Sourdough starter

Well I now have an additional issue in that the recipe i want to use calls for rolled oats and I have quick oats on hand, which may require less oats in weight or more water.

My starter is 1:1:1.

It might be a week or 2 before I give it a go.
1 flour, 1 water, 1 ???
 
Ok you two, lol. For the recipe I'm likely going to use, it calls for 90 grams of active starter, so yesterday I put 30g of starter, 30g of rye flour, and 30g of water in a jar and covered it with a coffee filter and a rubber band. I thought 1:1:1 was clear enough but...

I might actually bake today which is why I fed her last night.
 
Back when I used to use keep sourdough starter I just left wet flour in the open air and let the yeast in the air get thinks going. it took while and several flour additions to get the stafter ripe enough for bread but after a few months it was really good. When I closed the gourmet store I brought the starter home and my wife disposed of it right away. So it goes with love and marriage.
 
1 flour, 1 water, 1 ???
Huh?
Flour, water and ???
You asked the above and I explained. I'm new to sourdough and all of the online resources I have read show it in 3 numbers separated by colons (like 1:1:1) with starter being one of the factors. I've actually never seen a starter in my reading that wasn't 100% hydration, only doughs and levains of varying hydration levels.

I found a recipe for bread dough that has the ingredients i want to use, so my only issue is converting the amount of quick oats to use vs. rolled oats, since quick oats are lighter in weight and more processed, and the recipe calls for rolled oats (and quick oats possibly will absorb more water). Quick oats is what I have on hand. I'm sure I'll figure it out, thanks!
 
I'll go through it and see if I can figure it out.
My starter is 65% hydration (100 gr flour, 65 gr water) as it works better for me and in my climate.

The 100 % starter is more standard (1:1).
You can feed it in a lot of different ways.
Lets take your proportion
100 flour, 100 water, 100 starter.
This will become active quicker than
100 flour, 100 water and 10 starter
The last one can take longer between feeding
So you got a choice here.

The terminology gets mixed up at times.
I use starter & mother for the same thing.
This may not be totally correct

Levain is the activated "mother/starter" for the bread you are baking. So the mix you use.

Now its time to look at the recipe you want to use ;)
 
I'll go through it and see if I can figure it out.
My starter is 65% hydration (100 gr flour, 65 gr water) as it works better for me and in my climate.

The 100 % starter is more standard (1:1).
You can feed it in a lot of different ways.
Lets take your proportion
100 flour, 100 water, 100 starter.
This will become active quicker than
100 flour, 100 water and 10 starter
The last one can take longer between feeding
So you got a choice here.

The terminology gets mixed up at times.
I use starter & mother for the same thing.
This may not be totally correct

Levain is the activated "mother/starter" for the bread you are baking. So the mix you use.

Now its time to look at the recipe you want to use ;)
Yes, I had read the same as you provided. I've made levains several times before.


The recipe is on a previous page. I'll go back and get it and move it here:
 
So ingredients
90 g rye starter (she doesnt specify, lets assume 100% hydration - 45 g rye flour/45 g water)
45 g oats
90 g whole wheat
270 bread
315 water

Total water 45 + 315

Oats want 100% hydration so you need 45 g water for them alone.

Remaining 405 other flours and 315 water - gives 78% hydration.
Its what the recipe also states.
78% gives a wet dough and can be difficult to work with, but is doable

Total of flours incl oats is 450 gr.
General rule is 2% salt which is 9 gr.
She uses 11 gr. It's fine, you can go up to 2.5%, but personally I would lower it to 9.

Basicaly, go ahead and bake :)
 
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