Baking – making a sourdough starter in desert like conditions

bakingsourdoughsourdough-starter

It's finally summer and the daily temperature here is between 75-85 – which I figure is finally good for making my first starter. My concern, though, is that the overnight temperature drops to the 50s. Can I still make a starter on my counter?

My kitchen tends to stay pretty cool until later in the afternoon/evening, if that is useful to know.

Best Answer

Well every yeast strain is a bit different but normally the range is fairly forgiving. Speaking from homebrew side; killing yeast from cold is almost impossible.

Homebrew side; they make electric thermostat controlled blankets to control temperatures; if you are going repeat this a couple times might be worth investment. In beer world; changing the yeast reproduction rates and brew temp can have significant effect on flavour; not sure this applies to sourdough starters at all.

Temperatures:

above 108F - yeast start to die

140F - all yeast dies

below 32F - yeast can die

40F-65F - most yeast strands will be sleeping / dormant

78F - usually optimized production

Now I see optimized production of CO2 change from 10-15 degrees depending yeast strain; some being as high as 100; others being low as 70; but gives a good idea.