
I've been handing this recipe around in various places and I thought I'd share here too, where I originally got the idea. Special thanks to Mariana who helped me find the original post about this (linked at the bottom of the post).
The traditional way to create a starter can take a few weeks to a month to have a usable culture. Some science-minded bakers have figured out a way to accelerate the process to have a viable and very beautiful tasting culture in just 3-7 days. Using heat and hydration it’s possible to speed up the fermentation to get through the “bad bacteria” phase in just 48 hours, leaving you a usable culture on the third day with some luck. I created my starter on a Tuesday and I baked with it on that Friday with great results.
I first came across this method in a post on The Fresh Loaf by the contributor Ars Pistorica, AKA Ian Lowe of Apiece Bakery in Tasmania. I’ve been using this method ever since I first read about it in 2013. He uses whole wheat and/or rye. It’s not the only way to accelerate the first stages of creating a starter, but this is how I’ve adapted this method to various gluten-free grains. Use whole grain, freshly milled flour if possible. The method can be used for almost any kind of flour, including roots like potato or cassava flour (though I haven't tested this). Teff is the absolute best, but it’s expensive so I usually use sorghum. I tried millet for the first time this time around and it turned out amazing to my surprise.You need some way to keep the culture at a consistent temperature for 24 hours at a time. I use a seedling heat mat, but a yogurt machine or a large insulated jug or cooler filled with water at the correct temperature also works.
Step 1: In a plastic gallon bag or in a large silicone bag mix: 50g flour, 100g spring water Temp:40°C/104°fLay these directly on the seedling mat or immerse in warm water and keep heated to a constant temperature for 24 hours.

Step 2: The culture may smell anywhere from mildly funky to really, really bad. This is normal.Add to the bag and mix in as best you can: 50g flour Temp:35°c/95°fIf it’s so thick it’s hard to mix, you can add about 80g spring water. I usually do this for sorghum starters.Lay the bag on a cooling rack over the seedling mat or immerse in warm water and keep heated at a constant temperature for 24 hours.

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You don’t say how much flour you feed it. And in step 3, it looks like you are saying yo use 250 g flour instead of “step 2, 50 g”. Your post just needs some editing and proofing to be understandable.
And thank you for sharing this method. I was able to bake 10 days after creating my starter but having a starter ready sooner is a huge bonus!
Thanks for the catch! It's 50g flour as in the day before. I couldn't get the formatting to give me spaces on this site so it is very difficult to read and proof. Thanks for slogging through it!