A starter’s gone bad when it turns rotten-smelling, grows fuzzy mold, or stays flat and lifeless after repeated feedings.
A sourdough starter can feel like a tiny science project that pays you back in bread. Most days it smells pleasantly tangy and rises on schedule. Then you open the jar and something’s off: a fuzzy patch, a weird color, or a stink that doesn’t belong in food.
Here’s a straight answer path. You’ll learn what’s normal, what’s a hard stop, and how to get a neglected starter back on track without wasting bags of flour.
What A Healthy Starter Looks Like Day To Day
A healthy starter is a steady mix of wild yeast and lactic acid bacteria. When it’s fed regularly, it tends to behave in predictable ways.
- Smell: Mildly sour, yogurt-like, fruity, or like green apples.
- Texture: Thick batter after feeding, then airy and webby as it ferments.
- Rise: It expands after feeding, then slowly falls back as food runs low.
- Surface: Bubbles, craters, and a gentle dome are normal.
A jar can look scrappy and still be fine. Separation, a dry rim, or a sluggish rise usually points to hunger, not spoilage.
Can My Sourdough Starter Go Bad? Signs That Mean Toss It
Yes, starters can spoil. The “toss it” signals are specific. When you see them, don’t scrape and keep going. Start fresh.
Fuzzy Mold And Colored Growth
Any fuzzy growth is the clearest stop sign. Mold can show up white, green, blue, or black. In moist foods, mold can spread beyond the visible spot, which is why scraping isn’t a safe bet. USDA’s “Molds on Food: Are They Dangerous?” explains that moldy foods can have more growth than the eye catches.
Pink or orange streaks are also a hard stop. That color can signal unwanted bacteria taking over. Toss the starter, wash the jar, and start again.
Rotten Smells That Don’t Clear
A hungry starter can smell sharp, sometimes like solvent. What you’re watching for is a truly rotten odor: garbage, decay, or a smell that makes you gag. If it stays foul after one feed-and-wait cycle, ditch it.
No Activity After Repeated Feedings
Sometimes a starter looks fine but never perks up. If you’ve fed it twice a day for three days and it still won’t bubble or rise, it may be too contaminated or too damaged to recover. Starting over saves time and flour.
Hooch, Separation, And Dark Crust: The “Ugly But Fine” Stuff
Not every weird starter is a bad starter. A lot of scary-looking changes come from simple neglect.
Hooch On Top
That gray or brown liquid layer is hooch. It’s a sign your starter is hungry. You can pour it off, or stir it back in for a more sour profile. Then feed and give it time to rise.
Watery Separation
Thin liquid pooling can mean your mix is on the wet side or your flour isn’t absorbing as much. Stir, feed, and try a thicker batter for a few rounds.
Dried Skin On The Surface
A starter left in the fridge can form a dark, wrinkled skin. If there’s no fuzz and no pink/orange staining, you can peel off the dry layer and feed what’s underneath.
Sourdough Starter Going Bad In The Fridge And On The Counter
Starters slide into trouble faster when conditions favor unwanted microbes or when the starter stays weak for a long stretch. Most of the time, it comes down to temperature, feeding rhythm, and jar cleanliness.
Temperature And Timing
Warm kitchens speed fermentation. Cool kitchens slow it. If the jar sits warm and unfed for days, off-smells and odd growth become more likely. Food-safety agencies use the “danger zone” to describe temperatures where bacteria multiply quickly. The USDA’s “Danger Zone (40°F–140°F)” page defines that range. A starter isn’t the same as cooked meat, yet the takeaway still helps: warm, wet foods change fast.
Underfeeding And A Weak Culture
Regular feeding keeps the mix sour enough to discourage invaders. When a starter is starved for long stretches, the balance can shift. You may see a sluggish rise and harsher smells. If there’s no mold, steady feeding often brings it back.
Messy Jar Walls And Dirty Tools
Old paste on the jar walls dries out, then re-wets, then dries again. That cycle gives stray microbes a place to hang out. Keep it simple:
- Use a clean spoon each time you stir or scoop.
- Wipe the rim after feeding.
- Move the starter to a fresh jar when the sides get coated.
White Film And Other Surface Confusers
Not every pale layer on top is mold. A starter that’s been sitting can form a thin, matte film that looks like dried paint. Sometimes it’s a yeast-heavy skin; sometimes it’s a harmless layer from drying. This kind of film is usually flat and smooth, not fuzzy. It may crack like a dried puddle when you tilt the jar.
Mold is different. It tends to look hairy or plush, with edges that lift off the surface. It can form round colonies, and it often shows clear color: green, blue, black, or bright white fuzz. If you can’t tell which you’re seeing, take the cautious route and toss it. If you’re confident it’s a dry skin with no fuzz, peel it off, take a clean spoonful from underneath, and feed in a fresh jar.
Decision Table: Keep, Fix, Or Toss
This table is your fast screen. When in doubt, lean toward food safety.
| What You Notice | Likely Meaning | What To Do Next |
|---|---|---|
| Fuzzy white/green/blue/black growth | Mold has colonized the surface | Toss starter, wash jar with hot soapy water |
| Pink or orange streaks | Unwanted bacteria taking over | Toss starter, clean tools, start new culture |
| Gray/brown liquid on top (hooch) | Starter is hungry | Stir or pour off, feed, keep warm for a cycle |
| Sharp solvent-like smell | Starter is stressed and underfed | Feed more often for 1–2 days, keep jar clean |
| Rotten garbage smell | Spoilage microbes dominate | Toss starter |
| No bubbles or rise after 3 days of twice-daily feeds | Culture is too weak or contaminated | Start over |
| Dark, dry skin after weeks in fridge | Surface dried from dehydration | Discard skin, feed the clean inner starter |
| Thin starter with pooling liquid | Hydration is high | Feed thicker for a few rounds |
How To Revive A Neglected Starter Without Guesswork
If your starter shows no mold and no pink/orange tint, you can usually bring it back with a short reset. The goal is strength, fast, with little waste.
Step 1: Take A Small Seed Portion
Scoop one tablespoon of starter into a clean jar. If there’s hooch, stir first so the seed portion matches the jar.
Step 2: Feed With A Consistent Ratio
Use a simple 1:2:2 by weight (starter:water:flour). Stir until smooth. Mark the jar with a rubber band so you can see the rise.
Step 3: Keep It Steady And Track The Peak
Pick a spot that stays steady, like a microwave with the light on. Watch for a clear rise within 4–12 hours. When it peaks and starts to fall, feed again.
Step 4: Repeat For Two Days
Do 3–5 feeds over two days. You’re looking for faster rise times and a clean tangy smell.
Storage And Feeding Rhythms That Keep Starters Stable
Most starter stress comes from a mismatch: a counter routine used on a fridge starter, or a fridge routine used on a warm counter jar. Match the rhythm to how often you bake.
Counter Rhythm
- Feed every 12–24 hours based on peak time.
- Keep the jar loosely covered so gas can escape.
- Refresh the jar often so dried paste doesn’t build up.
Fridge Rhythm
- Feed, let it start bubbling, then chill it.
- Refresh weekly if you want it ready with minimal ramp-up.
- Before baking, do 1–3 counter feeds to build strength.
Backup In Case Of Mold
Keep a fallback starter so you don’t lose weeks of work. Spread a thin layer of starter on parchment, let it dry, then store flakes in an airtight jar. To restart, dissolve a small pinch in water and feed daily until it rises reliably.
Storage Table: Practical Timelines For Common Setups
These timelines are a starting point. Rise and smell beat the calendar.
| Where You Keep It | Typical Feeding Pattern | What To Watch |
|---|---|---|
| Counter, warm kitchen | Every 12 hours | Fast peaks, hooch if you miss a feed |
| Counter, cool kitchen | Every 24 hours | Slower rise, milder aroma |
| Fridge, baking weekly | Feed once a week | Thin hooch layer is common |
| Fridge, baking monthly | Feed, then 2 days of wake-up feeds | Plan a ramp-up window |
| Freezer, dried flakes | No feeding while stored | Several feeds to wake it up |
Quick Checks Before You Bake With It
Right before you mix dough, do a quick scan. It takes 20 seconds and saves a lot of regret.
- Look for fuzz or colored streaks.
- Smell for clean tang. If it smells rotten, toss it.
- Stir and check texture. If it’s separated, feed it.
- Mark the jar and confirm it rises on the schedule you expect.
If you want more baking-focused troubleshooting on sluggish rise, hooch, and odd colors, King Arthur Baking’s starter troubleshooting lists the patterns bakers see most often.
When Tossing Is The Right Call
Tossing a starter can sting, yet it’s sometimes the cleanest move. If you see fuzz, colored streaks, or a rotten stench, bin it. Wash your jar and tools well. Start again with flour and water, and you’ll have a usable starter in about a week.
References & Sources
- USDA Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS).“Molds on Food: Are They Dangerous?”Explains why mold growth can extend beyond what you see and when discarding is the safer choice.
- USDA Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS).“Danger Zone (40°F – 140°F).”Defines temperature ranges tied to faster microbial growth, useful for planning storage and feeding.
- King Arthur Baking.“Sourdough Starter Troubleshooting.”Baking-focused guidance on hooch, neglect, odd colors, and when to restart.