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    « Coming to Your Senses | Main | Removing the Skin from Garlic »

    Mar 26, 2006

    Comments

    Brent Hendricks

    Just just rescued a starter that I have diligently kept alive for about 1 year and half now. I have had some things happen in my life that just made me completely forget about my little yeast colony. It had been neglected for about 3, 3 1/2 weeks. Upon opening the container, there was a firm layer of mold around the top, and the smell of spoiled starter was very strong.

    I took a spoon and carefully removed a section of the mold, to about half the depth of the starter. Then using about 1 to 2 teaspoons of the starter underneath, I transfered it to another container, and put about 3 Tablesppons of flour and warm water, and let it sit for about 3 hours. I then added a 1/4 cup of flour and warm water. I let that sit all night. In the morning I added 1/2 cup of flour and 1/2 cup warm water. 8 hours later.

    The starter was again bubbly, and I was very happy that I still had a viable yeast colony to work with. I have now thrown half that mix away, and added 1 cup of flour, and 1 cup warm water. It will be this batch that I will attempt a sourdough sponge with.

    As long as you still have some viable yeast, that can reproduce, your starter is not lost.

    thomas cappiello

    I've been keeping sourdough off and on now for twenty years. My latest "batch" is about 7 years old. I waste very little of it. I keep mine in the refrigerator in a ceramic "pot" and try to use it every week. I have let it sit in the refrigerator for around two weeks with out any attention at all. It will get slightly moldy on the sides, and I do have to freshen it by taking a smaller amount avoiding the using the "spoiled" parts and throwing the rest away. But I think its life and resiliency is much more than you describe. Every time I use the starter, I transfer it all to another container, I clean out the pot, then put the remainder I haven't used back in the pot. I then add about a cup of flour and water to mix, not runny, not too thick, and let it activate at room temperature for about a day, then put it back in the fridge. Our household temperatures may be cool enough (60-68 F)to allow this, but feeding it several times a day is not needed, it doesn't thrive that much.

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