National Sourdough Bread Day
National Sourdough Bread Day is a reminder that the best table is a crowded one — plates passing, seconds offered, everyone fed.
Why it matters
WELCOME TO THE PARTY!
You’ve made it to National Sourdough Bread Day. Every April 1st, a country of amateur bakers and seasoned pros pulls out the Dutch oven to honor bread that’s been rising for 3,500 years. Grab an apron. You’re in.
The Story
Bread is older than writing. Older than agriculture. Older than almost any tradition humanity still practices — and sourdough is the oldest bread we still make.
The earliest evidence comes from Egypt around 1500 BCE, where bakers figured out that a paste of flour and water, left out long enough, would begin to bubble on its own. The loaves they baked rose; the bread kept better; the flavor was tangier and more interesting. For the next 3,000 years, that was simply how bread was made.
Commercial yeast didn’t exist until the 1860s. Industrial bread got faster and blander; sourdough got relegated to the niche. But it never fully disappeared. In 1849, a French-born baker named Isidore Boudin arrived in San Francisco during the Gold Rush and found local wild yeasts so flavorful that he built a business around them. The Boudin mother starter has been fed continuously since. It is older than the state of California.
Then came 2020. When the pandemic sent Americans home for weeks on end, millions of them decided this was the moment to finally make bread. Flour disappeared from grocery shelves nationwide. Instagram filled with proof shots. “Sourdough” became one of the most-searched terms on Google. Starters multiplied; some survive to this day, named and fed and passed between friends like heirlooms. That’s the part of sourdough culture we’re honoring today.
Good bread is the most fundamentally satisfying of all foods; and good bread with fresh butter, the greatest of feasts.
Why Sourdough?
Four reasons your great-great-grandparents knew and we’re just rediscovering:
Wild Yeast
Commercial bread uses one domesticated strain. Sourdough hosts a whole ecosystem — dozens of wild yeasts plus bacteria. Every starter is genuinely one of a kind.
That Tang
Lactic acid bacteria produce lactic and acetic acid during the long ferment. That’s what you taste — a mild vinegar-and-yogurt note no commercial loaf can touch.
Stays Fresh Longer
The acids that give sourdough its flavor also fight mold and staling. A good loaf stays fresh 4–7 days on the counter. Triple the grocery-store lifespan.
Easier Digestion
The long ferment breaks down gluten and phytic acid before you eat it. Many people with mild gluten sensitivity can eat sourdough comfortably.
Start Your Starter!
A living colony of wild yeast and lactic acid bacteria, cultivated from nothing but flour and water. Once established, it can last generations. Here’s the simplest path in.
50g whole-rye flour + 50g filtered water. Stir. Cover loosely. Leave at room temp (~70°F).
A few bubbles? Stir. Don’t feed. It’s thinking.
First feed! Discard half. Add 50g flour + 50g water. Mark the level with the rubber band.
Visible activity now — bubbles throughout, a slight rise. Discard half, feed.
May smell like nail polish remover — normal! Switch to half rye + half all-purpose. Discard, feed.
Smell mellows to tangy and yeasty. Should double in 4–6 hours after feeding. Discard, feed.
Reliably doubles in 6 hours? Ready to bake. Name it. You now own a pet made of flour.
Feed daily on the counter, or weekly in the fridge. Treat it kindly — it could outlive you.
Loaves Around the World
Every baking culture has its own sourdough. Six worth tasting (or making) at least once.
Did You Know?!
Boudin’s mother starter has been alive since 1849.
It survived the 1906 San Francisco earthquake. Every loaf they bake today is descended from that 19th-century batch.
There’s a Sourdough Library in Belgium.
The Puratos Sourdough Library in Sankt Vith houses 150+ starters from around the world, kept alive as genetic preservation.
Pandemic flour shortages were real.
Spring 2020: U.S. flour sales jumped 155% year-over-year. Mills ran 24/7; shelves stayed empty for months. The cause? Home sourdough.
Astronauts fermented sourdough in space.
A NASA-partnered study sent starters to the ISS to test microgravity effects on fermentation. Spoiler: it changed.
Read & Bake
Tartine Bread
Chad Robertson · 2010
The book that sparked America’s artisan-sourdough revival. Worth it for the photos alone.
Flour Water Salt Yeast
Ken Forkish · 2012
Methodical, engineer-friendly, and the best single book for understanding why sourdough actually works.
The Perfect Loaf
Maurizio Leo · 2022
The most visual, modern guide. Gorgeous step-by-step photography. Recipes for every skill level.
Pair It With
Sourdough is a slow-day food. While the dough proofs, lean into the rest of a slow Saturday:
Chet Baker, Nina Simone, or Spotify’s “Sunday Morning” playlist
The Sporkful’s bread episodes — Pashman & Myhrvold to start
Jiro Dreams of Sushi — craft & patience, not bread, but close enough
Molly Wizenberg’s A Homemade Life — writing that makes you hungry
Share Your Loaf!
Tag us @celebrationnation with #NationalSourdoughBreadDay. We repost the best crust shots.
How to celebrate
Small, doable ways to celebrate National Sourdough Bread Day.
- Host a low-stakes dinner — everyone brings one thing.
- Cook sourdough bread the way a family member taught you, if you can.
- Order from a locally owned spot that could use the business.
- Make a double batch and drop half off to a friend.
- Eat together without screens — even for 20 minutes.
Celebration ideas by audience
For families
Pick a recipe together, assign jobs, and serve it family-style. The cooking is the conversation.
For kids
Let the kids build their own version — tacos, pizzas, sandwiches. Their plate, their rules.
For couples
Pick one recipe you've both never made and cook it together, no outside help.
At the office
Do a shared lunch instead of the usual — team potluck, takeout from a local spot, or a catered tray.
At school
Tie the meal into a cultural or geography lesson — ingredients, origins, stories.
In your community
Organize a neighborhood potluck or contribute to a community meal at a shelter or church.
On your own
Cook one real meal for yourself. Plate it like company's coming.


