask the bakery if you can have a little of their sourdough starter; if properly buttered up with a little flattery and discussion of baking, they may just share. – BobMcGee Sep 04 '11 at 17:53
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In theory you are correct, but reality is some will survive, I invite you to try it. – Cos Callis Sep 04 '11 at 19:12
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As it happens, I have homemade sourdough bread (temp-tested to an appropriate interior temp of 190F or so), a good starter (for comparison), and plenty of flour. However, I don't have a lot of free time most days. Can I abbreviate this by pureeing a lot of sourdough bread with 50/100 flour/water? This one demands to be put to the test. We'll do two batches in parallel to allow for a 50/50 failure rate. – BobMcGee Sep 04 '11 at 19:34
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@BobMcGee you would need to do this test in a sterile room , just having a cool cooked loaf in the outside air will have contaminated it enough – TFD Sep 06 '11 at 07:09
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@TFD: Bakeries are no more sterile than a clean house is... I've got a sneaking suspicion that this method is actually just culturing the microbes in the flour, just like the traditional way of making sourdough starter. But, I guess that can always be a new control... – BobMcGee Sep 06 '11 at 15:42
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@BobMcGee - In your test, how could you distinguish in the end product between microbes in the flour and what might be present in a baked loaf? – rfusca Sep 07 '11 at 01:28
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Russian kvas is made by adding well toasted, black bread to a jug of water with a little sugar. The result has a very pronounced bread yeast pungency. Yeast survives baking and even toasting afterwards. (It seems unlikely to be airborn yeast given how consistent the product is and how similar to the source bread.) – Sobachatina Dec 03 '18 at 23:27