You put a day into that loaf — don’t let it go stale by day two. Sourdough actually keeps better than most bread thanks to its natural acidity, but only if you store it right. The good news is the rules are simple, and most of them are about what not to do.
The golden rules
Storage is a trade-off between a crisp crust and a soft crumb. These principles hold whichever you choose.
Cool completely first — wrapping warm bread traps steam and turns the crust soggy and the crumb gummy.
Crust vs crumb — air keeps the crust crisp; plastic keeps the crumb soft. You can't maximise both.
Never the fridge — cold speeds up staling — the one place you should not put bread.
Freeze for the long haul — anything past 2–3 days is better frozen than left out.
Day 1–2: on the counter
For the first day or two, the counter is the best place for a crusty loaf.
- 1Cool fully Let the loaf cool completely on a rack — ideally a few hours — before you cut or store it.
- 2Cut from the middle (optional) Some bakers slice from the centre and press the two halves together, protecting more crumb than cutting from an end.
- 3Store cut-side down Sit the loaf cut-face-down on a board or counter. The crust shields the top and the cut face rests on the surface, slowing moisture loss.
- 4Leave it unwrapped or bag it in paper Open air or a paper bag keeps the crust crackly. Add a bread box if you want a little more protection.
Crust crisp or crumb soft?
Choose your storage by what you care about most.
Freezing for the long haul
Freezing is the single best way to keep sourdough — and it locks in near-fresh quality if you do it early.
- 1Cool completely Never freeze a warm loaf; let it cool fully so no steam is trapped.
- 2Slice first Slice the loaf before freezing so you can pull out only what you need and toast from frozen.
- 3Wrap airtight Bag or wrap the slices with the air pressed out to prevent freezer burn. A whole loaf can be double-wrapped instead.
- 4Freeze up to ~3 months Label and freeze. Toast slices straight from frozen, or thaw a whole loaf and refresh it in the oven.
Reviving a stale loaf
Day-old sourdough isn’t a lost cause — a hot oven brings it back.
Lightly mist the whole loaf with water (or hold the crust briefly under a running tap), then bake at 180–200°C (360–390°F) for 5–10 minutes. The moisture turns to steam inside, re-softening the crumb, while the heat re-crisps the crust. It comes out remarkably close to fresh. One catch: refreshed bread stales again quickly, so do this just before you plan to eat it.
Common storage mistakes
- ×Wrapping a warm loaf → traps steam, soggy crust and gummy crumb; always cool first
- ×Storing in the fridge → speeds up staling; use the counter or freezer instead
- ×Sealing a crusty loaf in plastic on day one → softens the crust you worked for
- ×Freezing without slicing → you have to thaw the whole thing to get one piece
- ×Refreshing too early → refreshed bread goes stale fast, so reheat just before eating
