frustratedearthmother
Sustainability Master
Woo Hoo!!My "caught" sourdough starter made bubbles today!
Woo Hoo!!My "caught" sourdough starter made bubbles today!
you're on your way! congratulationsMy "caught" sourdough starter made bubbles today!
I only used half flour and doubled the waterWhy use a package when you can make the starter by scratch with minimal ingredients , flour , water , sugar , yeast , potatoes
@R2elk I am glad to hear that you have been able to keep your sourdough alive and well.
My sourdough starter was 4 years old when I moved out to Wyoming. 2 months later is was pink with grey fuzzies. My second starter lasted almost a year before going pink. I may have been the problems, but I treated just like I did in Wisconsin. My neighbor (who thought she was a homemaker goddess) had the same problems that I did.
But I didn't give up, I am still working on getting a sour dough starter going in healthy.
The thing that gave mine a jump start was adding some wheat flour to it. It got active really quick after that.@R2elk I am glad to hear that you have been able to keep your sourdough alive and well.
My sourdough starter was 4 years old when I moved out to Wyoming. 2 months later is was pink with grey fuzzies. My second starter lasted almost a year before going pink. I may have been the problems, but I treated just like I did in Wisconsin. My neighbor (who thought she was a homemaker goddess) had the same problems that I did.
But I didn't give up, I am still working on getting a sour dough starter going in healthy.
I never kept mine fully exposed to the air. Way too many different molds in the air in my house.it sounds like your air contains enough off-type algae, moss, bacteria or fungi that you should probably keep it covered in the fridge to prevent it from being contaminated. often just keeping the container closed but not so much that air can't get in will do it. there is no way i can keep a starter culture going here in the fridge at all - Mom needs every bit of fridge space she can get at times.