• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Traditional Cooking School by GNOWFGLINS

Dish up the simple joy of healthy, down-home foods your family will LOVE… tonight.

Join 12,000+ families served since 2010!

  • Join Now
  • About
    • About Wardee & TCS
    • Our Team
    • FAQs & Help
    • Contact
  • Recipes
  • Blog
    • Recipes
    • Archives
  • Podcast
    • #AskWardee
    • Know Your Food with Wardee (retired)
  • Shop
    • Bible-Based Cooking Program
    • Print Textbooks
    • eBooks & eCourses
    • Recommended Tools & Supplies
    • More Books We Love
    • Complete Idiot’s Guide To Fermenting Foods
      • Errata
  • Login
You are here: Home » Food Preparation » Does Sourdough Bread Get Moldy? +Troubleshooting Dense Sourdough Bread #AskWardee 110

Want our free no-knead ancient grains sourdough bread recipe? Click here to download it FREE!

Does Sourdough Bread Get Moldy? +Troubleshooting Dense Sourdough Bread #AskWardee 110

We only recommend products and services we wholeheartedly endorse. This post may contain special links through which we earn a small commission if you make a purchase (though your price is the same).

Print Friendly, PDF & Email

slices of homemade bread with mold spots

“I thought sourdough bread wasn’t supposed to mold that fast!” is a common email we receive.

Recently, Julie P. sent an image and info about her sourdough bread woes… including what she thinks is mold at 3 days. She too is wondering if her sourdough bread should have molded that quickly.

And, she’s asking for guidance on lightening up her loaf. The dough was dense and didn’t seem to get baked all the way through when following my recipe for No-Knead Einkorn Sourdough Bread.

Julie, let’s troubleshoot your bread woes on today’s #AskWardee… so it turns out great next time! 🙂

Read, listen, or watch below!

Subscribe to #AskWardee on iTunes, Stitcher, YouTube, or the Podcasts app.

Q: Does Sourdough Bread Get Moldy?

slice of bread with slight dark spots

Julie P. asked:

Thank you for your past help. I tried to make the loaf pan and roll sourdough bread per the recipe (No-Knead Einkorn Sourdough Bread). It didn’t go really well. The dough didn’t rise and then the bread was very dense, no air pockets even though cooked the correct time. What went wrong? Do you have suggestions?

Also, after three days it molded. See attached picture (above). Is that normal for it to mold that fast? I want to try again but would love some guidance as to what to do differently. Thank you so much.

Troubleshooting Your Sourdough Bread

I’m happy to help, Julie!

Are the dark spots what you’re thinking is mold? If so, I don’t think that’s mold — that’s where the baking soda didn’t get mixed in well enough.

Your bread does look underdone, which can happen with a denser dough that you’ve mentioned. A longer bake would help.

So would improving the texture of the dough so it’s not so heavy. I give many tips on lighter, less dense bread in this Ask Wardee #053: Less Dense Sourdough Bread.

In #AskWardee 018, I shared my own daily sourdough routine, which involves what I call “daily maintenance amounts”. Go here to get all my best feeding tips.

Even though I talk about using small amounts of flour for feeding (in episode #18), keep in mind that you should also make sure the starter is getting enough food to support the work of rising bread dough. It’s different for everyone. Your clue to whether your starter is strong enough is the daily activity it shows — bubbles, yeasty/fresh smell, etc.

If your starter doesn’t rise the bread and isn’t as active, it might need to be fed more at each feeding or might need more frequent daily feedings, like three instead of two. Go with small-enough amounts of flour so you don’t overwhelm your life and to be frugal with flour, but not with amounts so small that the starter suffers and doesn’t perform well.

By the way, here are instructions for creating an einkorn sourdough starter.

closeup of homemade sourdough bread

When You Try Again…

When making the No-Knead Einkorn Sourdough Bread (pictured above), try again by:

  • Taking the day or two leading up to baking and give the starter plenty of food and TLC so it’s really strong and active. This also ensures it has plenty of acid to react with the baking soda to add extra lift.
  • If you aren’t already, use fresh-milled flour for a lighter result — the mill we love and use daily is the Mockmill home stone grain mill. (Limited time: get 2 free eBook packages from me with your purchase!)
  • Sift your flour before making the dough (if not using fresh-milled flour).
  • Rising your dough at a warm room temperature.
  • Those brown spots in your bread are signs the baking soda wasn’t worked in well enough — so do a few more folds to ensure it is mixed throughout.
  • Bake longer if the dough is dense, so it cooks all the way through. You can cover the top with parchment paper near the end so it doesn’t get too brown.

What About Mold?

Even though sourdough bread’s natural composition resists mold, due to the vinegar produced by the sourdough starter’s organisms, it does still mold eventually. How long depends on the doneness of the dough, how it’s stored, and the humidity/temperature conditions.

Certainly, if it’s not baked all the way through, it can mold in three days … or less! If it’s humid or warm, any bread will mold in three days or less.

I don’t like to keep our bread at room temperature as long as three days because homemade bread dries out faster. I pre-slice it and keep in the freezer and take out just what’s needed for that day, or even on the spot to put in the toaster because it’s pre-sliced. Then you have fresh bread on any day.

Also… the toaster can help bake under-done bread a little more. Keep it in the freezer until toasting and it will maintain its current state without molding. 🙂

Helpful Links

  • FREE No-Knead Einkorn Sourdough Bread Recipe
  • Mockmill home stone grain mill — Limited time: get 2 free eBook packages from me with your purchase!
  • Ask Wardee #053: Less Dense Sourdough Bread
  • #AskWardee 018: What’s Your Daily Sourdough Routine?
  • How To Make An Einkorn Sourdough Starter

More Sourdough Posts from the #AskWardee Show:

  • When Is A Sourdough Starter Ready For Baking? #AskWardee 145
  • Sourdough Tips, Troubleshooting & Frequently Asked Questions
  • Sourdough Troubleshooting: How To Know When Your Starter Is Strong Enough For Bread-Baking
  • The Best & Healthiest Flours For Sourdough #AskWardee 065
  • Feeding Your Sourdough Starter… More Than Just Flour! #AskWardee 150
  • Is Aged Flour *Really* Better For Sourdough? #AskWardee 122
  • Can I Use Reverse Osmosis Water For Fermenting, Culturing, & Sourdough? #AskWardee 138
  • How To Transition A Sourdough Starter To Einkorn #AskWardee 069

 

How long does your sourdough bread last? How do you ensure a light, well-baked loaf?

We only recommend products and services we wholeheartedly endorse. This post may contain special links through which we earn a small commission if you make a purchase (though your price is the same).

Posted in: #AskWardee Fermenting & Culturing Food Preparation Q & A Sourdough Videos

About Wardee Harmon

Wardee lives in the Boise area of Idaho with her dear family. She's the lead teacher and founder of the Eat God's Way online cooking program as well as the author of Fermenting, Sourdough A to Z, and other traditional cooking books. Eat God's Way helps families get healthier and happier using cooking methods and ingredients from Bible Times like sourdough, culturing, and ancient grains.

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Jeanette says

    February 21, 2018 at 7:54 pm

    I normally make the no-knead Einkorn sourdough bread in my Dutch oven which makes one loaf so when you use a loaf pan, does it make one or two loaves? What type and size of a loaf pan do you use, (glass, tin, ceramic etc)? When baking the bread in a loaf pan, do you need to cover the bread as it bakes?

    Reply
  2. Beth Ann says

    February 22, 2018 at 5:31 pm

    Jeanette, I generally use a loaf pan when I make bread (I don’t have a Dutch oven). I usually fluctuate between a big, what I call industrial size loaf pan, and a “normal” size (of which I use two when making this recipe. Mine are metal, but I have some smaller ones that are a type of glass. I generally do not cover the bread. I might bake longer and cover it for the final, say, twenty minutes at a lower temperature since my most recent loaf came out underdone.

    Reply
  3. Linda Woods says

    February 26, 2018 at 7:04 pm

    Wardee, can you please give us the inch size of your loaf pans? My pans tend to not be exactly straight sided. I suppose you get two loaves in the loaf pan with the No Knead Einkorn recipe.

    Reply
    • Danielle says

      February 27, 2018 at 10:05 am

      Hi Linda,

      Here are the loaf pans Wardee ues: http://amzn.to/2CMp454 They are 8.3 x 5 x 4 inches.

      She doesn’t quite get 2 loaves so that’s why she increases the recipe 250% to get 3 loaves at a time.

      Reply
  4. Linda Woods says

    February 26, 2018 at 7:05 pm

    I measure the temperature of my loaves that are very large in the dutch oven with an instant read thermometer to 200 degrees.

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

Hi and Welcome!

I’m Wardee Harmon and I help Christian families who know they should eat healthy but are tired of complicated, time-consuming, weird-tasting, and unsustainable “healthy” diets…

…who want to look and feel better, save time and money, and have more energy for enjoying family life and serving Him fully!… like I was. Click here for more…

Recently on the Blog

  • Fizzy Apple Cider Switchel (VAD)
  • VitaClay Review & Buyer’s Guide
  • How to Make Healthy Cookies #AskWardee 006
  • Bean and Barley Soup (Instant Pot, Stove Top)
  • Soaked Spelt Banana Bread (VAD)
  • Ancient Grains 101
  • How to Heal Digestive Issues Naturally (Leaky Gut, SIBO, IBS, Celiac & more)
  • How To Meal Plan In 4 Easy Steps (KYF103)
  • Debunking 4 Sourdough Myths (& How To Overcome Them)
  • How To Use A Pressure Cooker 101

Recently Commented

  • YTmp3 on How To Make Healthy Mild-Tasting Mayonnaise #AskWardee 128
  • Debbie on 45 Real Food Copycat Recipes (Olive Garden, Chipotle & more!)
  • YTmp3 on Homemade Sauerkraut In A Stoneware Crock
  • AJ on Homemade Dog Food In The Instant Pot
  • Ali on Rhubarb Salsa
  • Leif on Amish Butter: Really?
  • Makenzie Reed on How To Make An Herbal Eye Pillow For Relaxation & Headache Relief

We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites.

Before Footer

g-NOWF-glinz

…are what we eat! God’s Natural, Organic, Whole Foods, Grown Locally, In Season.

We love working with other Christian families who love good food and want to eat according to God’s design…

Not only because we believe it’s the healthiest way, but because we want to give Him glory for creating good food as the best medicine!

Learn more about GNOWFGLINS here…

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IOcH27DM1dI

Eat God’s Way Cooking Program

Our Eat God’s Way cooking program is for Christian families who know they should eat healthy but are tired of complicated, time-consuming, weird-tasting, and unsustainable “healthy” diets…

…who want to look and feel better, save time and money, and have more energy for enjoying family life and serving Him fully!

Join 12,000+ families served since 2010! Learn more here…

Copyright © 2025 Traditional Cooking School by GNOWFGLINS • About • Help • Privacy • Partners