Garlic Parmesan Sourdough Bread Recipe (2024)

By: Author Pamela Baker

Posted on - Last updated:

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This Garlic Parmesan Sourdough Bread is not only full of nooks and crannies that you love so much in sourdough bread, but aromatic and oh so flavorful!

Truth be told, I was introduced to homemade sourdough bread over 30 years ago. I got the starter from my next door neighbor. At first, I didn’t know what to do with it. Then I found a recipe for maintaining the starter in an old cookbook.

I kept that starter alive for years. By alive, I mean that I kept feeding and using the sourdough starter. With time, it developed the best flavor! Although, I read recently that sourdough starter that is 30 days old tastes the same as starter that’s 10 years old.

The Science Behind Sourdough Starters

A sourdough starter is made using two simple ingredients: flour and water. As the microbes eat the sugars in the flour, they exhale carbon dioxide, producing the bubbles that turn a flat, dense loaf into something light and fluffy.

Here’s an entire article on the science behind sourdough starters on Sourdough Science. An an article on the health benefits of sourdough starter.

Why Sourdough?

Garlic Parmesan Sourdough Bread Recipe (2)

People bake with sourdough starters for different reasons. Homesteaders use it as provides an endless supply of levain for bread baking. Purchasing and using yeast is totally not necessary.

I choose to use a sourdough starter for one because it has incredible flavor that just can’t be reproduced. But, more importantly because it’s easier to digest and scientists believe it can be eaten without the spike in blood sugar that happens when you eat regular bread.

Having said that, in my opinion, it makes the bread healthier! Plus, it is really fun and gives you a sense of accomplishment that you can nurture and feed something that gives back so much delicious enjoyment!

Garlic Parmesan Sourdough Bread Recipe (3)

Garlic Parmesan Sourdough Bread

Yield: 1 loaf

Prep Time: 12 hours

Cook Time: 25 minutes

Total Time: 12 hours 25 minutes

This Garlic Parmesan Sourdough Bread is not only full of nooks and crannies that you love so much in sourdough bread, but aromatic and oh so flavorful!

Ingredients

FOR ACTIVATING THE STARTER

  • 2.4 oz (1/4 cup) sourdough starter
  • 4 oz (½ cup) lukewarm (90°F to 100°F) pure filtered or bottled water
  • 4 oz 1 cup whole-wheat flour

FOR THE BREAD DOUGH

  • 2.4 oz (¼ cup) active sourdough starter
  • 12 oz (1½ cups} warm (100°F to 125°F) water
  • 15 oz (3½ cups) unbleached bread flour, plus more for dusting
  • 2 oz (½ cup) whole-grain whole-wheat flour
  • 1 tsp fine sea salt
  • 2.4 oz (1/4 cup) minced garlic
  • 1½ oz (⅓ cup) grated Parmesan or Romano cheese
  • 2 tsp dried oregano

Instructions

ACTIVATE THE STARTER

  1. At least 6 to 12 hours before making the dough, in a medium bowl, combine the starter and lukewarm water, mixing with a spoon until completely incorporated. Then add the flour, again completely incorporating the flour into the starter mixture.
  2. Loosely cover and let sit on the counter until ready to use.

MAKE THE BREAD

  1. In a large bowl, add 2.4 oz (¼ cup) of the active sourdough starter. Add the warm water and stir until the starter has completely dissolved. Add the bread flour and whole-wheat flour to the yeast mixture, mixing to combine completely. Let the dough rest for 30 minutes.
  2. Sprinkle the salt over the dough and mix to combine. Let the dough rest for 2 hours more.
  3. While still in the bowl, gently knead the bread dough a couple of times. Let the dough rest for 2 hours more.
  4. Knead the dough in the bowl a couple of times again and let rest for 2 hours more.
  5. After the 6 hours of intermittent kneading, knead in the garlic, Parmesan cheese and dried oregano until completely incorporated into the dough.
  6. Place a parchment paper square on a flat surface and lightly flour it. Turn the bread dough out onto the prepared parchment. Work the dough by repeatedly pulling the corners of the dough toward the center to form a ball. Once the ball is formed, turn it so the pulled edges are on the bottom. Using the parchment, transfer the bread dough to a clean bowl (with the parchment). The dough should bounce back when a finger is pushed into its side. Cover the bowl with a clean kitchen towel and refrigerate the dough overnight.
  7. The next morning, when you’re ready to bake your bread, preheat the oven to 450°F with the Dutch oven and lid in the oven. (Preheat the Dutch oven while preheating the oven.)
  8. Remove the dough from the refrigerator. Sprinkle flour over the top of the bread and smooth it with your hand. Gently dusting off any excess flour. Using a bread lame or very sharp knife, cut an X into the top of the dough.
  9. When the oven has heated, remove the Dutch oven from the oven. Using the corners of the parchment, transfer the bread dough and parchment into a Dutch oven. Spray the bread with water a couple of times and place the lid on the pot. Bake for 10 minutes.
  10. Reduce the oven temperature to 425°F and bake for 25 minutes more.
  11. Remove the lid and bake for 10 minutes more. The bread is done when the crust is golden brown and the loaf reaches an internal temperature of 210°F on a digital food thermometer.
  12. Transfer the pot to a wire rack and let the bread cool there for 10 to 15 minutes.
  13. Remove the bread from the pan by lifting the parchment paper and place it on the wire rack to cool completely before slicing.

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Garlic Parmesan Sourdough Bread Recipe (5)

Sourdough Starter Resources

I realize I haven’t yet shared my recipe for sourdough bread starter, but I’m doing some experimenting and plan to share the results when I’ve finished. In the meantime, if you’re looking for sourdough starter recipes or help with your starter, I recommend the following:

More Recipes from The Birch Cottage

If you liked this Garlic Parmesan Sourdough Bread Recipe, you might also like these recipes from The Birch Cottage:

  • Stand Mixer Buttermilk Biscuits
  • Parker House Rolls with Sea Salt
  • English Muffin Bread for the Bread Machine

I hope you enjoy this Garlic Parmesan Sourdough Bread Recipe as much as my family has enjoyed it. If you have any questions, please don’t hesitate to ask.

Happy baking!

Garlic Parmesan Sourdough Bread Recipe (6)
Garlic Parmesan Sourdough Bread Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is the secret to good sourdough bread? ›

Top 10 Tips & Tricks for Making Sourdough
  • Use your sourdough starter at its peak. ...
  • Moisten the surface of the dough before baking for more rise. ...
  • Handle with care: be gentle with your dough. ...
  • Use sifted flour to make your sourdough less dense. ...
  • Soak your flour beforehand for a lighter loaf. ...
  • Just add water for softer sourdough.

What is the secret behind the sour of sourdough bread? ›

Sourdough bread's signature taste comes from friendly bacteria and yeast, which produce flavorful lactic and acetic acids in rising bread dough.

What happens if you add too much flour to sourdough? ›

What Happens If You Feed a Sourdough Starter Too Much Flour? If you add more flour than water into your sourdough starter jar, it will be a very stiff starter. This is not always a bad thing, and sometimes extra flour is necessary to rectify a runny starter or make the starter peak at a later time.

What cheese goes well with sourdough bread? ›

I love the combination of cheddar, gruyere, Havarti, and parmesan here. It gives the grilled cheese a slightly elevated and gourmet feel. Some other great cheese options would be mozzarella, brie, gouda, pepper jack, Monterey jack cheese, or American cheese.

What is the best flour for sourdough bread? ›

The best flour blend for creating a new sourdough starter is 50% whole-meal flour (whole wheat or whole rye) and 50% bread flour or all-purpose flour. I recommend a 50/50 mix of whole wheat flour and bread flour.

What makes sourdough bread more flavorful? ›

Longer fermentation

As your dough proofs, the good bacteria eats up sugars and starches in the flour. This decreases the sweet undertone and creates a more sour undertone. The longer you ferment, the more starches and sugars the bacteria eats, and the more sour your bread will be.

Why do you put vinegar in sourdough bread? ›

There are two main acids produced in a sourdough culture: lactic acid and acetic acid. Acetic acid, or vinegar, is the acid that gives sourdough much of its tang. Giving acetic acid-producing organisms optimal conditions to thrive and multiply will produce a more tangy finished product.

What flour makes sourdough more sour? ›

For more tang: Incorporate some rye flour and/or whole wheat flour early in the bread-making process, such as when feeding the mother culture and the preferment. Rye flour in particular will help your culture produce some acetic acid.

What makes sourdough bread better? ›

Sourdough relies on a mix of wild yeast and lactic acid bacteria, rather than baker's yeast, to leaven the dough. It's richer in nutrients, less likely to spike your blood sugar, contains lower amounts of gluten, and is generally easier to digest than bread made with baker's yeast.

Can you use too much starter in sourdough bread? ›

The more starter you use, the faster your dough will ferment - resulting in a less sour loaf. Of course the amount of starter is actually a ratio in relation to the flour - so 50g of starter to 500g of flour will ferment at a much slower rate than 200g of starter to 500g of flour.

What is the black hooch on my sourdough starter? ›

Barb Alpern, one of the sourdough experts on our Baker's Hotline, advises callers to discard the hooch if it's darkened to black. “At this point, the liquid is all sourdough waste products and isn't going to contribute anything very positive to the starter.

How to tell if sourdough starter is bad? ›

Typical signs of food spoilage and mold include pink, orange, or green colors, white fuzzy spots, or sometimes areas that are darker with white areas on top. If you see any of these signs, I would recommend throwing your starter away and creating a new one.

What butter goes best with sourdough? ›

Delicious whipped herb butter has the ability to transform anything you spread it on - from crusty sourdough bread to the perfect steak.

What meat goes good with sourdough? ›

My preference for regular meats like turkey, chicken, tuna or beef is toasted sour dough bread. For the spicier meats like pastrami, salami and the like is a light rye bread.

Can I use shredded cheese in sourdough? ›

My favorite is a mix of shredded cheddar and parmesan cheese, but any cheese works - mozzarella, feta, cheddar, gouda, asiago - anything you like to eat is perfect for this loaf. You can even add in some bacon or pepperoni if you like.

What is the mother of sourdough bread? ›

Mother - this is the overall dough culture that lives in a bowl in your fridge. We take portions from it to make our ferments (Starter) for our sourdough recipes. When the mother culture gets low, we add to it (feed it).

How can I make my sourdough rise better? ›

So don't leave your dough in a warm oven, on a radiator or in sunlight. It will likely be too warm and will dry out your dough too. Instead, find a cosy spot, with no drafts, for your dough to rise. And, if your sourdough starter is struggling to get going, consider finding it a warmer spot too.

How to make sourdough bread fluffier? ›

Keeping the lid on for the first part of baking allows steam to expand between the gluten fibers to rise the bread and create a fluffy loaf. Step 4: Remove the lid and bake for an additional 12-14 minutes or until the crust is crispy and golden brown. Once you take the lid off, the bread likely won't rise anymore.

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