AT-08 · Starter Problems · The Sourdough Database Trouble Atlas

Hooch /Liquid on Top.

There's a gray or dark liquid sitting on top of your starter. It looks alarming. It smells like alcohol. You're wondering if it's dead.

How common
Very common
Severity
Not a crisis — just hungry
Visible when
On the starter surface
Atlas entry
AT-08
§ 01 — what you're seeing The symptom.

A watery, grayish or brownish liquid pooling on top of the starter. Sometimes there's separation — starter on the bottom, liquid on top, possibly a thin layer of dried starter crust at the very top. The liquid smells like alcohol or acetone. The starter underneath may look deflated.

§ 02 — root causes Why it happened.

Ranked by likelihood. Start at the top before assuming something exotic.

  1. always the cause
    Hungry starter — needs feeding
    Hooch is ethanol — the byproduct produced by yeast when it runs out of sugars to eat. The yeast metabolizes all available flour and then starts producing alcohol. The liquid separates and pools on top. It's not a sign that your starter is dying — it's a sign that it's very much alive and asking to be fed. You're just a little late.
§ 03 — fix this bake What you can do right now.
  1. Pour it off or stir it in — your choice
    Pouring off the hooch gives a milder, less sour result. Stirring it back in incorporates all the acidity for a sharper flavor. Either is fine. Neither will harm the starter.
  2. Feed it now
    Discard down to 50g of starter, then feed 1:5:5 (50g starter, 250g flour, 250g water) or whatever your regular ratio is. Put it somewhere warm. It should be active within 4–8 hours.
  3. Don't panic
    Hooch is not mold. It's not contamination. It's not death. It's the starter telling you it's ready to be fed. You've seen it before, you'll see it again.
§ 04 — next bake How to prevent it.
  1. Feed more frequently
    If hooch is appearing regularly, your starter needs more frequent feeds — twice daily at room temperature, or once daily with refrigerator storage between feeds.
  2. Move it to the fridge between bakes
    If you bake once a week, keep the starter in the fridge and feed it once a week, taking it out 12 hours before you plan to use it. This dramatically reduces hooch accumulation.
  3. Increase the feeding ratio
    A higher ratio of flour to starter (1:5:5 instead of 1:1:1) gives the yeast more food to work through, extending the time before hooch appears.

Before next bake — check these

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