The sourdough starter has been in the fridge all week. Before the Saturday bake, you need to feed it back to an active state. The baker has 85g of starter left after discard and wants to build up to a 1:5:5 ratio feed at 25 degrees C -- you need the exact water and flour amounts and an estimated peak time.
Water = (Starter ÷ Ratio_S) × Ratio_W
Flour = (Starter ÷ Ratio_S) × Ratio_F
Common ratios: 1:1:1 = quick peak (4–6h at 21°C) · 1:5:5 = slow peak (10–14h) · Use higher ratios in warm kitchens or for overnight schedules.
1 What this calculator does
Calculates the water and flour to add for a sourdough starter feed from the existing starter weight and feed ratio. Shows the total volume after feeding, the starter hydration and an estimated time to peak activity based on temperature.
2 Formula & professional reasoning
Feed ratio format: Starter:Water:Flour (e.g. 1:5:5)
Water = (Starter weight / Ratio starter) x Ratio water
Flour = (Starter weight / Ratio starter) x Ratio flour
Total after feed = Starter + Water + Flour
Hydration = (Water portion / Flour portion) x 100
Peak time estimate: Base 8h at 21C -- decreases ~1h per 2C above 21C, increases ~1h per 2C below
The feed ratio determines how much new food (flour and water) is given relative to the existing starter. A 1:5:5 ratio means for every 1 part of starter, add 5 parts water and 5 parts flour. A lower ratio (1:1:1) is a maintenance feed for a starter baked daily. A higher ratio (1:5:5 or 1:10:10) builds up volume for a bake or is used to strengthen a weak starter. Temperature accelerates yeast and bacterial activity according to Q10 rule -- roughly doubling for every 10C increase, so peak time halves as temperature rises.
3 Worked examples
⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.
Water: (50/1) x 1 = 50g | Flour: (50/1) x 1 = 50g | Total: 150g | Peak at 22C: base 8h - ((22-21)/2) x 1 = 7.5hWater: (85/1) x 5 = 425g | Flour: (85/1) x 5 = 425g | Total: 935g | Hydration: 425/425 x 100 = 100% | Peak: 8 - ((25-21)/2) = 8-2 = 6hWater: (30/1) x 2 = 60g | Flour: (30/1) x 3 = 90g | Total: 180g | Hydration: 60/90 x 100 = 66.7% | Peak: 8 - ((24-21)/2) = 6.5h4 Sanity check
5 Common errors
| Error | Cause | Consequence | Fix |
|---|---|---|---|
| Using starter that has already peaked and collapsed | Missing the peak window and using the starter when it is in decline | Bread that rises slowly or not at all -- dense, sour loaf | Use starter at peak activity: domed surface, doubling in volume, bubbly throughout, passes float test. Feed at a schedule that matches your baking window. If the starter has peaked and collapsed (fallen), it needs another feed cycle before it is ready to bake. |
| Not discarding before feeding, allowing acid to accumulate | Adding new flour and water without removing any of the old starter | Overly sour starter that inhibits yeast activity and produces unbalanced flavour | Before each feed, discard all but 10-20g of starter (or the portion needed for the build ratio). The discard removes accumulated acetic acid that would otherwise slow the yeast and produce excessively sour bread. |
| Using cold water straight from the tap in warm weather | Not adjusting water temperature to the ambient environment | Dough temperature drops below optimal range after mixing -- longer fermentation time than expected | In warm weather, use room temperature or slightly cool water. In cold weather, use warm water (30-35C). The goal is a final starter temperature of 23-26C after mixing. |
| Expecting consistent peak times without considering flour type | Using rye or wholemeal flour in the starter without adjusting timing expectations | Starter peaks much faster than expected with white flour (rye accelerates fermentation significantly) | Rye flour contains more natural yeast and bacteria than white flour, and the extra nutrients and sugars cause faster fermentation. A rye starter at the same temperature will peak 30-50% faster than a white flour starter. Adjust your timing or ratio accordingly. |
6 Reference & regulatory links
7 Professional workflow
Common tools used alongside this one: