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Sourdough love stories

We meet some very old (bread) mothers and the families that care for them.

A spongy collection of flour, water, wild yeasts and bacteria may seem an unlikely object of affection, but some sourdough starters are truly cherished, and can even become part of the family.

Emily Thomas hears how one starter has been used to bake bread in the same family since the Canadian gold rush more than 120 years ago, and speaks to a man trying to preserve sourdough diversity and heritage by running the world's only library dedicated to starter cultures.

And a German baker, whose starter has survived Nazism and communism, reveals the commercial demands of maintaining it and why old ‘mothers’ (as sourdough starters are known) hold a powerful lesson for us all in nurturing living things.

Producers: Simon Tulett and Sarah Stolarz

(Picture: A woman holding bread. Credit: Getty Images/Â鶹ÊÓƵAV)

Contributors:

Ione Christensen;
Karl de Smedt, Puratos;
Christoph Hatscher, Bäckerei & Konditorei Hatscher

Available now

29 minutes

Last on

Sun 21 Feb 2021 12:32GMT

Broadcasts

  • Thu 10 Dec 2020 04:32GMT
  • Thu 10 Dec 2020 06:32GMT
  • Thu 10 Dec 2020 09:32GMT
  • Thu 10 Dec 2020 13:32GMT
  • Thu 10 Dec 2020 21:32GMT
  • Thu 10 Dec 2020 23:32GMT
  • Thu 18 Feb 2021 02:32GMT
  • Thu 18 Feb 2021 06:32GMT
  • Thu 18 Feb 2021 09:32GMT
  • Thu 18 Feb 2021 13:32GMT
  • Thu 18 Feb 2021 21:32GMT
  • Thu 18 Feb 2021 23:32GMT
  • Sun 21 Feb 2021 12:32GMT

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