I feel like that with sourdough. I started making it when COVID hit because I couldn’t find bread or yeast in stores, and now I’m stuck making two loaves a week. It’s not much work at all, but there are many things that have to be monitored and done at exact times; it blocks when I can go out and I can’t go on long vacations or my starter will die.
You can make a starter backup by spreading it out thinly and letting it dry. If you ever need it, it’s just combine with water and feed it.
Also you don’t need to feed it every week. A healthy starter can easily go 3 weeks without being fed.
I feel like that with sourdough. I started making it when COVID hit because I couldn’t find bread or yeast in stores, and now I’m stuck making two loaves a week. It’s not much work at all, but there are many things that have to be monitored and done at exact times; it blocks when I can go out and I can’t go on long vacations or my starter will die.
You are a slave to the dough. Abandon your old life and accept it’s yeasty embrace. It is the only way
You can make a starter backup by spreading it out thinly and letting it dry. If you ever need it, it’s just combine with water and feed it.
Also you don’t need to feed it every week. A healthy starter can easily go 3 weeks without being fed.
Why are you stuck?
My family expects sourdough. I want them to love me.
It’d work on me, too.
If being a reluctant servant is the price for love, you should find love elsewhere.