Amish Friendship Bread Starter Recipe
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Use this Amish Friendship Bread Starter Recipe as a base for many sweet breads, dinner rolls, muffins and other baked goods. Hints for storing and using up the sourdough starter.
Download the Amish Friendship Bread Starter instructions here.
Click here to see how to bake the friendship bread.
Have I got a treat for you today! Classic Amish Friendship Bread Starter Recipe. Have you ever tried this sweet sourdough?
It’s one of those recipes that people seem to either love or hate. On one hand, you make a sweet sourdough that you have to keep dividing and using up, or passing out to your friends….or throw away. If you keep the starter going, it just…well…keeps going.
On the other hand, you make a sweet sourdough that is versatile and makes an amazing cinnamon quick bread. Quick bread that is so addicting that you can eat 6 loaves in a matter of 3 days.
Yeah….just please don’t ask. ๐
Whether you make it this bread weekly, haven’t seen it in years, or are completely new to Amish Friendship Bread, my goal is to convince you to at least give easy sourdough recipe a try. I’m going to make it easy for you with hints! The recipe for the bread itself is coming soon, but first you need the starter.
How to Make Amish Friendship Bread Starter:
- Have Ziploc plastic bags (for easily storing the starter), glass bowls and wooden spoons on hand. For sourdough, you don’t want to use metal bowls or utensils. Sourdough is acidic and can dissolve some metals. It’s best to use anything but metal bowls and utensils.
- Write the directions right on the Ziploc bags using a permanent marker so you never have to go hunting for the directions.
- Make the starter recipe, then pour it into a Ziploc bag (with the directions written on it). You can also store this in a loosely covered glass bowl if you’d like. I just find it easier to use a Ziploc bag.
- While you are working your way through the 10-day process, store the starter at room temperature. If the Ziploc bag gets air in it, simply let it out.
- How much sourdough you end up with at the end of the 10 day process depends on how active your sourdough is. You’ll end up with about 5-6 cups.
- On Day 10 after you add last bit of flour, sugar and milk, separate out 1-cup portions into Ziploc bags (don’t forget those directions on the front!).
- At this point, you can give away some of those starter bags to friends along with the recipe and instructions so they can indulge in their own friendship bread.
- Keep a starter for yourself to continue the sourdough process (Day 10 is equal to Day 1), and make the Amish Friendship Bread with one of the other cups of starter.
- If you can’t find anyone who wants the sourdough starter, simply throw those 1-cup bags into the freezer until another time when you’d like to start the sourdough process our bake the bread. When you pull the sourdough out of the freezer, treat it as Day 1. Or just go ahead and use that cup to bake loaves of friendship bread!
You don’t have to feel like this is a never-ending recipe. Although it may seem that way, you can easily freeze the 1-cup sourdough portions at the end of the 10 days to make multiple recipes (that we’ll be sharing on our site soon!).
But this Amish cinnamon friendship bread? You’ll be wanting to make it. It’s the best in served warm with a slather of butter.
Although this sweet sourdough starter is very easy, you may have questions! Please comment below with your questions and I’ll update this article to answer your questions as you have them.
Other Recipes to Use our Starter in:
Download the Amish Friendship Bread Starter instructions here.
Amish Friendship Bread Starter Recipe
Use this Amish Friendship Bread Starter Recipe as a base for many sweet breads, dinner rolls, muffins and other baked goods. Hints for storing and using up the sourdough starter.
Servings 4 cups
Prep Time 10 minutes
Total Time 10 minutes
Ingredients
- 1/4 cup warm water about 110 degrees
- 1 package active dry yeast* (2 ¼ teaspoons)
- 1 cup all-purpose flour
- 1 cup granulated sugar
- 1 cup milk (2% or higher fat)
Instructions
- Pour the warm water into a small glass bowl.
- Sprinkle the yeast over the water. Let this stand for 5-8 minutes to allow it to dissolve.
- In a larger glass bowl (or plastic bowl. Don’t use metal bowls or utensils for sourdough), mix together the flour and sugar with a wooden spoon.
- Stir in the milk and then the yeast mixture.
- Cover loosely with plastic wrap and allow it to stand until bubbly.
- Once the mixture is bubbly, pour it into a gallon-size zippered plastic bag and seal. Do not refrigerate. Allow the sourdough mixture to sit out at room temperature. This counts as Day 1.
- Day 2: Mash the bag.
- Day 3: Mash the bag.
- Day 4: Mash the bag.
- Day 5: Mash the bag.
- Day 6: Add 1 cup each of flour, sugar and milk. Mash the bag until it is mixed well.
- Day 7: Mash the bag.
- Day 8: Mash the bag.
- Day 9: Mash the bag.
- Day 10: Pour the sourdough into a glass (or other nonmetal) bowl. Add ½ cup each of all-purpose flour, granulated sugar and milk. Mix well with a wooden spoon.
- Divide out 1 cup portions of the starter, placing each one-cup portion in separate zippered plastic bags. You’ll get about 4-5 bags.
- Seal the bags, and give the starter away to friends along with the instructions, keeping one for yourself if desired. The starter then goes back to Day 1.
- Keep one starter for yourself.
Video
Notes
*Instant yeast will work as well.
**Calorie count shown above is for the friendship bread starter only and measures the calories in an entire cup. You use 1 cup of starter per two loaves of bread.
Nutrition
Calories: 337kcal
hi, i made this bread years ago from a starter given to me. i didn’t realize that the starter takes the full 10 days as well as the bread! I hope this comes out as good as i remember! will let you know and thank you for having printable recipes!
Janice J.
Itโs been about 6 years since Iโve made this. Pulled my recipe out the other day and now Iโm on day 5. Only difference in our recipes is I feed on day 5 instead of 6. Also yeast is optional. I had none so I didnโt put any yeast. Seems like the point of this is it makes its own yeast by sitting at room temp for 10 days. Iโm pretty sure this is the way Iโve always done it. I hope itโll be okay. Will find out in 5 more days…canโt wait! I love this bread!
What about baking instructions?
Hi there, yesterday was my day 10 and I forgot about my starter/adding the ingredients/separating it out to gift. Have I ruined it completely?!
Hi can I use 1% milk instead?
Where are the instructions for actually making the bread? You know… once the starter is ready? Canโt seem to find those instructions.
I’m going to make my starter today. I have several ladies that want one also. I will see them on day 5. Can I just seperate the starter right away into atleast 3 bags and then on days 6 and 10 have them each only add 1/3 of what they are supposed too ( like day 6 only add 1/3 cup instead of 1 cup of each)? In my head this will work, but in reality i don’t know. I havent made this for 25yrs atleast. I just thought about it and now have a hankerin for it… which stinks… Read more »
Can you add less sugar on baking day to make it a bit less sweet?
After day 10 do you have to separate it or can I cook all of it?
It’s been years since I made this and no one has mentioned this…I might just be daft.
On day 10, after I’ve added the ingredients and separated the batter into 1 cup bags, what do I add to my 1 cup of batter, before I bake it??
On day 10 I added the 1/2 sugar, milk and flour but only had 2 2/3 cups of starter ! This has never happened before ! Are they still good to use ? What happened?
Do you use bleached or Unbleached flour ?
Hello Iโm starting on my very first Amish friendship cake.step is done.when I got up this morning my bag looked like a balloon โผ๏ธ๐ฑ is this normal๐ฑโผ๏ธ๐ it keeps inflating ๐
Can I add and bake on day 11 as day 10 I had to work too late to start!
I just made the starter last night. I put it in a gallon ziplock bag and there was so much air in it this morning Iโm sure it wouldโve exploded if I got up a couple hours later! It popped and splattered a bit on me when I released the air. Not sure if this can happen sometimes and itโs still ok? The only thing I did differently was that I added a little sugar to the yeast and warm water mix since it mentioned that on the package itself…wasnโt sure itโd be a big deal but curious?
Can I make sour dough bread out of the amish friendship starter? I want sour dough bread