The goal of this weekend bread baking schedule is to help you get into a routine for baking fresh, healthy bread more often without having to worry about refreshing your sourdough starter during the week. Ok, I know it’s hard to bake a sourdough recipe every weekend, but I believe this post outlines a manageable schedule for fresh bread most weekends. It can be challenging to carve out time from our busy work schedule day after day to devote to sourdough starter maintenance—with two kids at home, believe me; I get it.
Help! I don’t have time for anything bread during the week, how can I ignore my starter most of the time and just bake on the weekends?
I get the above question a handful of times during the week, thus motivating me to put together this entire post. The key to reducing the maintenance required for a sourdough starter, of course, relies on using the home refrigerator. I’ve mentioned many times in the past that a starter can be placed into the fridge and taken out when needed, but given the number of questions, I think this sample schedule might give some concrete ideas and instructions for how it can be done and still make great bread—and even sourdough pancakes.
A high-level timeline goes something like this (click the link on each day to jump down to that day’s schedule):
| Day of Week | Action |
|---|---|
| Monday | The starter is in the fridge, resting. |
| Tuesday | The starter is in the fridge, resting. |
| Wednesday | The starter is in the fridge resting. |
| Thursday | Take the starter out of the fridge after work, let ferment for a few hours, and refresh at night. |
| Friday | Refresh starter in the morning before work. Feed again at night before bed. |
| Saturday | Build the levain early in the morning. Refresh the starter and let ferment all day until night. Mix the dough in the afternoon and bulk ferment in the afternoon/ evening. Shape the dough and place proofing baskets in the fridge overnight. At night make my sourdough starter discard pancake or waffle batter. Then, refresh the starter before placing it into the fridge. |
| Sunday | The starter is in the fridge resting. |

Most people are turned off by sourdough baking at home, primarily because of the overhead in dealing with a sourdough starter. It does indeed take a few minutes each day to care for but believe me, this is a weekend baking schedule that’s manageable and one that you can work right into life’s hustle.
First, let’s talk about what I refresh my starter with when I keep it in the fridge.
Starter Maintenance Refreshment Before Refrigeration
I like to slightly reduce the hydration at the refreshment right before placing my starter in the fridge. The lower hydration helps to reduce the fermentation activity slightly, and I prefer it a little on the stiff side, so it’s not quite so gooey when I take it out the following week.
Refreshment Process
Before placing my starter in the fridge (you might also want to label your Weck jar “Sourdough Starter” to avoid someone inadvertently throwing it out!):
- Using a ripe sourdough starter, discard down to 20g
- Refresh the starter with the ingredients listed in the table below
- Let sit on the counter for 30 minutes to 1 hour
- Place in fridge for up to 3 weeks (I’ve done up to 3 weeks using this method, but it might be possible to keep it in there even longer. In this case, I’d reduce the hydration even further.)
Refreshment Ingredients
| Weight | Ingredient | Baker’s Percentage |
|---|---|---|
| 20g | Ripe sourdough starter (100% hydration) | 20% |
| 100g | 30g whole rye or whole wheat flour, 70g white flour | 100% |
| 100g | Water, warm room temperature | 100% |
For more, see my in-depth look at how I feed my sourdough starter daily.
Dough Proofer

One tool I mention occasionally (and have been frequently asked about) is my proof box. In the past, I’ve considered building one of these on my own with a digital controller and ice chest, but in the end, I bought this Brød and Taylor dough proofer. It’s been plugged in and turned on ever since. I keep my starter in the box all day, every day, at just the right temperature—for me, that’s around 74-76°F (23-24°C).
Additionally, when making a levain for a single bake, I’ll place that in the center alongside my starter (also seen above). After I mix my dough, I can also easily fit my standard 2kg dough in the box, which is then also maintained at the right temperature during the entirety of bulk fermentation (the dough’s first rise).
The nice thing about this temperature-controlled box is that I can quickly get my starter back up to a warm temperature after taking it out of the fridge. Once I take it out, I place it into the proofer set to 76°F (24°C), and it will return to full activity in short order.
This proofer is one of those tools that help me achieve more consistency with each bake. If someone asks, I also keep a small thermometer next to my starter that tells me the current temperature at that spot and the highest and lowest temps recorded (handy to know if there were any spikes up or down).
See my post on using the Brød and Taylor proofer for more information. If it’s cold in your kitchen, refer to my guide on baking bread in the winter. Conversely, if it’s warm, my guide on how to bake bread in the summer will have tips for keeping your dough cool and under control.
Weekend Bread Baking Schedule: How do you schedule sourdough?
Before we begin, I want to show a picture of what my starter typically looks like when it’s at full strength, regularly receives refreshments, and I keep it at a warm temperature in my proofer:

Above, you can see the signs for vigorous fermentation: bubbles at the top and the sides, some rise height (it’s “peak,” as some bakers call it), and a loose and frothy consistency. My starter usually takes about 11-12 hours to get there using my typical refreshment (20g ripe starter, 100g flour, 100g water at room temperature) when it’s kept in my proofer at around 76ºF (24°C).
I followed the exact process I’m about to outline with my starter for a week, and I took photos of each step to illustrate the method better. In addition, I baked two loaves of Beginner’s Sourdough Bread and made sourdough pancakes to illustrate the effectiveness of my resuscitated starter. As a result, you’ll see my starter transition from states of high activity, reduced activity, “rest,” and the reverse when taken back out of the fridge. This progression will help me explain the cues and what to expect as your starter changes.
My stater performs best when given at least 2-3 refreshments after it’s taken out of the fridge but before being used to create a levain for baking.
Thursday

Our starter has been in the fridge for several days at this point (since last Saturday). Fermentation has continued, but it’s slowed due to the cold temperatures. Nonetheless, there will still be signs of fermentation (as seen above): some scattered bubbles and potentially a layer of thin liquid on the top that’s gathered. This liquid, sometimes called “hooch,” is a byproduct of fermentation and consists of alcohol. It’s not harmful, and I usually stir this down into the mixture during the first refreshment (you could also pour it off if you’d like).
Evening: Remove Starter from Fridge
When you get home from work, take your chilled starter out of the fridge and let it come to room temperature (or place it in a proofer set to warm temperature) for a couple of hours. I give mine enough time to warm up, become easier to stir, and potentially finish fermenting a bit longer.

You can see the transparent layer of liquid on top, some bubbles in the interior and on top, but overall nowhere near the vigor you’ll see in my starter when kept in my proofer.
Before going to bed, discard the contents of your jar down to 20g ripe starter and add 100g room temperature water and 100g flour (or your standard refreshment flour mixture). Place your starter in a warm location or a proofer, and let ferment until the morning.
Friday

In the morning, you can see above that my starter is still a bit sluggish to rise and overall still not up to total activity (compare the above picture to the one at the beginning of the schedule). However, it has only had a single refreshment since you pulled it from the fridge, and with 24 more hours to ferment after this refreshment, we’ll see the activity pick up quite a bit by Saturday morning.
Morning: Refresh Starter
Before heading off to work, refresh your starter with whatever ratios you typically use to have your starter last for 12 hours before needing another refreshment. For me, I discard the contents of my starter container to 20g ripe starter and refresh with 100g flour and 100g water at room temperature. Then, stir, place the loose-fitting lid back on, and put the jar into your proofer or on the counter. Let ferment until later in the evening.

Evening: Refresh Starter
You’ll see that by the evening, your starter will display signs of even more vigorous fermentation—things are starting to pick back up to normal. So, in the evening, before bed (or when your starter needs refreshment), do a regular refreshment. I made the same refreshment as the morning.
In the morning, we’ll finally build a levain to mix the dough on Saturday.
Saturday

As seen above, my starter is back at full strength by Saturday morning. Super strong signs of fermentation occurred overnight with lots of bubbles, nearly the same height as usual, and a smell that’s ever so slightly sour and yet relatively mild—pleasantly reminiscent of creamy yogurt.
Morning: Build Levain
First thing in the morning, make a levain that will be used in a dough mix later that day. The recipe I decided to use here is based on my Beginner’s Sourdough Bread formula, but you could make a levain from any of the recipes here at my site.
After mixing a levain, place it in the proof box or somewhere warm in your kitchen, and let it ferment until it’s ready to be used later in the day. From there, autolyse (or not), mix, and continue to follow whatever bread recipe you’re baking.
Morning: Refresh Starter
After making a levain, refresh your starter and place it in the proofer or the counter until the evening. Why do we bother refreshing the starter? I do this to give my starter enough food to get through the day to nighttime, where I will prepare sourdough pancake batter for Sunday morning. If you want to skip making pancakes (why would you?), refresh your starter (as outlined Sunday morning, below) to prepare it for cold storage until next week.
Afternoon: Mix, Bulk, Pre-shape, Shape and Retard Dough
Proceed to follow whatever sourdough bread recipe you started this morning, then place the dough in the refrigerator for an overnight retard for increased flavor (you will bake the bread Sunday morning).

Evening: Make Pancake or Waffle Batter
If you feel like light and fluffy pancakes, use my overnight sourdough starter discard pancake recipe to make the pancake batter at night and let ferment until the morning. Alternatively, if you feel like something crunchier, make my overnight sourdough waffles.
Evening: Refresh Starter with Maintenance Ratios and Refrigerate
After making the pancake batter, refresh your starter using the maintenance ratios I described at the beginning of this post. Let sit out 30 minutes to 1 hour and then finally place back into the refrigerator until next week (or whenever you want to bake again).
Sunday

The past few days have built up to this final day, the day we get to enjoy not only fresh sourdough pancakes but also fresh sourdough bread later in the afternoon. Remember, at this point, your starter is in the fridge and resting until next week. So there’s no need for refreshment this morning.
Morning: Make Pancakes, Preheat Oven
In the morning, preheat the oven to prepare bread after breakfast. Additionally, get that smoking hot griddle (or 12″ steel skillet like I use) going and get ready to make some pancakes. Finish making the pancake batter, cut up some fresh fruit, and whip some heavy cream. Finally, make the sourdough pancakes and enjoy while the oven preheats.

Afternoon: Bake Bread
Continue to follow whatever bread recipe you started and bake the sourdough bread once the oven is preheated. Let cool and enjoy just in time for lunch. Again, your starter is still resting in the fridge, waiting until you want to bake again.
Lately, I’ve also been experimenting with baking my usual 900-950g batard shape (instead of being forced to make a boule in a combo cooker) in a 5.75 qt Staub Cocotte and, as seen above, the resulting bakes have been fantastic. The steam trapped inside is sufficient to blister the crust and the radiating heat from the cast iron colors the crust beautifully. I will continue using this, especially for single loaf bakes (it’s also pretty amazing in the kitchen for roast chicken!) when steaming the entire oven isn’t necessary.
Alternatively, you could use your typical Dutch oven or even the Challenger Bread Pan for long, oval loaves.

The various bread shots used my refrigerated starter throughout this post—all fantastic bakes! I’ve found using a schedule like this to help offset workload during busy weeks while still ensuring I enjoy fresh bread on the weekend and into the following week.
At first glance, this weekend baking schedule post might come across as packed with many steps, but the fridge does most of the work. This way, our starter only needs attention a few days at the end of the week, removing many maintenance refreshments while still allowing us to make great bread. The key is using the cold temperature of the fridge to slow fermentation Saturday through Thursday and then only three refreshments before baking. And while our starter is out for bread, we might as well make some sourdough pancakes that make the weekend go from great to excellent. Buon appetite!
Weekend bread baking schedule FAQ
How do you schedule sourdough?
In most cases, your starter can be kept in the fridge, taken out a day or two before you need to use it, given two to three feedings, then used to make a levain or mixed directly in the dough.
How can I increase my sourdough activity?
To increase sourdough starter activity, keep it at a warm temperature and give it timely feedings. I like to feed it every 12 hours and kept around 74-76°F (23-24°C).
How do I make my sourdough schedule fit?
In the end, this is a personal thing! Your starter can go 12 to 24 hours between feedings when kept at warm room temperature, and at each point when you feed it, it can be used to mix into bread dough. This gives you multiple opportunities throughout the day to make fresh sourdough bread.
What’s Next?
Now that you have a go-to method for a weekend bread baking schedule check out my weekday sourdough bread for when you want to try and squeeze a loaf of fresh sourdough in during the busy workweek.
If you use the tips in this post, tag @maurizio on Instagram and use the hashtag #theperfectloaf so I can take a look!
234 Comments
My starter on Saturday am was not as active as yours in the picture….it only rose to about three fourths of Weck jar, maybe less. Should I be concerned? It was active and bubbly.
Sounds absolutely fine to me. The actual height it rises to is not as important than all the other signs you're describing!
I went ahead with the baking and they were a great success!! I am excited to continue. I get confused about restrengthening my starter however. But following the schedule I take it out and start refreshing it on Thursday for a Saturday bake with lots of discarding along the way which seems counterintuitive but it did produce two nice loaves.
@maurizioleo:disqus
Your website (and cookbook) are great resources for beginners. Thanks for putting this information out there!
Can I follow this weekend baking schedule indefinitely? Can I do this for months, or years on end?
Thank you, Jade, appreciate that. Yes you can keep this schedule going as needed.
I have been using 20g starter, 80g rye and 80g water then placing in the Brod & Taylor Sourdough Home. I wanted to try your ration 20/100/100 with rye and white so I did. I placed it in the home at 20celcius which usually gives me a nice 24 hour ripening, but by evening my starter was already way more active like 30% higher in the jar! In the morning it had receded a bit which was not good. Any suggestions on how to use your ratio for the home for up to 5 days?
Heidi 🙂
I have times all outlined on my guide, here: https://www.theperfectloaf.com/feed-your-starter-less-often-thanks-to-the-sourdough-home/
Hi Maurizio, I'm confused by your statement "I like to slightly reduce the hydration at the refreshment right before placing my starter in the fridge." You then go on to specify for the pre-refrigeration step the same 20:100:100 ratios that you use for regular feeding of the starter, so it seems you aren't reducing hydration after all. What am I missing?
Hi Rob, I found in the main body of text this, maybe this is it:
"Before going to bed, discard the contents of your jar down to 30g ripe starter and add 100g room temperature water and 100g flour (or your standard refreshment flour mixture). Place your starter in a warm location or a proofer, and let ferment until the morning.
It's adjusted above!
I am gluten free and received a starter from a friend that was gluten free and wondering if using gluten free flour is
working as starter does not rise well and made waffles and they seemed too cake like. Anyway, I did try my friend’s bread and did not react and she used regular flour. So wondering if gluten free even works. Confused. Molbeck
hi, i’m just a beginner i just started making my starter, unfortunately on day 5 i wasn’t able to feed my starter in the night and on day 6 i didn’t feed in the morning, would my starter have gone bad, what can i do to continue the feeding?
Dont worry about it, just keep with the schedule and pick up where you left off!
I’m a beginner, have a healthy starter (from scratch) and plan to bake this weekend. How at what intervals should I stretch and fold during bulk fermentation?
I have this all outlined on my guide to bulk fermentation: https://www.theperfectloaf.com/guides/the-ultimate-guide-to-bread-dough-bulk-fermentation/
Hi Maurizio, thank you so much for the post.
– Instead of equal ratio for starter/water/flour, you use significant less starter, and less water for keeping starter in fridge. Can you share a little more about why?
– I keep my starter in fridge and feed once a week. I notice it doubles in volume sometime mid week, and by the time I feed it’s shrunk back already. Shall I take it out and feed right after it’s peak?
Thank you.
Thanks for this Marizio. I love my Brod and Taylor proofing box for achieving good temp control. I would like to ask if you have a recommendation for a precise and accurate scale. The one I currently use doesn’t seem very precise. Keep up the great work. Your book is my new bread bible.
It's a wonderful device! I have all my favorite scales on my roundup, here: https://www.theperfectloaf.com/the-best-kitchen-scale-for-making-bread/
Ok perhaps a silly question but when you go to refresh your starter and you use, for example, 20g of starter with then adding flour and water can you clarify that process for the maintenance time (not when pulling out to feed then make dough). How do you do this without weighing out 20 g in a *new* jar? Do you discard and then use scale knowing weight of jar so you can assume how much remaining? For example if my jar is 420 g then I discard until weight is 440g? I don’t ever seen this shown or described when people discuss maintaining starters. Thanks for any advice
i wonder the same !
Help, this post currently says to refresh the starter on Monday morning, before work and again before bed, then it say to refrigerate Tuesday and Wednesday, pulling it out Thursday. On Saturday, after baking and refreshing at night, the starter goes back in the refrigerator for Saturday night and Sunday.
Am I really supposed to refrigerate the starter Sat. evening and Sunday, and bring it back to room temp for 2 feedings on Monday, before it goes back in the refrigerator for Tues and Wed?
Thanks in advance for your response.
Sheri—sorry for the delay. This is a typo! You do not need to take the starter out on Monday to refresh it. I updated the post. Sorry for the confusion!
In your weekend baking schedule, Saturday and Sunday are exactly the same and you never actually bake the bread. (Sounds like something I would do. LOL)
oops. I see that someone already alerted you to the Saturday/Sunday thing, so… Never Mind.
Hah! Yes, just fixed this yesterday. A refresh should show the correction for you, Mike!
@maurizioleo:disqus Hi there – absolutely love this schedule (and your book)! Thank you. Just as an FYI, there is a typo in the table above where Saturday and Sunday instructions are repeated. Thanks again for the content and instruction. This is my go-to site.
Thanks so much, Doreen! Glad you’re enjoying my cookbook 🙂 Will fix this typo, appreciate that.
Hey, relative newbie here and wondering if folks would advise for or against premixing rye and AP flour to have on the ready for refreshing and starter feeding. 🙏🏼
I am confused – I current maintain my starter as per King Arthur Baking’s ratio of feeding equal weights of starter, water and flour. Your ratios use much less starter/much more flour. Can you please explain? Thanks!
I’m wondering if it would work to use a hybrid method of maintaining a smaller starter + keeping it in the fridge during the week, then bulking back up again for a weekend bake? Or do you think the 20g/100g/80g refreshment is already the sweet spot for keeping the yeast and bacteria fed for a few slowed-down days?
A hybrid will work just fine, Sarah!
Thank you . . . you read my mind I think. I’ll just share the very-short-story. Last night I decided it was time to pay attention to my poor starter which has been neglected, sitting on the counter for over a week (about 9 days I think since I last showed it some love or fed it or even looked at it). I made some crepes and apple-muffins with the starving starter (which were awesome, much, much better than I anticipated), refreshed my starter and it was just as happy as a lark this morning. I thought about trying to get on some sort of weekly bake-schedule, decided to log on to your site and see if you said anything about it. Lo and behold, of course you have ‘the answer’. You are that distant sourdough-baking friend I’ve never met that helps me and has always helped me with this mysterious thing called sourdough. Just saying . . . Thank you!!!
Ha ha, thanks so much for that, Angela! Glad my site has helped. Also, isn’t it amazing how resilient our starters are? Love that!
Hi! Thanks so much for the information, it cleared up a lot for me. If I want to store my starter in the fridge for months, would I feed it before i put in fridge still? And would i feed it when i take out of fridge or discarded at al Thanks again!
I would still feed it before sticking it into the fridge!
I’m having a lot of trouble with Bulk fermentation. My starter is doing great. Rises all the way to the top very predictably in ~7 hours after feeding. But when I make the Levain it does nothing. I’m thinking of using my starter directly into the dough and skipping the levain step. Do you think that will work? Again thank you for your awesome website. I did cook a loaf that didnt rise much and predictably it came out pretty doughy (though I did get some nice air pockets in spots). The crust however was PERFECT! and delicious, exactly what I have been trying to get for a year now
Yes, you can absolutely skip making a levain if you’d like! If you think about it a starter and levain are really the same thing. So glad your bake went well!
Exactly what I did, made a second starter (basically a leaving but with same feeding as I give the starter). Used it at its peak and made the 2 best loafs I’ve ever made.
Hi Maurizio, This probably isn’t traditional and will alter my starter each time I bake, but for once a week baking what do you think of using the “scrapings” method and taking the scrapings out of the fridge just the night before bake day, adding warm water and building a Levain to be ready 12 hours later on the morning of bake day and then just storing the scrapings in the fridge till next week? Is this a bad idea?
For me, I prefer to refresh my starter 2-3 times when its out of the fridge before using it to bake. I find this time at room temp really helps build strength in the starter and makes for a more successful bake.
Hey, everyone! This is a really excellent post. I do have one question, though, and the answer might seem obvious to some of the more advanced members; When making the overnight pancake batter I should leave out the eggs for the next day, but it’s okay to include the milk in the batter overnight?
As long as it’s not too warm in your kitchen, it should be fine to leave it out. You can add the eggs the next day.
Hello Maurizio,
I created a starter according to your directions but then mistakenly placed a mature starter in the fridge without refreshing it. Now I want to follow the weekend baking schedule. What should I do? Should I take out the starter and refresh it first?
Thanks!
Yes, I would refresh it first!
Hey there! I took my starter out of the fridge on Thursday and have been following the weekend baking schedule. When I went to do my Friday morning feeding and only carried over 15g of starter, I had almost a full cup of discard! Is this normal? I’m looking for a way to reduce waste and I liked that you reduced down to 5:25:25 before the fridge, but now I have more starter than before lol
Hi there. When you say refreshment is that feeding ? Also why is the water percent right at the beginning of the post 80 percent (80 g I thought it would have to be 100 g to be 100 percent hydration) I’m very new thanks Iain
Hey Maurizio ! Is it okay that I placed my starter in the fridge last Saturday following your regular starter method (50g starter, 50g AP, 50g ww, 100g water)? is there anything I can do to help my starter before I build my levain on Saturday morning ?
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