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The Sourdough Series: Starting With Rye

I started my rye starter thinking it would be calm and intuitive. Flour and water mixed together and left on the counter. Something simple enough to take care of itself as long as I showed up. What I learned instead is that rye asks for attention more than precision and patience more than certainty.

In the beginning I mixed rye flour with water until it felt like a thick batter and placed it in a jar without overthinking it. The first day or two brought small bubbles and a faint sour smell which felt reassuring. I took those early signs as proof that I was on the right track and assumed the rest would unfold easily.

Then it shifted.

The smell became sharp and solvent-like which can be unsettling when you are new to sourdough. The rise slowed and some days it barely moved at all. I questioned everything. The flour. The water. The timing. Whether I had already gone too far.

What I learned is that this stage is common and rarely means failure. A strong acetone smell usually means the starter is hungry rather than ruined. Instead of piling more flour into the jar I began keeping a smaller amount of starter and feeding it fresh flour and water more thoughtfully. Less excess. More balance.

Rye does not respond well to urgency. It prefers steady care and space between feedings. I stopped chasing dramatic rises and started paying attention to smell texture and quiet signs of activity. Gentle bubbling. A soft lift. Even a rise of about half its height became enough to signal health.

There were days when it felt like nothing was happening at all. I learned that this waiting is part of the process and that leaving the starter alone matters just as much as feeding it. Fermentation needs rest in order to strengthen.

Over time the sharpness softened and the rhythm became clearer. Feed. Wait. Observe. The starter became more predictable not because I controlled it but because I learned how to listen.

My rye starter is still becoming what it will be. It is not rushed and it does not perform on demand. It has taught me to trust slow progress and to stay present in the middle of a process rather than fixating on the end.

That feels like a lesson worth keeping.

What I Did in Simple Terms

I started with rye flour and water mixed into a thick batter and kept it in a jar at room temperature

Each day I kept only a small portion of the starter and fed it fresh flour and water

When it smelled sharp or solvent-like I did not restart. I fed it gently and stayed consistent

I looked for small signs of life rather than big rises

I allowed quiet time between feedings and stopped adjusting constantly

If you are unsure you are likely doing better than you think

Companion Post

A Gentle Rhythm for Rye Starter

This post is not about perfect ratios or rigid schedules. It is about finding a rhythm that works for rye and for real life. If you are just starting out this is a simple approach you can return to without stress.

Rye thrives when it is fed regularly and left alone long enough to respond. A modest rise is enough. A softened smell is progress. Consistency matters more than timing things perfectly.

Think of this as a guide rather than a rulebook.

A Simple Beginner Feeding Rhythm

Printable Reference

Day one

Mix rye flour and water into a thick batter and place in a clean jar

Cover loosely and leave at room temperature

Days two to four

Once a day discard most of the starter

Feed a small amount with equal parts rye flour and water

Stir gently and return to the counter

What to look for

Bubbles forming throughout

A sour or sharp smell that may come and go

Some rise even if it is modest

If it smells strongly like acetone

It is usually hungry

Keep feedings consistent and avoid overfeeding

When it feels steadier

You may feed once or twice daily depending on activity

Look for a calmer smell and more reliable movement

Rye takes time

Quiet days are part of the process