Feed your starter, well.

Pick a ratio, target an amount, set your room temperature. Get the exact flour and water to add — plus an estimate of when it'll peak. Two modes: feeding for a bake, or daily maintenance.

Your feeding
In grams
g
1:1:1Fast
1:2:2Standard
1:5:5Build
1:10:10Long
Custom ratioSet your own
Starter hydration 100%
Most starters are 100% (equal flour and water). Stiff starters are 50–60%.
Room temperature 22°C / 72°F
Cooler kitchens slow fermentation. Warmer kitchens speed it up dramatically.
Your feed
Live
Estimated peak time
5hours
A standard 1:2:2 feed at room temperature.
Heads up —
What to combine
Existing starter
Keep this much
40g
Flour 80g
Water 80g
Total at peak 200g

What feeding actually does.

Your sourdough starter is a living ecosystem of wild yeast and bacteria suspended in a flour-and-water medium. Feeding it means giving the population fresh food: more flour to consume, more water to live in. The microbes eat the flour, multiply, produce gas (which makes the starter rise) and acid (which gives sourdough its tang).

The ratio in a feed is shorthand for "how much old starter, how much fresh flour, how much fresh water." A 1:2:2 feed means for every 1 gram of existing starter, you add 2 grams of flour and 2 grams of water. Bigger ratios (more fresh food per old) mean a longer wait but a more vigorous peak. Smaller ratios mean a faster peak but less total growth.

Choosing the right ratio.

RatioBest forPeak at 22°C
1:1:1Quick refresh, daily maintenance, small starter3–4 hours
1:2:2Standard feed, predictable peak4–6 hours
1:5:5Building before a bake, more dough6–8 hours
1:10:10Long retard, fridge maintenance, vacation10–12 hours

None of these is "right" or "wrong" — they're tools for different situations. A 1:1:1 is great when your starter is sluggish and needs a quick boost. A 1:5:5 is what you want the night before a bake so you have a fully active, peak starter ready in the morning. A 1:10:10 lets you feed Sunday and not feed again until Wednesday.

How temperature changes everything.

Yeast and bacteria are temperature-sensitive. The same 1:2:2 feed will peak in 4 hours in a warm summer kitchen at 26°C, but take 10 hours in a cool winter kitchen at 18°C. Bakers in cooler climates often switch to smaller ratios in winter and larger ratios in summer to keep their schedule consistent.

Bakebench's peak time estimates use a model that accounts for both ratio and temperature. Above 28°C, fermentation accelerates so much that timing windows shrink — you may need to set a timer rather than rely on visual cues. Below 18°C, fermentation slows enough that some bakers move their starter to a warmer spot (on top of the fridge, near a radiator) rather than wait.

Common starter feeding mistakes.

1. Feeding a sluggish starter the same way every time

If your starter peaks weakly or doubles slowly, a 1:1:1 feed for 2-3 cycles can wake it up faster than another 1:2:2. Match the feed to the starter's current vigor.

2. Using cold water

Cold water shocks the microbes. Use water at roughly room temperature, or slightly warm in a cool kitchen.

3. Mixing in a tall, narrow jar

You can't see the rise clearly. Use a wider container, or a glass jar with a rubber band marking the starting line.

4. Feeding at peak

If the starter is already at peak when you feed it, it has nothing left to grow on — the new food gets consumed slowly. Feed when the starter is past peak and starting to deflate, OR when it's at the bottom of its previous cycle.

Frequently asked questions.

How do I know when my starter is at peak?
Visual cues: doubled to tripled in volume, dome top (not yet collapsing), bubbles visible throughout, sweet-tangy smell. The "float test" — dropping a small piece in water — is unreliable for high-hydration starters but useful for stiff ones.
Can I skip the discard?
Yes, when you need to grow your starter. Just feed everything you have without discarding any. The "discard" step is only needed when you want to keep a small maintenance starter without it growing forever.
What's the difference between 100% and 50% hydration starters?
A 100% starter is half flour, half water by weight — pourable, soft, the most common style. A 50% starter (also called a "stiff levain") has half as much water as flour — looks like dough. Stiff starters ferment more slowly, develop different flavor profiles, and store longer in the fridge.
My starter peaks but never doubles. Is something wrong?
A healthy mature starter should at least double, often triple. If yours barely rises, try: more frequent feeds for a week, slightly warmer environment (24-26°C), and check your flour quality (fresh, ideally with some whole grain). It can take a new starter 4-8 weeks to fully establish.
How accurate is the peak time estimate?
Within ±20% for most situations. The estimate uses ratio and temperature, but doesn't know your specific starter's age, flour type, or microbe composition. Use it as a planning guide, not a stopwatch — and always trust visual cues over time predictions.

The rest of the set.

Copied to clipboard