Sourdough Sticky Buns {Or How to Adapt a Recipe to Sourdough} (2024)

Sourdough Sticky Buns {Or How to Adapt a Recipe to Sourdough} (1)

I'm often asked how to adapt a typical yeast-bread recipe to a sourdough recipe. I could make a guess, - decrease the water, substitute the yeast for sourdough starter, and extend the rising time, but I had not actually tried it.

But a few weeks ago, I ran out of yeast and didn't want to make a special trip to the store when I was hit with an urge to make sticky buns. I figured this was the perfect opportunity to try adapting my mom's sticky bun recipe to sourdough.

I can now say with assurance that it works to adapt a yeast bread recipe to sourdough. Works very well.


Sourdough Sticky Buns {Or How to Adapt a Recipe to Sourdough} (2)

When I mixed up the dough, I omitted the yeast, added some active sourdough starter, and cut back the water. I placed the dough in the bowl and began to wait. And wait. It took over four hours for the dough to nearly double in size. Sourdough is never mistaken for the fastest baking method.

Sourdough Sticky Buns {Or How to Adapt a Recipe to Sourdough} (3)

After rising, I divided the dough in half, rolled it out, and sprinkled the dough with brown sugar and cinnamon.


Sourdough Sticky Buns {Or How to Adapt a Recipe to Sourdough} (4)

I rolled the dough tightly and sliced the dough into fifteen slices and placed it into a 9x13 pan with prepared slurry.

Sourdough Sticky Buns {Or How to Adapt a Recipe to Sourdough} (5)

I could have cut them into fewer slices for larger buns, but I knew these will increase in size and be perfect for our family. I did the same with the second half of dough, resulting in two pans of buns.


Sourdough Sticky Buns {Or How to Adapt a Recipe to Sourdough} (6)

Again, these took a while to raise (2-3 hours) but eventually they filled the pan and were ready to bake.


Sourdough Sticky Buns {Or How to Adapt a Recipe to Sourdough} (7)

After baking, I turned them out onto a pan and let the syrup drip down into the buns.


Sourdough Sticky Buns {Or How to Adapt a Recipe to Sourdough} (8)

But the real question - what about the flavor? Do sourdough sticky buns taste sour?

If you have eaten a San Francisco-type sourdough, you know that sourdough can taste truly sour. But not all breads made with a sourdough starter has that distinctive flavor. I actually wish we would use "wild yeast" or some other term instead of "sourdough." Bread that is made with a large quantity of starter and risen in warm temperature won't have as strong a flavor, because it will rise quickly and not allow the "sour" flavors to develop. Bread that is made with less starter and risen cold and slow, will have a more developed flavor.

Your pleasure in more or less flavor will depend upon your goals or your tastes. Our family enjoys sourdough. While my children like if I occasionally make a typical yeast bread, Ed says that the typical yeast bread has no flavor.

(Warning: get your husband hooked on quality bread, and you'll spoil him for any other bread - for life. Last week, when he was traveling for work, I heard a litany of complaints about the horrid sandwich bun he was forced to eat. But doesn't every wife like to know that her husband likes her cooking best?)

But I wasn't sure if the combination of sour and sweet in these sticky buns would be complementary.

There IS an undercurrent of a sweet/sour tang in these buns. And we loved it. It reminded me of a citrus tang, like adding a lemon glaze to a sweet cake.

But of course just one attempt wasn't enough. I had to make these buns again to makes sure that the first try wasn't just a lucky success. And this time they were even better. I omitted the slurry or goo, instead making plain cinnamon buns. Then I added a peanut butter fudge frosting. I'm sorry. We were eating the last of the batch when I realized I had not taken a photo.

Want to try it? Here is the recipe for the sourdough sticky buns adapted from my mom's sticky bun recipe.

SourdoughSticky Buns

1cup warm potato water

1cup mashed potatoes

2cups active sourdough starter

2/3cup butter or oil

1/3cup honey (or 2/3 cup sugar)

2eggs

2tsp salt

3cups white flour

3cups whole wheat flour (more if needed)

Mixall ingredients together. Add more flour if needed to make a soft dough. Knead for five minutes. Place in greased bowl and raise untildoubled (at least 3-4 hours). Divide dough in half and roll half into 12 x18 inch rectangle. Sprinkle with cinnamon andbrown sugar. Roll up jelly-roll style from long side. Slice in 15pieces. Place in 9x13 pan. Repeat with the second half of dough.Raise for 2 (or more) hours until doubled. Bake at 375 for 15-20 minutes.

Variation:Place slurry (or goo) in pan before placing rolls if you want sticky buns. My mom's recipe is 2 cups brown sugar, 1 cup water, 4 T molasses, 4 T butter. Stir together in pan and bring to boil. Simmer for one minute. Pour in baking pan before placing rolls. Remember to flip out of baking pan immediatelyafter baking.

Second Variation: After shaping buns, wrap pan tightly in plastic wrap and place in fridge. They will rise slowly. One or two days later, remove from fridge. Allow to warm up for 30 minutes then bake them for fresh buns.

Sourdough Sticky Buns {Or How to Adapt a Recipe to Sourdough} (9)

I'd love to hear your attempts in adapting recipes for sourdough.


Sourdough Sticky Buns {Or How to Adapt a Recipe to Sourdough} (2024)

FAQs

How do you fix sticky sourdough dough? ›

If your dough is too sticky and it's impossible to work with you can add some extra flour, just a little at a time. Make sure you weigh the extra flour you add and then you'll be able to adjust the recipe correctly the next time you bake.

How do you handle sticky dough? ›

After the first rise, you would normally knead the dough again. However, if you find your dough is too sticky at this point, do not knead it again. Instead, gently press and deflate the dough. You can also use a light coating of flour on your hands and working surface to press and stretch the dough.

How do you fix gummy sourdough bread? ›

Try less water with your flour. Uneven heat in your oven can be the culprit – if you loaf is nicely golden on the outside but gummy or moist in the inside, it's baking too quickly on the outside. Trying reducing the temperature you're baking at and bake for a bit longer.

How do you adjust sourdough flavor? ›

My sourdough bread is not sour. I want more sour flavor. What can I do? Keep the dough temperature higher: Lactic acid bacteria love the higher temperatures of 85-95 degrees F, so keeping the dough in that range will produce more bacteria resulting in a sour loaf.

Why is my sourdough gluey? ›

The 4 Common Mistakes:

Using a weak starter or not using starter at its peak. Using too much water relative to the flour. Over fermentation: letting the bulk fermentation (first rise) go too long. Using too much whole wheat flour, rye flour, or freshly milled flour.

Why is my bread sticky after baking? ›

Ive had with loafs that didnt ferment right, mostly underfermented and dense, that the bread wouldnt bake right and would end gummy in the center. You could also try leaving the bread in the oven after baking while the oven cools, that could help dry it out a bit more or try with smaller loafs.

What if 2 ingredient dough is too sticky? ›

If dough is too sticky to knead, add more flour, 1 Tbsp at a time, until no longer sticky; let sit five minutes.

What is the difference between sticky and tacky dough? ›

What's the difference between "sticky" and "tacky"? These two words have basically the same meaning (able or likely to stick), but "tacky" is weaker - it means "only slightly sticky".

How do you fix Overproofed sourdough? ›

4 Ways to Save Overproofed Dough
  1. Adjust your scoring technique. “Scoring the dough helps it give one last little human intervention before it gets baked,” Apollonia says. ...
  2. Bake the dough as a pizza or flatbread crust. ...
  3. Reshape the dough and let it proof again. ...
  4. Use overproofed dough in sourdough discard recipes.
Sep 27, 2022

How do you know if sourdough is gummy? ›

Using a thermometer to test when sourdough bread is done will only work if the dough has been perfectly fermented. If the sourdough is under fermented, the thermometer will show it as being cooked through, however the bread will still be gummy inside.

Is gummy bread overproofed? ›

The crumb structure of an under proofed loaf will be tight and gummy. Because it was not given enough time to develop and trap CO2 gasses, the crumb structure will be very dense, with uneven air bubbles.

Should I add more flour if my sourdough is sticky? ›

If you've just completed autolyse and you feel that your dough is too wet, it is possible to add some more flour at that that stage. The flour will absorb water and become incorporated during the stretches and folds. However, if you are just about to shape your dough, adding flour is not an option.

Why is my sourdough dense and chewy? ›

Bread too dense? It might be cold dough. One of the most common mistakes is having a dough temperature that's too low for the starter to feed on all the flour in the dough, resulting in a crumb that's dense, with fewer openings. "Starter is happiest and most active at around 75 degrees.

What makes sourdough bread taste better? ›

Natural Fermentation: Sourdough bread is made using a natural fermentation process that involves wild yeast and lactobacilli bacteria present in the sourdough starter. This fermentation process creates complex flavors and aromas that are not present in bread made with commercial yeast.

Can I fix Overproofed dough? ›

If you come back to your rising loaf and see that it's oversized and puffy, turn the dough out of the pan and reshape it. Return the dough to the pan and set a timer for 20 minutes (each rise goes faster than the last).

How do you fix underproofed sourdough? ›

To fix underproofed bread, next time, give the dough more time to ferment before baking. This could mean additional time in bulk fermentation, proof, or a combination.

What is Overproofed sourdough? ›

Overproofed is when the dough has rested too long and the yeast has continued making carbon dioxide while the strength of the dough (gluten bonds) have begun to wear out. The dough will look very puffy, but when you touch it or move it you may notice it deflate or sag.

Can you stretch and fold sourdough too much? ›

Too little folding can result in weak dough. But too much folding can produce excessive tension and compressive forces. An over-folded dough might have a tighter crumb as the layers of alveoli push against each other and coalesce. In the worst case, excessive folding might cause a dough to tear under too much tension.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Pres. Carey Rath

Last Updated:

Views: 5930

Rating: 4 / 5 (41 voted)

Reviews: 88% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Pres. Carey Rath

Birthday: 1997-03-06

Address: 14955 Ledner Trail, East Rodrickfort, NE 85127-8369

Phone: +18682428114917

Job: National Technology Representative

Hobby: Sand art, Drama, Web surfing, Cycling, Brazilian jiu-jitsu, Leather crafting, Creative writing

Introduction: My name is Pres. Carey Rath, I am a faithful, funny, vast, joyous, lively, brave, glamorous person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.