sourdough-starter-manager
Manage sourdough starters with feeding schedules, hydration calculations, health tracking, and baking preparation. Use when the user wants to maintain a sourdough starter, plan feedings, calculate ratios, troubleshoot starter problems, or prepare for baking.
Best use case
sourdough-starter-manager is best used when you need a repeatable AI agent workflow instead of a one-off prompt.
Manage sourdough starters with feeding schedules, hydration calculations, health tracking, and baking preparation. Use when the user wants to maintain a sourdough starter, plan feedings, calculate ratios, troubleshoot starter problems, or prepare for baking.
Teams using sourdough-starter-manager should expect a more consistent output, faster repeated execution, less prompt rewriting.
When to use this skill
- You want a reusable workflow that can be run more than once with consistent structure.
When not to use this skill
- You only need a quick one-off answer and do not need a reusable workflow.
- You cannot install or maintain the underlying files, dependencies, or repository context.
Installation
Claude Code / Cursor / Codex
Manual Installation
- Download SKILL.md from GitHub
- Place it in
.claude/skills/sourdough-starter-manager/SKILL.mdinside your project - Restart your AI agent — it will auto-discover the skill
How sourdough-starter-manager Compares
| Feature / Agent | sourdough-starter-manager | Standard Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Platform Support | Not specified | Limited / Varies |
| Context Awareness | High | Baseline |
| Installation Complexity | Unknown | N/A |
Frequently Asked Questions
What does this skill do?
Manage sourdough starters with feeding schedules, hydration calculations, health tracking, and baking preparation. Use when the user wants to maintain a sourdough starter, plan feedings, calculate ratios, troubleshoot starter problems, or prepare for baking.
Where can I find the source code?
You can find the source code on GitHub using the link provided at the top of the page.
Related Guides
AI Agents for Marketing
Discover AI agents for marketing workflows, from SEO and content production to campaign research, outreach, and analytics.
AI Agents for Startups
Explore AI agent skills for startup validation, product research, growth experiments, documentation, and fast execution with small teams.
AI Agents for Coding
Browse AI agent skills for coding, debugging, testing, refactoring, code review, and developer workflows across Claude, Cursor, and Codex.
SKILL.md Source
# Sourdough Starter Manager ## Description The Sourdough Starter Manager helps bakers maintain healthy, active sourdough starters through intelligent feeding schedules, precise hydration calculations, health monitoring, and baking preparation planning. Whether you're a beginner or experienced baker, this skill ensures your starter stays healthy and ready for any baking project. ## Core Capabilities ### 1. Feeding Schedule Management - Calculate feeding ratios (starter:flour:water) - Generate maintenance schedules (daily, weekly, refrigerated) - Create pre-bake preparation timelines - Track feeding history and patterns - Set reminders for upcoming feedings ### 2. Hydration Calculations - Calculate current starter hydration percentage - Convert between different hydration levels (e.g., 100% to 75%) - Adjust recipes for different starter hydrations - Calculate flour and water needed for target amounts ### 3. Health Monitoring & Troubleshooting - Diagnose common starter problems - Track rise times and peak activity - Monitor smell, consistency, and appearance - Provide recovery protocols for neglected starters - Identify contamination vs. normal fermentation ### 4. Baking Preparation - Calculate starter amounts needed for recipes - Generate feeding schedules to reach target amounts - Plan multi-day preparation timelines - Adjust for room temperature variations - Optimize timing for specific bake schedules ## Usage Examples ### Example 1: Daily Maintenance Feeding **User**: "I need to feed my starter. I have 50g of starter right now." **Assistant Response**: - Suggests 1:1:1 ratio feeding (50g starter : 50g flour : 50g water) - Notes this will yield 150g total - Recommends discarding excess if not baking soon - Provides timeline: feed now, ready in 4-8 hours at room temp (68-75°F) ### Example 2: Pre-Bake Preparation **User**: "I want to bake bread on Saturday morning. My recipe needs 200g of active starter." **Assistant Response**: - Calculates backward timeline from Saturday morning - Suggests feeding schedule: Thursday night and Friday evening - Provides specific amounts to feed at each stage - Warns about room temperature considerations - Offers contingency plan if starter doesn't rise as expected ### Example 3: Hydration Conversion **User**: "My starter is at 100% hydration but the recipe calls for 75% hydration. How do I convert?" **Assistant Response**: - Explains hydration percentage concept - Calculates flour/water adjustments needed - Provides step-by-step conversion process - Suggests how to maintain a 75% starter vs. one-time conversion - Notes texture and consistency differences ### Example 4: Troubleshooting **User**: "My starter smells like nail polish remover and hasn't risen in days." **Assistant Response**: - Identifies likely cause: hooch formation and starvation - Diagnoses: needs more frequent feeding - Provides recovery protocol: 1. Pour off liquid (hooch) 2. Discard 75% of starter 3. Feed with 1:2:2 ratio (more food to revive it) 4. Feed every 12 hours for 3-4 days 5. Monitor for sweet-sour smell and doubling - Sets realistic recovery timeline - Explains when to discard and start fresh ### Example 5: Long-Term Storage **User**: "I'm going on vacation for 2 weeks. How do I store my starter?" **Assistant Response**: - Recommends refrigeration method - Feeding protocol before storage: 1:5:5 ratio (well-fed) - Storage instructions: airtight container with room to expand - Revival instructions for return - Alternative: dehydration method for longer storage - Notes on starter resilience (can survive months in fridge) ## Key Formulas & Calculations ### Hydration Percentage ``` Hydration % = (Water Weight / Flour Weight) × 100 Example: 50g flour + 50g water = 100% hydration 50g flour + 37.5g water = 75% hydration ``` ### Feeding Ratio Notation ``` 1:1:1 = 1 part starter : 1 part flour : 1 part water 1:2:2 = 1 part starter : 2 parts flour : 2 parts water Example with 50g starter: 1:2:2 = 50g starter + 100g flour + 100g water = 250g total ``` ### Target Amount Calculation ``` To get X grams of starter at ratio R:S:F:W If ratio is 1:2:2 and you need 200g: - Total parts = 1+2+2 = 5 - Starter needed = 200/5 × 1 = 40g - Flour needed = 200/5 × 2 = 80g - Water needed = 200/5 × 2 = 80g ``` ## Troubleshooting Guide ### Common Issues **Not Rising / Slow Activity** - Likely causes: Too cold, needs more frequent feeding, weak starter - Solutions: Move to warmer spot (75-80°F), increase feeding frequency, try 1:2:2 ratio **Liquid on Top (Hooch)** - Cause: Starter is hungry and has consumed available food - Solution: Stir back in or pour off, then feed immediately **Mold Growth** - Identification: Fuzzy colored spots (green, pink, orange) - Action: Discard entire starter, sanitize container, start fresh - Prevention: Regular feeding, clean utensils, proper ratios **Acetone/Nail Polish Smell** - Cause: Starvation and alcohol production - Solution: Feed more frequently with higher flour ratios **No Bubbles After Several Days** - Possible causes: Chlorinated water, non-organic flour, too cold - Solutions: Use filtered water, try organic flour, increase temperature ### Health Indicators **Healthy Starter Signs:** - Doubles in size within 4-8 hours of feeding - Pleasant sweet-sour smell - Bubbles throughout - Passes float test (drop in water and it floats) - Elastic, stretchy consistency **Unhealthy Starter Signs:** - No rise after 12+ hours - Offensive smell (not just sour) - No bubbles - Watery consistency that doesn't improve - Colored spots or mold ## Storage Methods ### Refrigeration (Best for 1-4 week breaks) 1. Feed with 1:5:5 ratio 2. Let rise to peak (4-8 hours) 3. Seal in container with room to expand 4. Refrigerate 5. Can last months with occasional feeding (every 2-4 weeks) ### Dehydration (Best for long-term storage) 1. Feed starter and wait until peak rise 2. Spread thin layer on parchment paper 3. Air dry completely (2-3 days) or use dehydrator 4. Break into flakes and store in airtight container 5. Rehydrate with equal parts flour and water ### Freezing (Not recommended) - Can damage yeast and bacterial cultures - May not revive successfully ## Temperature Guidelines | Temperature | Activity Level | Feeding Frequency | |-------------|----------------|-------------------| | 65-70°F | Slow | Every 24 hours | | 70-75°F | Moderate | Every 12-24 hours | | 75-80°F | Active | Every 8-12 hours | | 80-85°F | Very Active | Every 6-8 hours | | 85°F+ | Too Hot | Risk of bad bacteria | ## Baking Preparation Timeline ### Same-Day Bake (8-12 hours notice) - Take refrigerated starter out - Feed 1:2:2 ratio - Use when doubled (4-8 hours depending on temp) ### Next-Day Bake - **Evening before**: Feed refrigerated starter 1:1:1 - **Morning of bake**: Starter should be at peak, ready to use ### Weekend Bake Planning - **Thursday evening**: Remove from fridge, feed 1:2:2 - **Friday morning**: Discard all but 50g, feed 1:2:2 - **Friday evening**: Check rise, feed 1:1:1 (or according to recipe needs) - **Saturday morning**: Use at peak rise ## Best Practices 1. **Consistency is Key**: Try to feed at similar times each day 2. **Ratios Matter**: Adjust feeding ratios based on schedule and temperature 3. **Trust Your Senses**: Smell and appearance tell you more than the clock 4. **Keep Records**: Track feedings and outcomes for better understanding 5. **Don't Stress**: Sourdough starters are resilient and forgiving 6. **The Float Test**: Not perfect but helpful - drop starter in water, it should float when ready 7. **Room Temperature**: Affects everything - adjust expectations accordingly 8. **Discard Uses**: Don't waste - use in pancakes, crackers, pizza dough ## Recipe Adjustments When a recipe calls for different starter than you maintain: **Your starter is 100% hydration, recipe calls for stiff (50-60%)**: - Reduce water in recipe by 10-20% - Or convert portion of your starter temporarily **Your starter is 100%, recipe calls for liquid (125%)**: - Add extra water to recipe - Or adjust your starter for one feeding ## Advanced Tips - **Peak vs. Past Peak**: Use at peak for maximum rise, past peak for more sour flavor - **Flour Types**: Whole wheat and rye ferment faster than white flour - **Water Quality**: Chlorinated water can inhibit growth - use filtered if possible - **Seasonal Variations**: May need more frequent feeding in summer, less in winter - **Whole Grain Boost**: Add 10-20% whole wheat/rye to feeding for more activity - **Starter Names**: Many bakers name their starters - it's tradition! ## When to Use This Skill Use the Sourdough Starter Manager when users: - Ask about feeding their sourdough starter - Need help calculating hydration or ratios - Want to prepare starter for baking - Have questions about starter health or troubleshooting - Need storage advice for vacations or breaks - Want to convert between different starter hydrations - Ask about timelines for baking preparation - Need help reviving a neglected or weak starter - Want to understand fermentation schedules - Ask about temperature effects on starter activity ## Important Notes - Every starter is unique and may behave slightly differently - Trust your senses (smell, sight, texture) over rigid timing - Room temperature significantly affects all timelines - When in doubt, feed your starter - it's hard to overfeed - Starters can survive weeks of neglect in the refrigerator - Start fresh if you see mold (colored fuzzy spots) - don't risk it --- *Remember: Sourdough baking is an art and a science. These guidelines are starting points - adjust based on your environment, schedule, and starter's unique personality!*
Related Skills
CRM Manager
Manages a local CSV-based CRM with pipeline tracking
Procurement Manager
You are a procurement specialist agent. Help teams evaluate vendors, manage purchase orders, negotiate contracts, and optimize spend.
Employee Offboarding Manager
Generate complete offboarding checklists and transition plans when an employee leaves.
Software License Manager
Audit, track, and optimize your organization's software licenses. Finds waste, flags compliance risks, and builds a renewal calendar.
Inventory & Supply Chain Manager
Complete inventory management, demand forecasting, supplier evaluation, and supply chain optimization for businesses of any size. From stockroom to strategy.
Environmental Compliance Manager
Assess, track, and maintain environmental regulatory compliance across EPA, state agencies, and industry-specific requirements. Built for manufacturing, construction, energy, logistics, and any business with environmental obligations.
Engineering Manager OS
Complete engineering management system — team building, 1:1s, performance, hiring, architecture decisions, incident management, and scaling. From IC-to-manager transition through director-level operations.
AI Agent Manager Playbook
Your company deployed AI agents. Now what? This skill turns you into the person who actually makes them productive — the Agent Manager.
Accounts Receivable Manager
Automate AR workflows: aging analysis, collection prioritization, payment follow-ups, cash application, and bad debt forecasting.
node-red-manager
Manage Node-RED instances via Admin API or CLI. Automate flow deployment, install nodes, and troubleshoot issues. Use when user wants to "build automation", "connect devices", or "fix node-red".
cloudflare-manager
Manage Cloudflare DNS records, Tunnels (cloudflared), and Zero Trust policies. Use for pointing domains, exposing local services via tunnels, and updating ingress rules.
evomap-heartbeat-manager
Automated EvoMap AI-to-AI network node heartbeat maintenance with continuous monitoring and error handling. Keeps your EvoMap nodes alive and active in the distributed AI work network.