miss_thenorth said:
So, can you explain your process of "months" to get your starter making decent loaves, and can explain how you used your starter that were producing so so loaves?
If I am interpreting correctly, you got your starter started, but it wasn't giving you the flavour you wanted? and so, you kept feeding your starter --on the counter or in the fridge?-- and then finally after months, you got decent tasting loaves?
I probably should have written it down at the time, but I will try to reconstruct what I did for you here . . . .
I think it took about a week for my starter to start doubling. At that point I started discarding half with each feeding, but I think I kept it at room temperature and just kept feeding it for at least another week like that before I even tried to use it. Then I think the first thing I tried to make was pancakes and they were an absolute flop, but I suspect that could be because I didn't give them enough time at all to get bubbly (being a sourdough newbie).
I believe at this point though (after 1 week of maintaining it on the counter and after 2 weeks since starting it) I started to keep it in the fridge most of the time and then bring it out to feed it every week. It may have helped if I had kept it on the counter longer. . . .
I started taking the weekly left-overs (after feeding it for two days and only storing a little bit in the fridge for the next week) and attempting to make bread with it. I started with some pretty simple recipes and found that I wasn't having a whole lot of luck . . . the bread tasted sour (more sour than my bread does now) but it wouldn't rise worth a darn. I think for a month or so, I would actually supplement some commercial yeast to get it to rise a little better, but I can't remember for sure that I did, or if I was just tempted to do it. Meanwhile, I was also learning the process of keeping the starter happy on the counter in cooler temperatures. Since a very sour flavor is indicative of the bacteria growing, and since bad rising is indicative of the yeast not growing well, I figured I needed to keep the starter as warm as I could to encourage more yeast growth. (The bacteria and yeast are supposed to be in balance). I often used the oven to keep it optimally warm for the yeast, but I found that had it's drawbacks too . . . often I would mess up and overwarm it and kill it. So for a while there, I had several starters going so I always had a back-up just in case.
After nearly killing it too many times, I decided to just keep it on the counter.
And then I just trudged along like that for a while. I think it was about 2-3 months from when I started it, that I started to get loaves that would rise well and the consistency of my bread baking results started to pick up. I found some other recipes for sourdough bread (basic white sourdough, dark rye, etc.) and was having better luck at this time, so I have since been making those same recipes regularly. I haven't gone back to some of the earlier recipes that I tried . . . maybe I was just too disappointed with them. My guess is the recipes were fine, it was just my starter.
I would guess that 3 months after starting my starter . . . around December . . . my starter was finally up to par. Since then it has actually improved! I am getting some crazy nice loaves of bread now.

That isn't just me either. I gave BBH some of my starter near the beginning and she has noticed the same improvement.
To answer your last question . . . it was the ability to make the bread rise that was making those first loaves so-so. I think I actually preferred the flavor of those first loaves, because they were very sour. But I guess, ultimatel, the texture of the bread outweighs the flavor, IMO. It isn't that my sourdough isn't sour anymore . . . just not intensely so. But to me there is nothing quite like fluffy, melt-in-your-mouth bread.
