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Sourdough Starter Feeding Ratio Calculator

Calculate the correct amounts of starter, flour, and water for any sourdough feeding ratio.
Works for 1:1:1, 1:2:2, 1:5:5, and any custom ratio.

Starter Feed Amounts

What a feeding ratio really means

A sourdough starter feeding ratio is expressed as Starter : Flour : Water by weight. The numbers describe parts:

  • 1:1:1 = equal weights of all three (e.g., 50g starter + 50g flour + 50g water)
  • 1:2:2 = double the flour and water (50g starter + 100g flour + 100g water)
  • 1:5:5 = five times the flour and water (50g starter + 250g flour + 250g water)
  • 1:10:10 = ten times (50g starter + 500g flour + 500g water)

The ratio of starter-to-food (flour + water) determines how quickly the wild yeast and bacteria can ferment the new flour. Lower starter ratio = more food per yeast cell = slower fermentation but bigger ultimate rise.

The ecosystem inside your jar

A mature sourdough starter is a complex microbial community, not just yeast. The major players:

Wild yeasts:

  • Saccharomyces cerevisiae (sometimes; same as bread yeast)
  • Candida humilis (the most common in sourdough)
  • Kazachstania species
  • Other naturally occurring yeasts from flour and environment

Lactic acid bacteria (LAB):

  • Lactobacillus sanfranciscensis (famous for SF sourdough)
  • Lactobacillus brevis
  • Lactobacillus plantarum
  • Many other species

The ratio of yeast to LAB determines flavor and rise:

  • More yeast = more leavening power, milder flavor
  • More LAB = more sourness, less rise

A 1:1:1 starter at room temperature favors LAB growth (more sour). A 1:5:5 starter has more food per cell, favoring yeast growth (milder, better rise).

How feeding ratio affects timing

Approximate peak times at 75°F (24°C):

Ratio Dilution Peak time
1:1:1 2x 3-5 hours
1:2:2 4x 5-8 hours
1:3:3 6x 7-10 hours
1:5:5 10x 10-14 hours
1:10:10 20x 18-24 hours
1:20:20 40x 24-36+ hours

At cooler temperatures (65°F / 18°C), all times approximately double. At warmer temperatures (85°F / 29°C), times approximately halve.

These are rough guides. Real timing depends on starter strength, flour type, ambient temperature, and how long it’s been since the last feeding.

Choosing a feeding schedule

1:1:1 daily: traditional approach

  • Pros: starter ready quickly, manageable amounts
  • Cons: requires daily attention, more sour flavor
  • Best for: bakers who bake several times per week

1:2:2 daily: balanced

  • Pros: good rise, moderate sourness, somewhat forgiving
  • Cons: still daily commitment
  • Best for: weekly bakers

1:5:5 every 12 hours: peak fermentation control

  • Pros: strong starter, great rise, complex flavor
  • Cons: more food, jar grows quickly
  • Best for: serious bakers wanting maximum performance

1:10:10 daily or every 24 hours: low-maintenance

  • Pros: feed once daily, milder flavor, predictable
  • Cons: needs to be timed with bake schedule
  • Best for: occasional bakers

Refrigerator storage (any ratio + 1-2 weeks rest):

  • Pros: feed once per week
  • Cons: requires “wake-up” feedings before bake
  • Best for: bakers who bake 1-2 times per month

Starter hydration

Hydration = water weight ÷ flour weight × 100%

Ratio Flour : Water Hydration Result
1:1:1 1:1 100% Standard active starter
1:1:0.5 1:0.5 50% Very stiff (lievito madre style)
1:1:0.65 1:0.65 65% Stiff (panettone, Italian)
1:2:2 1:1 100% Standard
1:1:1.25 1:1.25 125% Wet, very active
1:1:1.5 1:1.5 150% Very wet, soup-like

Stiff starters (50-70% hydration):

  • Less surface area = slower acid development = milder, less sour
  • Concentrate yeast activity
  • Used for panettone, brioche, sweet breads
  • Italian tradition (lievito madre, pasta madre)

Standard starters (100% hydration):

  • Most common for everyday sourdough
  • Easy to maintain and measure

Wet starters (125%+ hydration):

  • More acidic
  • More open crumb in finished bread
  • Some commercial bakeries use these
  • Can be unstable in hot weather

Levain vs starter — important distinction

Starter (mother culture): the small jar of culture you maintain perpetually. Usually 50-100g. Fed regularly, used to seed levains for specific bakes.

Levain (sometimes called “preferment” or “offshoot”): a portion of starter fed specifically for one bake. Built to the exact size and hydration needed for the recipe.

Example workflow for a single sourdough boule:

  1. Take 10g of mother starter from the refrigerator
  2. Build a levain: 10g starter + 50g flour + 50g water (a 1:5:5 build)
  3. Wait 6-12 hours for the levain to peak
  4. Use the full 110g levain in your bread recipe
  5. Feed the mother starter (1:1:1) and return to fridge

This way you don’t waste starter, your mother stays small, and you build optimal levain for each specific bake.

Reading starter activity

Healthy starter at peak shows:

  • Domed top, slightly cracked
  • Tripled or quadrupled in volume (mark the start level with rubber band)
  • Bubbles throughout when viewed through the glass
  • Tangy aroma — pleasantly sour, slightly fruity (banana, vinegar, mild yogurt)
  • Float test passes: a spoonful floats in room-temperature water

Warning signs:

  • Liquid layer on top (hooch): starter is hungry but not dangerous; just stir it back in
  • Gray or pink discoloration: contamination; discard
  • Mold spots: contamination; discard
  • Strong nail-polish or acetone smell: very over-fermented; needs aggressive feeding
  • No rise at all: dormant or starved; feed more frequently

Reviving a refrigerated starter

To wake up a refrigerated starter:

  1. Take from fridge, let warm to room temp (1-2 hours)
  2. Feed 1:1:1 or 1:2:2; let peak (6-8 hours typical)
  3. Discard most; feed again 1:5:5; let peak
  4. Optionally do one more feeding 1:5:5 the day of baking

This 2-3 feeding revival ensures peak activity. A starter pulled directly from the fridge produces less leavening power.

Common ratios for specific applications

Application Recommended ratio
Daily maintenance 1:1:1 to 1:2:2
Strong levain for baking 1:5:5
Sour-loaded bread 1:1:1 (over-ferment slightly)
Mild-flavored bread 1:5:5 at 75-80°F
Pancakes/discard recipes Use unfed discard
Panettone (Italian) 1:0.5:0.5 stiff starter
Reviving from fridge 1:2:2, 2-3 times

Discard — the byproduct everyone hates

When you feed a 1:5:5 starter, you typically discard everything except a portion to keep the math manageable. This “discard” can be:

  • Composted
  • Used in pancakes, waffles, crackers
  • Added to bread recipes for flavor
  • Refrigerated and used within a week
  • Pitied as a “lost opportunity”

A common workflow: keep mother starter small (20-30g). Build levain for baking. Daily feeding produces minimal discard.

Temperature sensitivity

Sourdough fermentation rate roughly doubles every 8°F (4.5°C) increase. Practical implication:

Temperature Speed multiplier
60°F (16°C) 0.5x (very slow)
68°F (20°C) 0.7x
75°F (24°C) 1.0x (standard)
80°F (27°C) 1.5x
85°F (29°C) 2x (fast)
90°F+ (32°C+) 3x+ (very fast, risk over-fermentation)

Hot kitchens require shorter timings or lower feeding ratios. Cold kitchens need longer timings or higher temperatures (proofing box, oven with light on).

Bottom line

Sourdough feeding ratios (Starter:Flour:Water) determine fermentation timing and flavor. 1:1:1 is fast, sour, and high-maintenance. 1:5:5 is slower, milder, and stronger. Hydration (water:flour ratio) affects flavor: stiff starters are milder, wet starters more active. Build a levain for each bake rather than over-feeding your mother starter. Mark starter level with rubber band to identify peak. At room temperature (75°F), 1:5:5 peaks in 10-14 hours. Temperature dramatically affects timing — adjust ratio or timing for your kitchen conditions.


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