I'm pretty new to sourdough - I've noticed that my dough always feels much stickier and a different texture than when I was just using commercial yeast. And, yes, I'm taking into account the hydration of the starter. The dough feels almost like taffy when I'm folding and shaping the loaf, very stretchy like bubblegum. (have I over kneaded the dough?) and seems to get wetter over time.
This got me thinking ... I keep feeding my starter and stirring it down .. so that starter already has the gluten developed pretty well and then I add it to flour and water and knead it some more. Perhaps I should knead my flour and water and then add the starter later so the starter isn't getting any more kneading?
Anything else ventured would be guesswork. What is your recipe? At what stage does this happen? What flour are you using?
More info the better.
Follow a recipe for now. But let's have a look at what you've done...
Initial autolyse was around 57% hydrated.
Final dough was around 70% hydrated.
Salt was 2% (normal)
Starter was around 61% (this is very high but ok if handled correctly).
Once your starter went into the dough the bulk ferment started. I calculate 4 hours! TBH I think you made more starter with that percentage and timing. Worse if it's very warm where you live.
How about this for a very nice recipe http://www.wildyeastblog.com/my-new-favorite-sourdough/
A nice build for the Levain would be:
Flour 100%
Water 100%
Starter 20%
Left for 12-14 hours overnight.
If you do a long final proof in the fridge then I advise you to put the shaped dough straight into the fridge to avoid over proofing. Otherwise follow the recipe.
I collect and rate my bread recipes - from firm favourite through must repeat to never again. And just as I reckon I 've reached nirvana, along comes another to tempt the senses, blow the weekend plans and ultimately scuttle the ratings chart!
This past weekend it was David's SJSD, and now this pops up from Lechem/wildyeastblog [audible sigh of exasperation].
Rather like one's children, nominating a favourite is not an option; same for bread?
The dough for a sourdough bread usually does feel looser and wetter as fermentation proceeds, compared to a dough made with commercial yeast. The bacteria in the sourdough culture produce acids, which give us the sour flavors, and protease enzymes, among other things. The acids and the enzymes both lead to breakdown of the gluten network in the dough as time progresses.
The baker strives to find the balance between enough fermentation for adequate aeration and flavor in the dough and too much fermentation that breaks down the dough. What you have observed is normal in sourdough. Now it's a matter of figuring out the new (to you) tactics to employ for the outcome that you want.
Paul