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Recipe · Sourdough · Overnight

75% Hydration Overnight Sourdough

A loaf of sourdough is a record of time. Hours of cold fermentation deepen the flavor, the gluten develops without aggressive kneading, and the finished crust holds the dark color of a slow, hot bake.

Total time

14 hours

Active

75 minutes

Hydration

75%

Difficulty

⌬⌬⌬

At 75%, you get real artisan crumb without fighting the dough. It's wet enough for visible holes in the cut loaf, dry enough that you can shape it on a lightly floured counter without the dough sticking to everything.

Overnight fermentation is where flavor lives. The dough goes in the refrigerator after a brief room-temperature ferment, the cold slows the yeast and lets enzymes do their work, and the loaf you bake the next day tastes like it cost more than it did.

Ingredients

1000g total dough. Yields 1 boule, ~900g baked.

Ingredient Grams Baker's %
Bread flour 508 g 100%
Water 381 g 75%
Salt 10.2 g 2%
Active sourdough starter (100% hydration) 101.6 g 20%

Schedule

  1. Day 1, 6:00 PM
    Mix flour and water. Autolyse 30 minutes.
  2. Day 1, 6:30 PM
    Add starter and salt. Mix until combined.
  3. Day 1, 7:00 PM
    Stretch and fold every 30 minutes for 2 hours.
  4. Day 1, 9:00 PM
    Bulk ferment 1-2 more hours at room temperature.
  5. Day 1, 10:30 PM
    Shape into a tight boule, place seam-up in a floured banneton. Cover and refrigerate overnight.
  6. Day 2, 7:00 AM
    Pull from the refrigerator. Preheat the oven and Dutch oven to bake temperature.
  7. Day 2, 8:00 AM
    Score the loaf. Bake at 500°F covered for 25 minutes, then uncovered for 20 more minutes.

Method tips for this style

The starter has to be active and bubbly within four to six hours of feeding. If it doubles in that window, it's ready. A sluggish starter produces a sluggish loaf, regardless of schedule or hydration.

What to expect

A balanced open crumb with visible holes and a chewy texture. The crust is thin but sturdy, and the flavor is a clean read on the flour and ferment.

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