Lauren's Einkorn Sourdough Starter Story
My name is Lauren and I work at jovial. I have always loved to bake, having learned from my Italian grandmother, Lucia, in her tiny kitchen decades ago. My favorite recipe that we made together was an orange chiffon cake that called for 12 eggs. She would crack each egg into my hand and I would let the whites slide through my fingers and then plop the yolk into a separate bowl. When I became a mom, much of my time in the kitchen was spent trying to feed everyone a square meal and cleaning up, so my baking fell by the wayside. Then, I saw a game changing recipe in the NY Times about 14 years ago for No-knead bread, and suddenly, we had homemade bread again!
I heard about einkorn, saw Carla give a talk at a local bookstore, and was eager to know more about jovial. Lucky for me, I live just 10 minutes from the company in Connecticut, and landed a job at jovial in February. If you’ve emailed or called for advice this year, I have probably helped you out. I field many questions about the sourdough starter recipe in Carla’s cookbook, and it became clear that if I was really going to offer meaningful help to our customers, I needed to make a starter for myself.
I took a 2 lb bag of all-purpose einkorn flour home with me the first week along with the book. I have a kitchen scale, which I have learned is probably the most important tool when working with einkorn. I got started, and as soon as I added the water to the flour, I was convinced that I did not have enough water. What I had in the bowl looked dry and crumbly, and that was so far from any starter I had ever seen. Since I wanted to be ‘by the book’ I kept stirring, and of course, after a few moments, the mass came together into a ball and I was able to pick it up and work it with my hands as Carla instructs in the book.
I put my new starter in a glass bowl, covered it tightly with plastic wrap and then tucked it into a kitchen towel and put it in the cabinet. I knew I had to wait 48 hours until I needed to feed it, but I actually forgot about it until nearly the end of the third day. When I uncovered it, what I saw looked nothing like what I had put in the cabinet. It was slimy and lumpy, and the flour and water had separated.
I continued, but I REALLY had trouble getting past the first 4 days. Before creating the starter for myself, I was not sure why I got so many questions about Day 5, since it seemed clear to me that you were supposed to discard most of this hard-won starter and refresh with only a half-dollar sized piece each time until the starter was ready. Wait, what? You THROW IT AWAY??? I did exactly what the book says and moved on.
My starter remained a ball with just a few bubbles forming after each refreshing for well past the 10-day mark. I was worried and frustrated, so I brought it to work with me one day. Our test kitchen reassured me that I was on the right track. I kept refreshing, covering, sniffing and hoping and hoping. Then, out of nowhere on day 16, I opened the cabinet and there she was, in her glory. I finally had a bubbly and sweetly sour starter that looked just like it should. Not only could I see bubbles when I turned the bowl over, but I could see bubbles on the surface of the starter, and it had spread out and risen up the sides of the bowl. It had all come together. It worked! Finally, I was on to baking, and let me tell you, it really was worth the wait.
My favorite go-to recipes are now the French Boule and the Classic Sandwich loaf. My daughters will eat almost a whole loaf in a day. We’ve made focaccia, grissini, and piadina. The slow-fermented Belgian waffles are a weekend regular as well. I’ve found out that thanks to einkorn sourdough, I can actually make many of these recipes even during a busy week with work and family. If I can do it, you can too, so don’t give up after Day 5 if things are moving along slowly. And, if you are feeling frustrated, you can always call me. I will do my best to answer any question you might have.
Good luck!
So excited and proud to have my friend Lauren involved with such an amazing product/company!!!
On day 1, you start with 1/2 flour and 3 Tbsp of warm water. You save 10 gm of starter on day 3 and add 1/2 cup flour and 3 Tbsp of warm water. You repeat this same process on day 4 and on day 5, you can make your bread with 2 tsp of starter?
Also, I want to make a sourdough starter, where do I go for the best instructions, it sounds a bit confusing... Do I buy a certain cookbook? Or is it online? Or do I call? Thank you so much!!
Not sure if I should throw the towel in and start over from day 1, or tough it out for a few more days. Any advice you can give me would be most appreciated. Thank you!
Do you think I should start refreshing every 12 hours again, or just keep going. I can't give up on this now. I've got some emotions invested in this project, along with 2 bags of flour!
Thanks for your help and encouragement!
Thank you!
Lovely post, thank you!
I am confused about building a starter without discarding daily. I see mention of amounts that indicate there may have been discard, but no instructions for that step in the Einkorn cookbook recipe for creating a sourdough starter. Can you direct me to the instructions I've missed or explain when you discard if you do?
Thank you!
It would be really helpful if you noted in ALL your materials that from day 5 you may NOT notice anything happening maybe for DAYS or WEEKS! I was really ready to give up until I read the testimonials on this site today. Einkorn is not cheap and it would have saved me on the time (started my sourdough starter journey in November!) and on the cost of all the einkorn I literally threw away!
On a positive note, I have been trying your recipes from the book and from your web site and they are all delicious! My husband is anxiously awaiting the sour dough einkorn bread that I promised him last year;)
Thank you to all who have shared their trying testimony of getting started on their starter..... Jovial...please add an addendum somewhere in the five day mark to let us newbies know that we are on the right track, even if we don’t see anything happening ;)!
I loved reading your story. I hope to see more! I wanted to make more starter, so I kept more (instead of 10g) after a while and started to feed it based weight, so if I had 50g of starter, I used 150g of water and 300g of flour. Is this how we maintain a larger starter culture? I'm confused about this and cannot seem to find the directions anywhere. Is the ratio for long term maintenance 1:3 (starter:water) and 1:6 (starter:flour)? Thanks!
4 teaspoons (20 g) Einkorn Sourdough Starter
¼ cup (56 g) warm water, at 100°F
¾ cup plus 1 tablespoon (100 g) all-purpose einkorn flour or ¾ cup plus 1 tablespoon (90 g) whole grain einkorn flour
You can find this recipe in the cookbook, if you do not have it yet, we would recommend it.
I'm thinking I need some help/advice.
I am on day 12 of attempting to make a starter and I am getting close to giving up. My ball of starter still has no bubbles on the surface and does not rise up or fill the bowl I put it in. Is there anything I can do besides the instructions in the book to jump start things? It is killing me to waste so much precious einkorn flour with all these refreshes. I refresh once in the morning and once in the evening.
Also, when I mix the 10 g of starter with the 30 g of warm water, is it supposed to completely dissolve? It gets creamy but there are still many lumps of starter that don't want to work itself into the water. Is that normal?
Thank you for any help you can offer!
Also, do you every recommend refreshing twice a day to get it going faster?
Thank you so much!
Hoping for some info on einkorn starter. I have a happy and vigorous 100% rye starter going. Is it totally NOT advisable to try building an einkorn starter from an existing starter based on a different flour type? I’ve watched your videos and do have a sense that it would take significantly longer to get an einkorn starter going than even in a cold northern Vt kitchen it took to get a rye starter going. Have ordered( through amazon as i didnt realize i could order direct from you) all purpose einkorn to get started baking with. Very excited to try it. Hope to hear back from you when you have time.
Best,
Hope Yandell
I just threw away my starter because it didn't look right to me. I gave up on day 6. Maybe I should've waited. I'm ready to try again, but I wanted to ask some questions. Might it be indeed possible to call you?
If not, maybe we could communicate through email?
Thank you so much!
Anna
FYI...this has been great fun. My son and I have kept records since day one;-)
Thank you,
Gloria Banker
Just be sure your starter is strong and is in fact regularly bubbling up in 6 hours. It may take longer. Give yourself plenty of extra time!
I know non-einkorn sourdough starter is supposed to double in size, but this just doesn't seem to be the case with einkorn sourdough starter. Is this correct? Is it not supposed to double in size?