sourdough starter

Sourdough Starter : Dhanaanis

Sour dough starter (Dhanaanis) is the heart of the great lahooh batter, that is what gives the sour dough lahooh the characteristic of tangy flavor, and it differs from recipe to recipe, depending on what type of grains used. It could be mix of whole wheat, sourghom, barley, corn, rice flour.

Once you have your starter going you can start making other breads suchs the Ethiopian Injera, Panacakes, french bread and more.

To make the starter you will only need;

  • flour
  • water
  • container for your batter
  • and a warm place to keep your batter
  • this will take a period of 5 days or less.

Day 1:

Mix ¼ cup water to ½ cup flour in a jar ( you can use mayonnaise or jam jars etc.) I am using plain unbleached all-purpose flour and warm water. You should have a tick paste , let it sit on the counter for 24 hours.

Day 2:

you should have some bubbles but you shouldn’t worry at this stage if yours didn’t develop any bubbles. Add ¼ cup water ½ cup flour to the bather and stir until combined. Let is sit for another 24 hours

Day 3:

Your starter should have some air and bubbles that is a good sign. Take about half of your batter (you can use it or throw it away) and mix in ¼ cup water and ½ cup flour. Leave it on the counter for another 24 hours

Day 4:

The starter should be double or triple in size and lots of bubbles in it, we need to take half of the batter out and add ¼ cup water and ½ cup flour mix and let it sit again for 24 hours.

Day 5:

your starter should be now doubled in volume that means you are ready to make sourdough lahooh.

You can get here recipe for sourdough Lahooh.

Feeding your starter:

If you are using this batter daily remove what you need for your lahooh and leave some for the next day, to this add flour and water to it then mix and let it sit on the counter for the next day.

At times when you dont have the time to make it daily leave it in the fridge that way you can forget about it for a week or so , when ready let it sit on the counter at room temperature, there will be some liquid on top you can mix in or discard.

Then I add flour and water and let it rest again to ferment, then use what I need and leave some for the next starter and keep it in the fridge.

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