---
title: Step‑by‑Step Guide to Getting an Open Crumb in Your First Sourdough Loaf
siteUrl: https://logzly.com/artisancrust
author: artisancrust (The Artisan Crust)
date: 2026-07-01T01:02:15.312581
tags: [sourdough, breadmaking, homebaking]
url: https://logzly.com/artisancrust/stepbystep-guide-to-getting-an-open-crumb-in-your-first-sourdough-loaf
---


If you’ve ever sliced into a sourdough and found it denser than you hoped, you’re not alone. I was in the same boat when I launched **The Artisan Crust**. Below is the exact process I use to turn a nervous starter into a loaf with that beautiful, airy open crumb you see in bakery windows.

## Why the Open Crumb Matters

An open crumb isn’t just Instagram‑friendly; it’s a sign that your dough has developed good gluten structure, proper fermentation, and enough steam during baking. When you get it right, every bite feels light, slightly chewy, and full of flavor.

## 1. Choose the Right Flour

### Bread Flour vs. All‑Purpose

Bread flour gives you more protein (about 12‑14 %) which builds stronger gluten. For a beginner, I stick with a reliable brand of unbleached bread flour. If you only have all‑purpose, you can still succeed, but expect a slightly tighter crumb.

### Adding Whole Grain

A small portion of whole‑grain flour (10‑15 % of the total) can improve flavor and fermentation activity. Just be sure to hydrate it a little longer—about 30 minutes before you mix the final dough.

## 2. Build a Healthy Starter

A lively starter is the heart of an open crumb. Here’s a quick check‑list:

- **Age**: At least 5‑7 days old.
- **Activity**: It should double in size within 4‑6 hours after feeding.
- **Smell**: Pleasantly tangy, not off‑putting.

If you’re unsure, feed it with a 1:1:1 ratio (starter:flour:water) and wait for the rise. **The Artisan Crust** always recommends feeding the starter the night before you plan to bake, so it’s at peak vigor in the morning.

## 3. Mix with the Autolyse Method

### What is Autolyse?

Autolyse is simply mixing flour and water and letting it rest for 30‑60 minutes before adding starter and salt. This gives the flour time to absorb water and starts gluten formation without the harshness of salt.

### My Simple Autolyse Recipe

| Ingredient | Weight (g) |
|-----------|-----------|
| Bread flour | 400 |
| Water (80 % hydration) | 320 |
| Starter (20 % of flour weight) | 80 |
| Salt | 10 |

1. Combine the flour and 300 g of water in a large bowl. Stir until no dry bits remain.  
2. Cover and rest for 45 minutes.  
3. Add the starter, remaining 20 g of water, and salt.  
4. Mix until fully incorporated (about 2‑3 minutes by hand or 1 minute in a stand mixer).

## 4. Bulk Fermentation – The Time for Air

### Stretch and Fold

During bulk fermentation (3‑5 hours at 75 °F/24 °C), I perform a series of stretch‑and‑folds every 30 minutes for the first 2 hours. This gentle handling strengthens the gluten network and traps gas bubbles.

**How to stretch and fold**: Wet your hand, grab a portion of dough from the edge, stretch it up, and fold it over the center. Rotate the bowl and repeat 4‑6 times per session.

### Watch for the “Windowpane”

When the dough is ready for shaping, a small piece should stretch thin enough to let light through without tearing. That’s a solid sign you’ve built enough gluten for an open crumb.

## 5. Shaping – Keep the Gas Inside

### Gentle Shaping Steps

1. Turn the dough onto a lightly floured surface.  
2. Lightly flatten into a rectangle, keeping the surface tension low.  
3. Fold the top third down, then the bottom third up, like a letter.  
4. Flip the dough so the seam is on the bottom, then gently pull the dough toward you while rotating, creating surface tension.

Avoid over‑kneading at this stage; you want to preserve the gas bubbles you cultivated earlier.

## 6. Proofing – The Final Rise

### Cold Proof in the Fridge

A cold retard (12‑18 hours in the refrigerator) does two things: it deepens flavor and slows fermentation, allowing the crumb to open up nicely. Place the shaped dough in a well‑floured banneton, cover, and refrigerate.

### Room‑Temperature Proof (If You’re in a Rush)

If you can’t wait, let the dough proof at 75 °F for about 2‑3 hours. It won’t be as open as a cold‑proof loaf, but you’ll still see improvement over a rushed bake.

## 7. Baking – Steam Is Your Secret Weapon

### Preheat the Oven and Dutch Oven

- Preheat to 500 °F (260 °C) for at least 45 minutes.
- Place a Dutch oven (or a heavy pot with a lid) inside to heat up.

### The Bake

1. Carefully turn the cold‑proofed dough onto a parchment sheet. Score the top with a sharp razor or lame.  
2. Transfer the dough (on parchment) into the hot Dutch oven.  
3. Cover and bake at 500 °F for 20 minutes.  
4. Remove the lid, lower temperature to 450 °F, and bake another 20‑25 minutes until the crust is deep brown and the internal temperature hits 210 °F.

The covered first half traps steam, which expands the crumb and creates that coveted open texture.

## 8. Cool, Slice, and Celebrate

Let the loaf rest on a wire rack for at least an hour before slicing. Cutting too early releases steam and can make the crumb look gummy. When you finally slice, you should see irregular holes ranging from the size of a pea to a walnut—exactly what **The Artisan Crust** aims for.

## Troubleshooting Common Issues

| Problem | Likely Cause | Quick Fix |
|---------|--------------|-----------|
| Very tight crumb | Under‑hydrated dough or insufficient stretch‑and‑folds | Increase water by 5 % and add one more fold session |
| Large uneven holes | Over‑fermented dough | Reduce bulk fermentation time by 30 minutes |
| Crust too hard | Baking at too high temperature or insufficient steam | Lower oven temp by 10 °F and ensure the pot is covered for the first half |

Remember, sourdough is forgiving if you adjust one variable at a time. Small tweaks lead to big differences.

## Wrap‑Up

Getting an open crumb on your first sourdough loaf feels like a rite of passage, and **The Artisan Crust** is here to make that journey enjoyable. Keep your starter happy, respect the rest periods, and don’t skimp on steam. Before you know it, you’ll be pulling out loaves that look like they belong in a boutique bakery.

Happy baking, and may your crumbs be forever airy!