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DIY Sourdough: The Beginner's Guide to Crafting Starters, Bread, Snacks, and More

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“Enjoy delicious, nutritious sourdough family favorites such as English muffins and cinnamon raisin bread right in the comfort of your own home.” —Hannah Crum, coauthor of The Big Book of Kombucha Real life is busy enough without having social media-worthy sourdough on your to-do list. But if your goal is to make simple, nourishing, and delicious whole grain sourdough for your whole family, then DIY Sourdough is your one-stop beginner’s guide. Coverage Simple sourdough recipes for breads, snacks, and moreThe secrets to consistent resultsTips and tricks for homemade sourdough, including flour buying, home milling, and sourdough starterHomemade bread scheduling options, including split-day sourdough recipes for making sourdough an easy part of your weekly routine. DIY Sourdough is your personal guide to getting started with sourdough. It gives you a helping hand to succeed and offers a simple time-saving approach to make nourishing and delicious sourdough that fits into a hectic lifestyle.“People have been fermenting grains, baking bread, and keeping sourdough starters alive for millennia using very simple, basic techniques. John and Jessica Moody bring back the simplicity by demonstrating in clear terms how a busy homesteading family, be they rural or urban, can bake a wide range of sourdough-based baked products with ease. To boot, DIY Sourdough will provide you with myriad recipes for feeding your family healthy, digestible baked products for breakfast, lunch, dinner, and in-between.” —Jereme Zimmerman, award-winning author of Brew Beer Like a Yeti

105 pages, Kindle Edition

First published May 1, 2020

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About the author

John W. Moody

5 books1 follower
John W. Moody is a farmer, homesteader, speaker, and author.

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5 stars
22 (20%)
4 stars
32 (29%)
3 stars
39 (36%)
2 stars
12 (11%)
1 star
3 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews
Profile Image for Haley Annabelle.
371 reviews186 followers
January 30, 2023
decent basic book on sourdough. I would not necessarily recommend this to the beginner unless you were more focused on the ancient grain aspect of bread-making. I would have appreciated a book with more ferment time (although I can modify that), and more discussion of what fermentation actually does.
Some of these recipes look really fun to try! And I learned that chickens enjoy your sourdough discard.

Note to beginners: you don't have to follow a rigorous schedule as recommended in her. Starter is much more forgiving than that.
Profile Image for Online Eccentric Librarian.
3,429 reviews5 followers
April 3, 2020
More reviews at the Online Eccentric Librarian http://surrealtalvi.wordpress.com/

More reviews (and no fluff) on the blog http://surrealtalvi.wordpress.com/

DIY Sourdough is a fairly brief but very personal book by the author and his wife. The emphasis here is on healthy. It's a more holistic take on sourdough starters than you typically find since the author really recommends you use organic grains, whole grains, and heirloom grains such as spelt: and do your own milling to create the flour.

The book is more about ensuring you get a decent sourdough than recipes. As such, there is a lot of information to ensure you get it right - consistency, taste, and plenty of recommendations if things go wrong. Creating a sourdough starter is likened to raising a baby - you have to feed it on a regular schedule for 3 months or so to ensure that it matures into something with an excellent taste. Along the way, there will be extra starter that you can use for some of the recipes in the book such as waffles or pancakes.

A lot of emphasis is given on milling your own grains into flour. From the different types of equipment you would need to conversion charts, freshness, fineness, and how much to mill at a time. So those looking to create the freshest bread possible have a resource here in learning to use a home mill.

Each of the Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner, and Snacks sections contain around 6 recipes. From banana bread to french toast, crackers to artisan spelt bread. And although there are biscuits and roll recipes, there are only two bread loaf recipes in there. Several of the recipes have photographs that shows the steps. Each recipe has prep time, cook time, serving size, ingredients, and numbered steps. Tips are given to take the recipes a bit further or for storage such as freezing.

In all, I would say this is one of the few health-oriented sourdough recipe books available on the market today. But as the author says clearly, this starter won't taste like the regular white-flour sourdough but it won't be a brick, either. Reviewed from an advance reader copy provided by the publisher.
Profile Image for Sydney Levi.
136 reviews3 followers
February 7, 2023
A fun read as I continue to enjoy baking bread for my family. It’ll be a different challenge to start this sourdough journey. This book makes the task seem less daunting than I originally had about the process.
Profile Image for PoligirlReads.
618 reviews9 followers
July 12, 2022
This was just okay. I'm going to have to look for a different book on sourdough.

I would have liked a book more on the chemistry behind sourdough and less an essay on how sourdough is a part of their personal lives. The cookbook felt tedious, and Moody's beliefs on breadmaking turn sourdough from a basic source of food into a luxury item. While I can appreciate the tips on grains, there's no way that I can source grains at the low prices he lists, nor can I have all the equipment on hand that he uses.

What he does well is offer a clear sourdough feeding schedule, along with useful conversion tips.

For all of this though, the proof is in the eating, and well, we eat primarily with our eyes. Not a single end product looked appetizing. This book is headed right back to the library.
5 reviews
January 12, 2023
A waste of time

For most people this book is a waste of time. I would not recommend it. Baking ingredients should be measured by weight in grams not by volume,
Profile Image for Lisa Vaxmonsky.
20 reviews
January 4, 2022
I appreciate this book for concepts and ideas, but the recipe themselves were not great. The English muffin recipe was incredibly dense. Not at all like an English muffin.

I did enjoy the read in the writing style and how the authors milled their own flour, but unfortunately I think some of the recipes missed the mark.
Profile Image for Liz.
91 reviews5 followers
January 29, 2022
As a complete newbie to sourdough I have found this book very helpful. It gave me a good idea of the process along with some tips. It’s very brief as well - read in just under an hour (excluding recipes).
Profile Image for Amanda.
587 reviews
December 10, 2020
I love that all the recipes use whole wheat flour, and I love the method they use to keep their start alive. I've been trying it and I love it.
Profile Image for Louise King.
478 reviews1 follower
January 21, 2025
Interesting tips for starters and maintenance of your starter. Interesting recipes to try!
Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews