Preserving Starter During Vacation

Toast

I have a whole rye flour starter at 100% hydration.  Before the current heat wave and resulting electric power shortage I was feeding the starter (no name yet; suggestions welcome) once or twice a week, 12 hrs before mixing the levain/sourdough.  It would about double at room temp or double + at 80 - 85 F in those 12 hrs.  The feeds are 1:10:10 with hot water, per "The Rye Baker".   After mixing the levain/sourdough, the starter went back into the fridge at 39 F / 4 C, which apparently put the yeast to sleep. 

We have a 3 week vacation coming up.  What's the best way to make sure that the starter will survive?  Since it goes dormant and falls back in the fridge, can I just do a regular 1:10:10 feed, let it grow for 12 hrs, and then into the fridge as usual?   Or should I do a 1:20:20 or even 1:30:30 feed to make sure there is enough food?  Or should I do the feed and (before or after the 12 hr development) divide it into two - half in the fridge, half in the freezer?   

I expect to do 2-3 daily feeds (that is feed in the AM once each day for about 2-3 days) when I get back to revive the starter before baking.  

Thanks for your help. 

Five years ago, I had to have major surgery. I did not want my 100 year old starter to die after I'd kept alive for 10 years. I searched for a way to preserve it. Get a rimmed baking sheet and cover it with parchment paper or foil. Spread a thin layer of your active starter on the parchment. Cover with a dry towel but don't let the towel touch the starter. Let it all dry thoroughly over a couple of days. Scrape the dried starter off the paper and place in an airtight container. 

https://www.kingarthurbaking.com/blog/2015/05/01/putting-sourdough-starter-hold

When you're ready to begin baking again, follow the directions above for refreshing it. 

Thanks, that's a great idea; the link to the KA article is very helpful.   I think I'll hedge by drying half my starter and keeping half in the fridge with a big feed.  When I get back, I try to revive both separately, and see how they do. 

This would be a good opportunity to experiment with several forms of backup.

1. Dried, as Ambimom said. Which is what I do.

2. High feed ratio, still at 100% hydration, and then put in the fridge, as you propose.

and I'd add:

3. A normal 1:1:1 feed, but then right before putting in fridge, add enough flour to make it 80% hydration. Lower hydration can make a starter live longer between feedings.

4. Same as 3, but put it in freezer.

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My experience of freezing 100% hydration starter is that it only lasted 3 to 4 months.

The King Arthur article on drying starter says that freezing will kill the starter.  I think I'll be OK with drying + big feed and refrigeration.

At worst, I can always start again;  the starter is only 6-8 months old, IIRC. 

I had shoulder surgery earlier this year. I have a one-year old 100% whole rye starter. IIRC, I fed my starter twice at 1:10:10 before surgery and then didn't touch it for six weeks. After that, I refreshed it at 1:10:10 every couple of weeks for a couple months until I recently could start baking again. I did not notice any sluggishness with the starter in the two breads I have made that relied exclusively on the starter for leavening.

My starter gets fed daily in a 1:2:2 ratio with a 50/50 mix of whole wheat and all-purpose.  When I am going on vacation, I feed the starter in the morning and let it show some expansion (generally occurs by early afternoon) and then I put the starter in the refrigerator.  It goes dormant while I am away. When I return from vacation, I feed the starter in the morning to revive it and then if it seems to need another boost I feed it that night.  Typically after that I can feed once a day in the morning, and it will be revived and ready to go in a day or two.  Nothing special needed.

The same procedure is used if I feel like taking a week away from baking.  Never had a problem with this approach, and that includes a three-week vacation.

Thanks.  I think the starter in the fridge should be OK for 3 weeks at 39 F / 4 C.  I am not certain but I have a hunch that the yeast sleeps soundly at that temp but the bacteria go on a little longer, or just continue very slowly.  Maybe I'll do two jars: the regular 7g starter at 1:10:10 and a double batch of 14g with a big feeding like 1:20:20, just as a hedge.  

When I get home, it will be interesting to see if there's any difference between the revived dried starter, the regular 1:10:10 feed refrigerated, and the 1:20:20 feed refrigerated. I wouldn't be surprised if after a couple of feedings after I get back that there's no perceptible difference.