How To Make Sourdough
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Here, you’ll find helpful Sourdough Baking tools, kits, discounts and more! These tools are the results of 3+ years of comparison shopping and testing the best way to make sourdough bread!

The Ultimate Sourdough Bread Baking Tools List

September 19, 2024 by admin 24 Comments

If you buy through my link, I get a little commission. These are tools I use daily in my own kitchen, so I can personally confirm that they are the best tools for the job and helps me a great deal!

Sourdough Starter Kit

Essential Tools for Creating and Maintaining Your Sourdough Starter

Sourdough Starter

The living culture of wild yeast and bacteria that ferments your dough and gives sourdough its distinctive flavor and leavening.

Get it here: https://starter.howtomakesourdough.com

Sourdough Starter Kit

Here are my #1 favorite and preferred tools for Sourdough Starters. These are the winners of three years of comparison shopping, research and testing.

Sourdough Starter

Thermometer and Hygrometer

My Favorite Kitchen Scale

Weck Jars

Off-set metal spatula 4.25″

Bread Flour

Dark Rye Flour

Brod & Taylor Proofer

Dough Mat

Use Code ROSELLE10 for 10% OFF

Rubber Bands

Dry Erase Marker

Sourdough Bread Kit

Here are my #1 favorite and preferred tools for baking Sourdough Bread. These are the winners of 3 years comparison shopping, research and testing. This is everything I use from start to finish.

Sourdough Starter

Thermometer and Hygrometer

Plastic Bench Scrapers

Metal bench scraper

My Favorite Kitchen Scale

Brod & Taylor Proofer

Stainless Steel Mixing Bowl 10 in

KitchenAid 8q – 4 loaves

Pyrex 11 cup glass

Banneton

“Banneton” $1.25

Flour Sack Towels (better)

Magnetic Bread Lame

Feather Razor

Parchment Paper

The Best Dutch Oven

Bread Knife

Kitchen Scales

Here are my Top picks for kitchen scales

22lb Kitchen Scale

Etekcity Food Kitchen Scale

My Favorite Kitchen Scale

Ingredients

Here are my Top picks for ingredients in each category. A more detailed explanation can be found here

Bread Flour

Whole Wheat Flour

All Purpose Flour

White Rice Flour

Dark Rye Flour

Super Fine White Rice Flour

Diastatic Malt Powder

Mixers

Here are my Top picks for stand mixers. As a busy mom, with a very little kitchen, I need my mixer to be multipurpose. A more detailed explanation of the best mixer for bread dough can be found here

KitchenAid 8q – 4 loaves (what I have)

KitchenAid 7qt – 2 to 3 loaves

KitchenAid 5qt – 1 loaf

Stainless Steel Mixing Bowl 10 in

Silicone Jar Spatula

Proofing Boxes

Here are my Top picks for folding containers (where you will fold your dough while it proofs)

Holds 1 loaf

Holds up to 8 loaves

Holds up to 12-16 loaves

Proofing Baskets / Bannetons

Here are my Top picks for proofing baskets (for maintaining dough shape as it goes through its final proofing)

Dollar Tree Find

Fruit Basket

Banneton

Flour Sack Towels (better)

Scoring Tools

Here are my Top picks for proofing baskets (for maintaining dough shape as it goes through its final proofing)

Magnetic Bread Lame

Curved Bread Lame

Thumb Bread Lame

Feather Razor

Astra Razors

Bread Art Tools

Here are my Top picks for making decorative art on my sourdough bread

Embroidery Scissors

Skewers

Flour Duster

Dental Floss

Pastry Brushes

Cake Stand Turntable

Super Fine White Rice Flour

Misc Baking Tools

Parchment Paper

Bread Mat (many sizes available)

Water Spray Bottle

Dutch Ovens

I prefer to bake sourdough bread in Dutch Ovens. Here are my top picks

The Best Dutch Oven

The Best Dutch Oven (knockoff)

Dutch Oven Oval

Round Dutch Oven

Le Creseut Round

Baking Pans

Here are my favorite baking pans

Stainless Steel Bread Pans

8 x 4 x 4

Pullman Loaf Pan – Standard

8 x 4 x 4

Pullman Loaf Pan – Large

13 x 4 x 4

Baking Sheet With Rack

16 x 12 x 1

Stainless Steel Focaccia Pan

11 x 9 x 2

Misc. Must Haves

Don’t forget these useful and helpful tools that are often overlooked

Thermometer and Hygrometer

Plastic Bench Scrapers

Metal bench scraper

Effortlessly clean your hands of dough

Code ROSE for 15% OFF

Bread Cutting Tools

Here are the best bread cutters I’ve found

Bread Knife

Meat Slicer/Bread Slicer

Hi Quality Cutting Boards – use code ROSELLE to get 10% OFF

Cute Packaging

Here are my top picks

Bread Bag

Long Bread Bag

Flour Mill

Here are my top picks

Mockmill 200

Flour Sifter

150 Mesh Sieve

Flour Bins

Here’s what I use to hold my flour (I buy in 50-80lb bags)

Flour Bin 25lb

Flour Bin 100lbs

Flour Bin 100lbs

Temp Control

(to control and manipulate starter or dough temperature)

Brod & Taylor Proofer

Dough Mat

Use Code ROSELLE10 for 10% OFF

Starter Glass Dome

Starter Heating Belt

Filed Under: Sourdough Baking Tools

Baker’s Percentages Explained (with calculators)

August 2, 2024 by admin 11 Comments

What is Baker’s percentages?

Baker’s %s are most commonly used for bread baking.

It’s very easy –if you know how to ✖️ & ➗, you can do it.

It’s basically baker’s shorthand. It’s formulas that helps all bakers, not just sourdough bakers deduce ingredient amounts & hydration ratios –especially helpful for troubleshooting sourdough problems.

How to find percentages from ingredient amounts

There IS one very important switch you have to make in your head:

Baker’s %s is in relation to the FLOUR, not the sum.

The flour weight is always set to 100%.

For example, let’s look at this

Beginner sourdough bread recipe:

  • 500g white bread flour
  • 360g water
  • 100g starter
  • 10g salt

Here’s how that math looks:

white bread flour 500 = 100%

water = 360 ➗ 500 = 72%

starter = 100 ➗ 500 = 20%

salt = 10 ➗ 500 = 2%

Simply ➗ the other ingredients by the FLOUR amount. It’s that easy.

Need a calculator? Don’t worry, here it is…

[supsystic-tables id=1]

How to find ingredients amounts from percentages

There may also be times when you need to use baker’s %s to calculate the ingredient amounts.

Like when you see recipes like this:

  • 100% white bread flour
  • 72% water
  • 20% starter
  • 2% salt

This is how chefs & bakers talk to each other.

When I was in culinary school we’d use recipes written out as only %s!

How do you find out the bread ingredients amounts?

First decide how much flour you want to put in your recipe. A normal-sized sourdough bread is around 500g of flour.

When you have this number, simply ➗ the other ingredients by the FLOUR amount. Sound familiar? (see above)

I also made a calculator for this process for you to use if needed!

[supsystic-tables id=4]

FINAL HYDRATION OF DOUGH (don’t pay attention to this)

☝️ Not really that important, unless you really want to know OR you want to make your own sourdough bread recipes

When we talk about baker’s % –it’s always in relation to the FLOUR, not the sum.

This wont give you the final hydration of the dough, though.

That’s because your starter has water too.

Most sourdough starters are 100% hydration, meaning they are made up of equal amounts flour & water.

So when calculating your DOUGH hydration you will want to ➗ the amount of starter in your dough in half, & add that to the amounts of flour & water.

Then calculate the hydration the same way you calculate baker’s %s with the new totals for your flour & water.

In other words:

Final dough hydration formula

➗ the  starter in half, 

➕ that to the flour amount

➕ that to the water amount

Now, (water amount) ➗ (flour amount) = Final dough hydration

Again, finding the final dough hydration isn’t as important as knowing the hydration amount in relation to your flour.

Unless, of course, you are trying to match the final hydration of a recipe you are trying to convert into sourdough

I also made a calculator for this process for you to use if needed!

[supsystic-tables id=5]

Filed Under: Sourdough Baking Tools, Sourdough Bread Tips

Sourdough Starter Tools

August 17, 2023 by admin 7 Comments

Here are all the tools I’ve researched, tested and used to maintain my sourdough starter

1) Starter container

Here are preferred containers, in order of preference:

For small batches of starter…

Plastic quart container

Weck jars (no shoulders)

Ball jars (wide mouth)

For large batches of starter…

KitchenAid 8qt Commercial Mixer (for mixing large batches of starter & doughs)

4qt Plastic Container (to hold starter while coming to peak)

8qt Plastic Container (to hold starter while coming to peak)

19qt Plastic bins (to hold starter while coming to peak)

2) A utensil to stir the starter ingredients

Here are the preferred utensils, in order of preference:

For small batches of starter…

Small offset spatula

Silicone Scraper Spatula (angled tip)

For large batches of starter…

Plastic bench scrapers

3) A kitchen scale

Here are the preferred utensils, in order of preference:

22lb Food Scale, big

11lb Food Scale, small

We are going to be measuring our ingredients by weight so a food scale is going to be a staple in your kitchen. That being said, you might as well get a good one like this since you will be using it to weigh your dough, and if you are operating a cottage bakery, you’ll be making large batches of dough, weighing 10+lbs.

4) A room thermometer & hygrometer

(optional, but very useful)

Thermometer & Hygrometer

This is a very helpful tool that lets you know the temperature and humidity in the room.

5) Rubber bands or dry erase marker

(optional, but extremely useful)

Rubber bands

Dry Erase Markers

These are very very helpful for the baker, as this will enable you to mark the starting point of the starter and will let you know how much the starter has risen.

You will want good rubber bands, big enough to stretch around a 32oz jar. If you don’t want to use rubber bands, you can just use a dry erase marker to mark the starting point of the starter, but that can easily be wiped off.

6) Proofer or Temp Control

(to control and manipulate starter temperature)

Brod & Taylor Proofer (for big starters)

Brod & Taylor Sourdough Home (for small starters)

Kombucha Heating Belt

Dough Mat – use code ROSELLE10 for 10% OFF

If you buy through my link, I get a little commission. These are ingredients and tools I use daily in my own micro-bakery, so I can personally confirm that they are the best tools for the job.

Once you have your ingredients and tools ready, it’s time to start making your starter.

Filed Under: Sourdough Baking Tools, Sourdough Bread Tips, Sourdough Starter Tips

© 2026 How To Make Sourdough by Roselle Blore

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