Blueberry Lemon Sourdough Bread Recipe - it's wonderful | Foodgeek (2024)

It’s late summer here in Denmark, and the greengrocers and farmer’s markets are overflowing with ripe produce. There are berries of all kinds: strawberries, blueberries, raspberries, black and red currants, blackberries, and even more exotic ones like gooseberries and lingonberries. One of my absolute favorites is blueberries. This is my recipe for blueberry lemon sourdough bread.

This bread is inspired by one of my favorite breakfasts of all time. Small American fluffy blueberry pancakes. Well, it’s not fluffy bread, but it does contain blueberries.

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This bread requires you to have an active sourdough starter. If you don’t have one, you can make one easily, just follow my guide and recipe.

If you are new to sourdough bread baking, there are quite a few techniques and lingo that you need to know and understand. If you haven’t baked one before, read my article about sourdough bread for beginners.

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Blueberries

Blueberries are common in both Europe, North America, and Asia, but the common commercially available kind has its roots in North America. This berry has a blue exterior and white flesh.

There’s a version of the berry (which is known as bilberry) that is native to Europe. This berry has darker blue-colored skin, and the flesh is deep red. We can sometimes get them at more specialized markets, but they are not so easy to come by.

Blueberry Lemon Sourdough Bread Recipe - it's wonderful | Foodgeek (3)

Both are really good, but I would say that the European version has a darker, more intense taste, akin to black currant.

Even though I bought some bilberries at my local market, I found that they are very brittle skin. I am sure that they would have popped while stretching and folding the dough. So this bread should be made with the North American variety.

The formula in this blueberry lemon sourdough bread recipe

The vitals

Total weight1688 grams
Pre-fermented flour9.1%
Hydration69.7%
Yield2 loaves

The dough

The formula in this blueberry lemon sourdough bread is white bread with no whole grains. I chose this to get a softer and whiter crumb. The inspiration for this bread came from American blueberry pancakes, which are a favorite of mine.

Blueberry Lemon Sourdough Bread Recipe - it's wonderful | Foodgeek (4)

The bread is 70% hydration and should be manageable by most bakers. The lack of whole grain does make it a bit slack. If you are worried about it being difficult for you, you can change the hydration to 65%.

WeightIngredientBaker's Percentage
750gbread flour100%
500gwater66.7%
18gsalt2.4%
250gblueberries33.3%
20glemon zest2.7%
150gstarter (100% hydration)20%

As always, if you want to play around with the formula, change the hydration or rescale it, you can find the formula here in my bread calculator.

Conclusion on this blueberry lemon sourdough bread recipe

Since the bread has no whole grain it is white bread with a soft crumb. As soft as a classic sourdough bread gets.

The crust is deeply caramelized and super crunchy. Whatever blueberries stuck out of the dough, popped in the heat, and gives the bread a gorgeous look.

Blueberry Lemon Sourdough Bread Recipe - it's wonderful | Foodgeek (5)

The taste of sweet blueberries in the bread is great, and the lemon zest is fragrant and citrusy and stands up against the sweet blueberries.

It’s a bread that goes well with some wonderful butter, or maybe with anything where you’d put a jam on. So maybe a good piece of cheese.

I really enjoyed it; it is not the last bread that enters my oven.

Please share on social media

This is my recipe for blueberry lemon sourdough bread. I hope you will try to make it. If you make this recipe and post it to Instagram, please tag me as @foodgeek.dk so I can see it. That will make me very happy.

Ad links! Links for equipment and ingredients in this recipe are affiliate links, which means I will get a commission if you purchase the product!

Blueberry Lemon Sourdough Bread

Course: Desert, Snack

Cuisine: All

Keyword: blueberry, lemon, sourdough bread

Course: Desert, Snack

Cuisine: All

Keyword: blueberry, lemon, sourdough bread

Servings: 2 breads

Calories: 1498kcal

Author: Sune Trudslev

Nutrition Facts

Blueberry Lemon Sourdough Bread

Amount Per Serving (1 bread)

Calories 1498Calories from Fat 63

% Daily Value*

Fat 7g11%

Saturated Fat 1g6%

Polyunsaturated Fat 3g

Monounsaturated Fat 1g

Sodium 3511mg153%

Carbohydrates 306g102%

Fiber 14g58%

Sugar 14g16%

Protein 48g96%

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.

Blueberry is a beautiful berry that is great in cakes, muffins, pancakes, and just as a snack. This bread is full of ripe blueberries and has an intoxicating smell of lemons.

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Ingredients

  • 750 g bread flour protein content 12-13%
  • 500 g water
  • 150 g sourdough starter fed and grown to its peak
  • 18 g salt
  • 250 g blueberries
  • lemon zest from three lemons

Instructions

Mix the dough

  • To a medium bowl, add 750g bread,500g water, 18g salt, 150g sourdough starter, and 20g lemon zest. Mix the dough so that all of the flour has been hydrated.

  • Cover the bowl and let it sit for one hour for the gluten to develop.

Stretch and folds

  • Zest 3 lemons and chop the zest finely.

  • Perform three sets of stretch and folds spaced out by 30 minutes.

  • During the first set of stretch and fold, add the blueberries and lemon zest during each stretch and fold.

  • After the last set, put the dough in a proofing container and let it rise 25%.

Divide and preshape

  • Put the dough onto your unfloured kitchen counter and divide it into two equally sized pieces of dough. Using your bench scraper, grab one piece and stretch each side (north, south, east, and west) out and over the dough.

  • Flip the dough over and put the bench scraper behind it In one swift motion. Pull the dough forward so the top gets pulled down in front of the dough. If any blueberries pop out, pick them up and push them up underneath the dough.

  • Once you can't get any further, put the bench scraper in front of the dough, push it away from you, and turn it around, so the bench scraper is behind the dough again. Keep going until you have a pretty taut surface. Continue with the other dough piece and let rest for 20 minutes.

  • Prepare two oval bannetons by spritzing them lightly with water and flouring them with rice flour. When the dough has rested, sprinkle the top of the dough pieces with flour.

  • Grab one dough ball and flip it over. Stretch the dough into a rectangle and fold the top corners towards the middle. Roll the dough towards yourself and press down lightly with your thumbs to seal the dough. Keep going until the loaf is oval.

  • Flip the loaf into a banneton. I will often stitch the back of the loaf when it's in the banneton; that gives a bit more tension on the top of the bread. Continue with the other bread.

  • Put both bannetons in the fridge for at least 8 hours, up to 48 hours.

Bake the bread – Next morning

  • Add a dutch oven or a combo cooker to your oven—Preheat the oven to 230°C/450°F/Gas mark 8. Let the oven heat for 30 minutes.

  • Grab a banneton from the fridge and flip the dough onto a peel with parchment paper. Score the bread, put it immediately into the dutch oven, and close it.

  • Bake for 20 minutes with the lid on the dutch oven. After 20 minutes, remove the lid. Bake for another 25 minutes until the bread is deeply caramelized and crunchy.

  • Take the bread out of the oven, and bake the other bread.

Video

Blueberry Lemon Sourdough Bread Recipe - it's wonderful | Foodgeek (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? ›

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 makes sourdough bread taste better? ›

The key taste compounds include salt, which is directly added to the dough, as well as acetic and lactic acid, produced during fermentation.

Why do you put honey in sourdough bread? ›

You'll find I use honey in many of my recipes. I love to use it in my no-knead 100% whole wheat sourdough bread because it makes it much softer and less dense than it would be without it. Subbing it in recipes that call for sugar is not usually as simple as a one-to-one sub, though.

What is the secret ingredient in sourdough bread? ›

The signature sourdough flavor comes from a combination of lactic and acetic acids, created as the dough rises and ferments. Refrigerating the dough encourages the production of more acetic acid, which is the tangier of the two. Thus, this bread with its refrigerated starter has the ideal balance of sour flavor.

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. Why do you need to use these two types of flour?

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.

How to get more sourdough flavor? ›

Longer fermentation

When it comes time to proof your dough, the longer you proof, the more sour the dough will be. 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.

Is sourdough good for your gut? ›

Sourdough bread may be easier to digest than white bread for some people. According to some studies, sourdough bread acts as a prebiotic, which means that the fiber in the bread helps feed the “good” bacteria in your intestines. These bacteria are important for maintaining a stable, healthy digestive system.

Why is everyone making sourdough bread in 2024? ›

For many folks, the renewed interest in sourdough is health-related. Some are going even further than baking their own bread: They're milling their own flour from whole wheat berries, too.

Why is San Francisco sourdough bread so good? ›

The key to sourdough bread tasting the way it does is the strain of bacteria, lactobacillus sanfranciscensis. And if that name looks like it has ties to San Francisco, it does. "This special strain of lactic acid bacteria thrives in our salty, cold environment," says Kosoy.

How to make sourdough more airy? ›

Here are some tips to help you make your sourdough bread less dense:
  1. Use a ripe sourdough starter. ...
  2. Knead the dough for the right amount of time. ...
  3. Proof the dough for the correct amount of time. ...
  4. Use the right type of flour. ...
  5. Add the right amount of water. ...
  6. Score the bread properly. ...
  7. Bake the bread at the correct temperature.
Sep 9, 2023

What does adding olive oil to sourdough bread do? ›

Does olive oil make dough softer? Yes - adding olive oil to sourdough bread will result in a softer crust and crumb. The oil as a lipid coats the flour and inhibits the gluten network resulting in a softer, tighter crumb and softer crust. This can be a desirable outcome if you do not like tough, chewy sourdough crusts.

What does egg do in sourdough bread? ›

It makes the bread lighter and fluffier. The reason for that is the fat in the yolk that inhibits gluten formation just as any other fat would. This results in a looser dough that can expand and puff up more.

Why do you add salt to sourdough bread? ›

Salt is an integral part of bread, whether it be sourdough or commercially yeasted breads. Salt will slow the fermentation down slightly, but not enough to actually affect the rise of your sourdough. It regulates the yeast's activity, ensuring fermentation doesn't happen too quickly.

How can I make my sourdough rise better? ›

You can get the sourdough starter to rise more by putting it next to the stove while you're cooking. The warmth from the stove can help to activate the yeast in the starter and make it rise more. For dough you should cover it with a damp cloth or plastic wrap so that it doesn't dry out.

How to make sourdough bread tastier? ›

Think Beyond White Flour

Instead of going 100 percent white, try mixing in 10 percent to 30 percent of another flour. Consider rye, spelt, hard winter wheat, or whatever special wheats your local mill carries. This is a painless way to layer deep, robust notes into your sourdough.

How to make your sourdough fluffier? ›

Step 3: Cover and let the dough rise for 10-12 hours. This is called bulk rise or bulk fermentation. Step 4: After 10-12 hours, the dough should be doubled (or even tripled) in size. Many recipes will tell you the dough is over-proofed if it triples in size but I find that it makes deliciously fluffy bread this way!

What is the best proofing time for sourdough bread? ›

In my experience, the shortest final proof (at room temperature) that I prefer to do is one hour. The longest final proof (at room temperature) is about 3 hours. When going past 2-3 hours in a final proof, the crumb tends to get very gassy and opens up large gas bubbles with a longer countertop proof.

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