How to Make Chewy Sourdough Bread at Home: artisan sourdough bread recipe (2024)

This post was most recently updated on January 26th, 2021

Chewy and slightly tangy, who doesn’t like a warm slice of sourdough bread? I bet you didn’t realize just how easy it is to make either.

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The bonus to sprouting/fermenting/souring grains – or anything for that matter – is that with the bacteria activity the end product is higher in protein, has a probiotic effect and it has a lot more bioavailable vitamins and minerals. Souring wheat also starts breaking down gluten, which makes it better tolerated for those that struggle with gluten sensitivity (2).

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How to make your own Chewy Sourdough Bread

How to Make Chewy Sourdough Bread at Home: artisan sourdough bread recipe (1)

As you will see below this whole process, from mixing the initial dough to baking the bread, is a long, slow, drawn-out affair. You can do it in a day if you’re at home, which is usually what I do, or you can spread the process out over a few days.

There are a few moments in the recipe where you can pause and put the dough or the shaped loaves in the fridge overnight.

This time in the fridge actually helps develop the flavors in the dough even more, which if you like the sour flavor is a good thing, my fussy kids prefer it made all in one day.

How to Make Chewy Sourdough Bread at Home: artisan sourdough bread recipe (2)

Chewy Sourdough Bread Recipe

Ingredients
For the leaven:
1 tablespoon active sourdough starter
75 grams (1/2 cup) all-purpose flour or bread flour
75 grams (1/3 cup) water

For the dough:
1 tablespoon salt
625 grams (2 1/2 cups) water (you may need an extra half cup)
700 grams (5 cups) bread flour

The sourdough starter

To make sourdough you will need a sourdough starter. Read here to find out how to make your own sourdough starter at home. Otherwise you can buy a starter culture from a few places online, just ask Google.

How to Make Chewy Sourdough Bread at Home: artisan sourdough bread recipe (3)

The Leaven

Once you have a nice active starter, the night before you want to make bread add 1/2 C flour and 1/3 C of water to your starter and leave it on the counter top- by the morning you should have pretty close to one cup of active leaven aka “some nice active starter”.

The Autolyse stage

Mix the leaven with the second measure of flour and water, let it sit for at least 30 minutes or for up to four hours.

During this time, the flour absorbs the water and becomes fully hydrated, which helps gluten formation during the next step.

Enzymes in the flour also start to break down the starches into simpler sugars, which become food for the yeast and bacteria in the leaven and also make the bread more flavorful.

The stretching stage

After the resting step, mix in the salt. Salt is necessary for a flavorful bread, but can inhibit the activity during the autolyse step. During this phase you can do the stretching which replaces the kneading of more well known recipes.

Stretching is not only less labor intensive, but it also gives the crumb of the finished bread a better structure and a nicer network of holes (which are a good thing in the artisan bread world!). It is quite simple really, you grasp one side of the dough, pull it up and fold it over the top of the dough, and work your way round the bowl in 1/4 turns.

Leave the dough to rest for 30-60 minutes and repeat 2-3 times. Sometimes I only do this once, and to be honest, it works just fine. Overall this stage lasts around 2-3 hours.

How to Make Chewy Sourdough Bread at Home: artisan sourdough bread recipe (4)
How to Make Chewy Sourdough Bread at Home: artisan sourdough bread recipe (5)

The Proofing stage

Proofing baskets support the shaped loaves during their final rise before baking. I use a proofing basket which came with a cotton lining, but you can just use a tea towel lined bowl.

I got my proofing basket for about $15. In either case coat it generously with flour. Use your fingers to rub the flour into the cloth — this is what will keep the dough from sticking.

How to Make Chewy Sourdough Bread at Home: artisan sourdough bread recipe (6)

Shape your dough into a nice round, dust in more flour and place into your well floured basket/bowl and sit in a nice warm place for 4-6 hours.

Alternatively, place the covered basket in the refrigerator and let them rise slowly overnight, 12 to 15 hours. If rising overnight, bake the loaves straight from the fridge; no need to warm them before baking.

How to Make Chewy Sourdough Bread at Home: artisan sourdough bread recipe (7)

Baking sourdough in a casserole dish or dutch oven

You need a moist, humid environment during the first few minutes of baking to get a good rise from the dough and to develop the crust, but making that happen in home ovens is tricky and imperfect.

In industrial ovens they have a steam injection function, lucky! Dutch ovens solve the problem for us home bakers, they trap the moisture evaporating from the bread and create its own steamy environment.

Once the initial baking phase is over, you uncover the pot to release the excess steam and let the bread continue baking.

If you don’t have a heavy casserole dish/ dutch oven, you can use any heavy pot with a lid, like a soup pot or even a large saucepan.

Preheat your oven to 220C/410F, with your pot/dutch oven in there to preheat as well. Temperature in the woodfired stove is a bit more difficult to control, but just make sure it is nice and hot.

Once you are ready to bake, pull your pot out and grease it well with butter/lard/oil and carefully slop your risen loaf into it.

Slash the top with a sharp knife. Place the lid on the pot and put it in your oven and set your timer for 30 minutes.

Reduce the temperature to 200C/380F. Open the oven, remove the pot’s lid and re-set the timer for a further 25-30 minutes.

How to Make Chewy Sourdough Bread at Home: artisan sourdough bread recipe (8)

Once the timer goes off again, remove your bread from the oven and tip out on to a rack, the bottom should sound hollow when tapped and it should look lovely and golden.

The old fashioned non timed way is when the bread smells cooked, give it a further 10 minutes and it will be done, this technique always worked for me when altering recipes.

How to Make Chewy Sourdough Bread at Home: artisan sourdough bread recipe (9)

Notes on making chewy sourdough bread at home

Whole-wheat sourdough:

You can replace up to half of the all-purpose flour with whole-wheat or whole-grain flour. Well, you can replace all of it if you like, but it will be quite a dense, heavy loaf.

All-purpose vs. bread flour:

Bread flour will give your bread a sturdier, chewier texture and a loaf that’s easier to slice. Loaves made with all-purpose flour still work just fine if that is all you have.

If your loaf sticks to the proofing basket:

This still happens to me all the time! If some of the dough stays stuck to the lining of the proofing basket, just pinch it away with your fingers. Fold a pinch of dough over the tear and bake as usual. The crust will look a little rough but the bread will still taste delicious.

Do you want to know all our sourdough secrets?? We have compiled it all into one fantastic, informative book. Check it out here


Do you make your own Sourdough? What is your fave recipe? Tell us in the comments below.

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How to Make Chewy Sourdough Bread at Home: artisan sourdough bread recipe (10)

How to Make Chewy Sourdough Bread at Home: artisan sourdough bread recipe (11)

How to Make Chewy Sourdough Bread at Home: artisan sourdough bread recipe (12)

How to Make Chewy Sourdough Bread at Home: artisan sourdough bread recipe (13)

How to Make Chewy Sourdough Bread at Home: artisan sourdough bread recipe (14)

How to Make Chewy Sourdough Bread at Home: artisan sourdough bread recipe (15)

How to Make Chewy Sourdough Bread at Home: artisan sourdough bread recipe (16)

How to Make Chewy Sourdough Bread at Home: artisan sourdough bread recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is the difference between sourdough and artisan sourdough bread? ›

The difference between sourdough artisan bread and artisan bread is the fermentation process. Sourdough requires the starter which takes 5+ days to craft. On the other hand, artisan bread can be whipped up within a day using bread flour and instant yeast.

Why is my artisan bread chewy? ›

Over-kneading has a tendency to result in chewy bread. Here's how to tell if you've kneaded enough. Another possibility—you used bread flour when all-purpose flour would do. If a recipe with bread flour turned out chewier than you like, try it with all-purpose and knead only as much as the recipe directs.

What causes chewy sourdough? ›

Uneven heat in your oven can be the culprit – if you loaf is nicely golden on the outside but gummy or moist in the inside, it's baking too quickly on the outside. Trying reducing the temperature you're baking at and bake for a bit longer. Experiment until you find the sweet spot, and take notes along the way.

How can I make my bread more chewy? ›

You need to increase the moisture content and develop the gluten more. You can also add some vital wheat gluten to you all purpose flour, I use about a tablespoon to 3 cups of flour. Gluten is developed by kneading, if you are looking for a chewy bread, knead your dough longer.

Why is my sourdough bread not chewy? ›

It might be cold dough. One of the most common mistakes is having a dough temperature that's too low for the starter to feed on all the flour in the dough, resulting in a crumb that's dense, with fewer openings. "Starter is happiest and most active at around 75 degrees.

What are the benefits of artisan sourdough bread? ›

Sourdough bread is a baking art form that is, by its very nature, a healthier choice – and here are our 11 favourite reasons why.
  • It is easy to digest. ...
  • It has a lower glycemic index. ...
  • Better for gluten-sensitivity. ...
  • More “good acid”. ...
  • Provides healthy bacteria. ...
  • Less yeast. ...
  • Natural origins. ...
  • Fewer preservatives.
Jun 22, 2016

Is artisan sourdough bread healthy? ›

It's richer in nutrients, less likely to spike your blood sugar, contains lower amounts of gluten, and is generally easier to digest than bread made with baker's yeast. Sourdough bread is one of my favorite types of bread. Not only do I find it tastier than conventional bread, but it's also arguably more nutritious.

Is artisan bread healthier than regular bread? ›

Artisan bread is thought to be a healthier option than store-bought bread. While there haven't been clinical studies to clearly define the differences, artisan bread is made from wholesome fresh ingredients whereas store-bought bread contains processed ingredients and preservatives to stretch the shelf life.

What makes bread chewy and fluffy? ›

Adding sugar weakens the gluten structure, absorbs water, and eventually makes the bread lighter and softer. As a result, sugar improves the bread's taste, structure and texture. Yeast also eats up sugar to produce carbon dioxide, which raises the dough and makes bread fluffy.

Why is my homemade artisan bread so dense? ›

Make sure that your dough is not too wet or too dry, both extremes will result in a dense crumb. You can check to see if you are using the right amount of water for the type of flour you use (click here to check).

How do you make artisan bread less dense? ›

Simply put, you have to control the temperature of the bread. Allowing ample time for your bread dough to rise and the yeast to form will create the holes in the bread that give it a lighter texture. Letting your dough get puffy and grow before it goes into the oven is critical.

How do you make sourdough more stretchy? ›

Stretching the bread dough up and over further develops the dough's gluten, bringing increased elasticity. Compared to more intensive dough strengthening, like the slap and fold kneading technique, these folds may feel like they aren't doing much. But in fact, they are.

Can you stretch and fold sourdough too much? ›

Too little folding can result in weak dough. But too much folding can produce excessive tension and compressive forces. An over-folded dough might have a tighter crumb as the layers of alveoli push against each other and coalesce. In the worst case, excessive folding might cause a dough to tear under too much tension.

What does overproofed sourdough look like when baked? ›

What to look for in an over proofed loaf. Similar to the signs of over proofed dough, an over proofed loaf will be very flat, without much rise or retention of shaping. Over proofing destroys the structural integrity of the bread, so loaves that have gone over are unable to hold their shape in the oven.

How to make sourdough crust less crunchy? ›

Brush With Butter

Butter contains fats that retain gases during baking, ensuring the dough rises properly in the oven and softening the crust. If you forget to brush the dough before you bake, you can still apply it as soon as you take it out. The butter will minimize the amount of crisping a loaf will do as it cools.

Why does sourdough bread have a unique taste and chewy texture? ›

Sourdough is made from lactic acid fermentation in a mixture of flour and water. It is commonly used for sourdough bread which has a unique flavor and crumb texture. The acidity of the dough is reduced due to the lactic acid and acetic acid produced during the fermentation.

How do I increase the strength of my sourdough starter? ›

There are three techniques for strengthening a weak starter:
  1. Change the feeding interval.
  2. Change the feeding ratio.
  3. Change the type of flour.

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