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 to 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.

What happens if you bake sticky dough? ›

The sticky dough can still rise or spring in the oven. The big question is whether the dough has enough strength to trap the gas and stop the dough from collapsing during proofing or when you bake. Make sure you choose high-protein flour to give strength to your dough.

How to work with sticky dough? ›

How to handle a sticky bread dough
  1. Get yourself a plastic dough scraper. Seriously, after a bowl – and an oven of course – this is the most useful bit of kit for making bread dough. ...
  2. Get a metal dough cutter/scraper. ...
  3. Oil the work surface. ...
  4. Clean and oil the bowl. ...
  5. Knead with quick, confident movements. ...
  6. Flour your hands.
Apr 2, 2015

What is the Rubaud method? ›

The Rubaud method is a popular method of hand mixing the dough. The Rubaud method develops gluten strength up front in the process. In the Rubuaud method, you gently lift and pull the dough in a bowl, mimicking the motion of a diving-arm mixer (or perhaps the diving arm-mixer is mimicking the Rubaud method!)

Do you have to autolyse sourdough? ›

The autolyse process imparts various benefits for sourdough bread. However, it's totally optional. While, you'll probably end up with a better result incorporating autolysis in your bread making process it's not require and if you're short on time you can totally skip it!

Why is my sourdough so dense and gummy? ›

If your loaf is dense, has uneven holes and a gummy texture, most likely there wasn't enough active wild yeast in your starter to make the bread develop and rise during baking. This can be the case even if your starter seems really happy and bubbly.

Can you still eat gummy sourdough? ›

It's not until you slice the sourdough and see the crumb structure that you realise it's under fermented. The great thing is that generally, unless it's completely raw inside, you can still eat an under fermented sourdough bread.

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.

What is the difference between sticky and tacky dough? ›

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

How to fix tough sourdough dough? ›

I feel like, more often than not, the issue is under-hydrated—meaning you didn't put enough water into the dough. If your dough is too stiff, basically that means it's resistant to being blown up by the yeast. DOGU: If your hydration is low, increase it.

What if 2 ingredient dough is too sticky? ›

Place flour and yogurt in a medium bowl; stir well with a wooden spoon until just combined and then keep mixing dough in bowl with your hands until smooth (about 2 minutes of kneading). If dough is too sticky to knead, add more flour, 1 Tbsp at a time, until no longer sticky; let sit five minutes.

Why is my sourdough bread sticky and not holding shape? ›

If you find your sourdough bread dough is too sticky when you are dividing and preshaping, it might be because it's over hydrated, under strengthened, or under proofed.

What to do if sourdough is overproofed? ›

Overproofed sourdough is preventable but also salvageable. Reshape the dough, bake it as a pizza or flatbread dough, or bake it and turn it into breadcrumbs for granola.

How do you revive sourdough dough? ›

Feed with flour and water

Feed the 113g saved starter with equal parts (by weight) unbleached all-purpose flour (56g) and water (56g). Usually, you'd feed with cool or room temperature water. But since your starter has been in the fridge, warm (not hot) tap water will help get things going.

Can I still bake over fermented sourdough? ›

When your dough is over-fermented, the scores will not “open up” during baking but instead will flatten and melt into the dough. Scores don't really open up. The resulting bread will be flat and not have a good oven spring. The crumb can look dense and compressed, especially towards the bottom of the loaf.

Why is my sourdough bread still doughy after baking? ›

Under fermented sourdough

Under-proofing the dough is a very common issue. You can tell if your loaf was under-proofed after it has been baked. A thick and chewy crust (that is hard to cut), a gummy and undercooked texture, a dense crumb, a few large sporadic holes…these are all signs of an under-proofed loaf.

How do I get my sourdough more firm? ›

Once you discover your dough is not holding shape, gently transfer it to an oiled bread stone and allow it to rise for a few hours before baking as usual. The walls of the loaf stone will give structure to the dough, allowing it to rise in the oven.

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