Soft, airy, and cooked on the stove top, these delicious sourdough English muffins begin with simple ingredients, an active starter, and a bit of fermentation time. With a crisp, structured exterior and a bubbly crumb full of sourdough flavor, use these muffins to build the perfect cheesy breakfast sandwiches or slather them with butter and jam for a filling snack.

Homemade sourdough English muffins change the game with their simplicity and versatility. Long-fermented and perfectly tangy, this easy recipe requires only pantry staples and an active starter with an overnight rise. The fermentation time not only adds better flavor, but also better digestion and a delicate, chewy crumb full of bubbly pockets that trap butter and homemade strawberry jam.
The flavor and structure of these muffins lend themselves perfectly to many different uses, such as savory sourdough breakfast sandwiches or even English muffin pizzas with homemade marinara and fresh mozzarella.
For more sourdough favorites, try these soft sourdough pancakes or waffles, sweet sourdough cinnamon rolls or coffee cake, or make a batch of sourdough biscuits or beignets. Making your own sourdough starter requires minimal ingredients and some patience, but the recipe opportunities are endless.
Why You’ll Love This Recipe
Sourdough flavor – Homemade English muffins have a savory, yeasty flavor, and sourdough fermentation adds a delicious tang that complements sweet or savory toppings.
Airy texture – Fermentation creates carbon dioxide, which builds up in the dough as bubbles. These bubbles cook in place, creating a crumb delicately arranged with the characteristic nooks and crannies that hold anything from jams and butters to melty cheeses and mashed avocado.
Versatile use – Use these for cheesy egg sandwiches, like eggs Benedict, or spread with soft butter and peach jelly, drizzle with honey and peanut butter, or pile them high with homemade chicken salad.
Ingredients

Flour – I use unbleached all-purpose flour for this recipe. Fresh-milled wheat also works, but the liquids need to be adjusted to account for the high absorbency of fresh-milled flour.
Sourdough starter – Use a recently fed, active, and bubbly starter.
Water – You can use milk in place of the water, if desired.
A full ingredient list with exact amounts can be found in the recipe card below.
How to Make Sourdough English Muffins (with baking soda)

Step 1: The day before you plan to cook the muffins, start with fermenting the grains. Add flour, water, and sourdough starter to a large mixing bowl or the bowl of a stand mixer and mix well. Use an active sourdough starter that has been recently fed.

Step 2: Cover the bowl with a towel and let it sit at room temperature for 12-24 hours. The fermentation process speeds up with warmer temperatures and slows with cooler temperatures. Where you place the bowl affects the timing.

Step 3: After the bulk fermentation, add honey, salt, and baking soda, stirring well.

Step 4: Transfer the dough to a lightly floured work surface and roll out to a 1/2 inch thick rectangle. Cut out circles using a biscuit cutter or a wide-mouth mason jar. Sprinkle the biscuits with cornmeal to prevent them from sticking while cooking (optional).

Step 5: Preheat your cast iron pan on medium heat until hot. Add some oil, then place the English muffins into the pan. Immediately reduce the heat to low so the dough has a chance to rise without the exterior burning.

Step 6: Cook until doubled in size, flipping only when the first side is golden. After flipping, increase the temperature a little so that the second side of the muffin cooks until golden brown. Let them cool for a few minutes, then slice and enjoy!
How to Make Sourdough English Muffins (without baking soda)

Step 1: Add all ingredients to a bowl (minus baking soda) and mix well. Let the dough rest for 30 minutes; this is called autolyse. This is the process of allowing the dough to rest so the flour has a chance to hydrate. Also, during this time, the gluten starts to develop, and the dough becomes stretchier.

Step 2: With the dough in the bowl, do one round of stretch and folds by grabbing one side of the ball of dough, stretching it upward, and then pressing it back into the center. Repeat with each side of the dough, for one complete round. Repeat the stretch and folds after 30 minutes, then set the bowl in a warm place and let it rise for 5-8 hours. The dough should double in size.

Step 3: After the fermentation, shape the muffins by rolling the dough into a 1/2 inch thick rectangle. Cut out circles using a biscuit cutter or a wide-mouth mason jar.

Step 4: Place on a baking sheet lined with parchment paper with a little cornmeal sprinkled on the bottom (optional). Cover and rise again for about an hour in a warm place until doubled in size.

Step 5: Preheat your cast iron pan on medium heat. When the skillet is hot, oil the pan and add the English muffins. Immediately reduce the heat to low so the dough has a chance to rise without the exterior burning. Cover with a lid and allow to cook for about 5 minutes.

Step 6: Flip once they are golden brown on the first side, then cook through until completely done – this usually takes another 5 minutes or so. Place on a cooling rack for a few minutes before slicing.
Tips
- Make sure the sourdough starter you are using is nice and active. This will give the dough those beautiful bubbles. Sourdough discard can be used if it was recently fed, but the rise time may need to be lengthened.
- The type of flour you use, as well as the humidity and quality of the starter, will cause each batch to need slightly different amounts of flour. If the dough seems too runny, add a bit more flour.
- Fermentation time will depend on the temperature of your home. The cooler your home, the longer it will take for the dough to double. Placing the dough in a warm place will speed up the process significantly.
- You can skip the second rise as long as you use baking soda. Without baking soda, allow the shaped muffins to rise for about an hour, or until doubled, before baking.
- The skillet needs to be hot before adding the English muffin dough so it doesn’t stick, but then it needs to be quickly reduced so the dough has a chance to rise and cook through without burning. Monitor the color of the muffins closely so they don’t burn.
- Cook four at a time so they have space to expand, or they will stick together.
- Don’t try to flip the muffins until they come up easily from the pan. The goal is to only flip them one time.
- If they are browned on the outside, but still not done on the inside, put them in a 250 to 300 degree oven for 10 minutes or so.
Recipe FAQs
Keep extra muffins in an airtight container or bag at room temperature for 4-5 days. Freeze them for longer storage.
Yes! Fermentation breaks down phytic acid, an anti-nutrient that hinders absorption, making sourdough English muffins easier to digest, as well as a great source of fiber and B vitamins. Also, homemade English muffins have zero artificial ingredients or preservatives.
You can expect the characteristic yeasty, salty flavor and bubbly, chewy texture of traditional English muffins, with the main difference being a long-fermented sourdough tang.
During fermentation, the natural yeasts in sourdough produce carbon dioxide, which is trapped in the wet dough as bubbles. When handled carefully and cooked on the stovetop, these bubbles cook in place, producing that characteristic “nooks and crannies” crumb.
While sourdough discard can have great results, use a discard that has been fed in the last week or so, and be prepared to adjust the liquid and fermentation times. See my recipe created specifically for sourdough discard English muffins for further instructions.
More Sourdough Recipes from the Farmhouse
- Sourdough Pizza Crust
- Sourdough Tortillas
- Sourdough Irish Soda Bread
- Easy Sourdough Flatbread
- Sourdough Cheddar Biscuits
If you try this recipe and love it, I would love it if you could come back and give it 5 stars! Tag me on Instagram @farmhouseonboone.




















Have you made these with all einkorn flour?
I have not. I have a recipe for einkorn biscuits which is probably the most similar. The recipe will need to be adjusted a bit to make it work for einkorn (less liquid).
This recipe was so good!! My husband and I ate two right away. I do have some adjustments to make: need my starter to be more active, more flour, and then I need to adjust for my awful stove. Can’t wait until I perfect them!
I have a Potato-Flake Sourdough starter, will this recipe work? Or do I need to alter some of the measurements? Thanks for your help!
I would think it would work, but I have never tried it. The amount of water may need to be adjusted based on how thick the starter is.
Could you cook these in the oven instead of a cast iron skillet?
Yes!
These turned out like biscuits, not English muffins. This is the second recipe I’ve made that the actual recipe is completely different from what the blog says to do. Very confusing!
I’m so sorry that you are having issues with these. I’ve actually changed it a bit, but wanted to keep the original way as well so others still had access to it.
Hello! I’m sorry, I’m really confused by this recipe. If I cover the dough with a towel, won’t it get crusty on top? Second, the instructions say to preheat the cast iron on low then turn down it down to low. Thank you!
You can use a wet towel to prevent this or a bowl with a lid. Sorry. Preheat on high and then turn down to low.
Even though I screwed the recipe up by putting the honey with the ferment (too sticky), then leaving out the salt and doing almost everything wrong with this recipe, they still did well for me!
I used bacon fat, as that was what I had. Didn’t have cornmeal, so left that out, but will do next time.
I ate one warm, with ranch powder on it to hide the blandness. Excellent though way too big. (My fault.)
Definitely making again, but following the recipe to a T.
I’m glad it still worked for you. And ranch powder sounds yummy!
Lisa, thank you so much for your gift of teaching! I have learned so much from you and I am having so much fun with my starter. Our daughter has a gluten sensitivity and can eat my sourdough. I haven’t mastered the artisan loaf yet, but I can rock the bagels, sandwich loaves, English muffins, pancakes, pizza crusts and flatbreads!!
Wow that is wonderful! Keep up the good work. Happy baking.
Hello Lisa! I love all the sourdough recipes! Sandwich bread and English muffins are my faves! I think I am getting the hang of it. One suggestion, could you make a sourdough book with other people’s pictures of their sourdough in it? Plus all questions you can do think of plus answers after each question? I am older and have a hard time finding what I need to know on the site. Seems like I have to spend lots of time finding answers. I also had a sourdough mold when I first started. Had a couple things not rise cause I didn’t understand that you had to feed starter after taking it out of fridge. Maybe add different scenarios also. It is a learning process, but I love it!
Why do these recipes always have you mix in baking soda after the 24 hr period? You lose out on the wonderful bubbles from the sourdough ferment. Also the dough is way too thick to properly take on baking soda. I usually just mix it all in all at once. I also started having much better luck when I mix it up, let it sit for an hour, then immediately shape it into loaves or English muffins or bagels or whatever and then let it sit 12-24 hours to rise. Before that I was killing the beautiful rise by punching down and reshaping or mixing in some random ingredient at the end.
I’ve always thought the rise wouldn’t be as good if the baking soda and baking powder was added and then allowed to sit. You don’t feel like that is the case though?