These soft, fluffy sourdough hamburger buns will be the star of any hamburger meal. They’re just spongy enough to soak up all that delicious burger juice, and any sauce you top your burger with, while also staying sturdy enough to hold a big juicy burger. A light egg wash gives these buns a flaky golden top, perfect for classic sesame seeds. Once you try this sourdough bun recipe, you’ll never go back to store-bought burger buns!
Soft Hamburger Bun Recipe with Sourdough Starter
Making soft burger buns is all about using the right ingredients. Unlike regular sourdough bread, you will need to use eggs, milk, and butter in this recipe. These are the ingredients that keep the buns light and fluffy!
Here’s everything you need to make the best soft hamburger buns:
- Fed, active, bubbly Sourdough Starter: I like to use my Sprouted Rye Sourdough Starter in this bun recipe. If you do not already have a starter, you’ll need to start this 7 days before baking or 2 days before baking if you use our quick recipe option.
- Flour: I use organic bread flour or organic unbleached all-purpose; both work well.
- Milk: I like to use whole milk for these buns, but plant-based milk also works well in this recipe.
- Butter: I use grass-fed organic butter, but vegan butter also works.
- Egg: I only use pasture-raised organic eggs, and make sure you whisk your egg well before adding it to the dough. If you are vegan, I’ve used Bob’s Red Mill Egg Replacer, which worked well.
- Salt: Unrefined sea salt, please! Just make sure your sea salt is unrefined and free from anti-caking agents.
- Spray Bottle Filled with Fresh Water: This is a must-have for stretching and folding the dough. (see the section below)
- Parchment Paper: Baking these sourdough buns on parchment paper is a must
Easy Sourdough Hamburger Buns
The hardest step when making these burger buns is stretching, folding, and shaping. It takes patience and a gentle touch, but it is not difficult.
I find that shaping burger buns are easier than shaping a sourdough boule. Just follow the directions in the recipe card below, and you shouldn’t have any problems!
Large Sourdough Hamburger Buns
It’s easy to make large hamburger buns at home. If you want larger buns, you need to divide the dough into fewer pieces.
This recipe gives you six large buns, perfect for a big juicy burger. If you need them even bigger, you can divide the dough into five pieces instead of six.
For smaller buns, such as buns you use to make sliders, Divide the dough into 8 or 9 pieces before shaping them into buns.
Easier to Digest Sourdough Hamburger Buns
Sourdough is the oldest form of bread. Experts say the bread originated in Egypt long ago… as in 1,500 BC. Since commercial yeasts were unavailable back then, bread products had to be naturally leavened using wild yeats.
Wild yeasts are “captured” in a sourdough starter along with flavor-developing microorganisms, like lactic acid bacteria. When I say “captured,” I mean they come from the flour you use to make them.
Since sourdough ferments during a longer rise time than traditional bread, it’s much easier to digest and more flavorful.
The flavor comes from the wild yeasts and bacteria metabolizing the sugars in the dough during the long rise and producing acids as byproducts. This is also why the bread is easier to digest! Essentially the microorganisms do some of the digesting for you in this sourdough bread recipe.
Visit our sourdough starter blog to learn more about the microbiology of sourdough starters.
Sourdough Nutrition
Sourdough bread is made out of flour, just like regular bread. However, the fermentation process makes the nutritional components of the flour more bioavailable.
Lactic acid bacteria in sourdough starters can reduce phytic acid, the compound that can prevent nutrient absorption in regular bread. Without the phytic acid binding to the minerals, you can absorb more potassium, phosphate, magnesium, folate, and zinc from the bread.
Sourdough Starter Problems?
Do you want to make this recipe but struggle with your starter? CLICK HERE for our blog on The Most Common Sourdough Starter Problems and How to Fix Them.
What to Make with these Sourdough Burger Buns
- Jalapeño Cheddar Burgers with Cilantro Lime Mayo
- Easy Vegan Beet Burgers
- Veggie Burgers with Turmeric, Chickpeas, and Sweet Potato
How to Make Sourdough Hamburger Buns
These soft, fluffy, flavorful buns will be the star of any hamburger meal. They’re just spongy enough to soak up all that delicious burger juice, and any sauce you top your burger with, while also staying sturdy enough to hold a big juicy burger. A light egg wash gives these buns a flaky golden top, perfect for classic sesame seeds. Once you try this sourdough bun recipe, you’ll never go back to store bought burger buns!
- Prep Time: 1 hour
- Cook Time: 30 minutes
- Total Time: 1 hour 30 minutes
- Yield: 6 Servings
- Category: Sourdough
- Method: Oven Baked
- Diet: Vegan
Ingredients
Buns
- 100 grams Sourdough Starter
- 300 grams Warm Milk
- 1 Egg, beaten
- 450 grams Bread Flour
- 10 grams sea salt
- 2 Tablespoons Butter, grated
- 20 grams sugar
- 2 teaspoons active dry yeast (optional)****
Egg Wash
- 1 Tablespoon Milk
- 1 egg beaten
- Sesame Seeds
Instructions
- In a large bowl, combine all of the bun ingredients
- Knead the ingredients together until a uniform dough ball forms.
- Cover the bowl with a towel and rest the dough for 30 minutes.
- First Stretch and Fold: Turn the dough onto a lightly floured countertop. Scrape out the bowl and rinse the inside of the bowl well. Dry the bowl and rub the inside lightly with oil.
- Stretch and fold the dough. Stretch the top of the dough over the bottom, side over side, and bottom over the top. Place the dough back in the bowl with the seam side down. Let the dough rest for 2 hours. It should puff up quite a lot.
- Second Stretch and Fold: Turn the dough onto a lightly floured countertop so the wet side is up.
- Stretch and fold the dough. Stretch the top of the dough over the bottom, side over side, and bottom over the top. Place the dough back in the oiled bowl with the seam side down. Let the dough rest for 1 hour.
- Next, sprinkle some flour on the surface of your counter. Remove the dough from the bowl and place it on the floured surface with the wet side up.
- Stretch the dough into a rectangle that’s a little bigger than a sheet of paper. Be gentle with the dough! You don’t want to flatten it. Lightly pull the sides.
- Using a knife or a pizza cutter, cut the dough into 6 even squares. (for smaller buns, cut into 7 or 8 squares)
- Line a baking sheet with parchment paper and sprinkle flour on top of the parchment paper.
- Grab a single square, and fold in the corners of the dough over each other, forming a round dough ball. Place the dough ball on the floured parchment paper. Repeat until all the dough has been shaped.
- Lightly press down on the tops of the dough balls to flatten them slightly.
- Lightly sprinkle the top of the dough balls with flour. Cover the dough balls with a towel and let them rise for 1 hour at room temperature.
- Preheat your oven to 400 degrees F. (Note: If you feel that your oven runs on the hotter side, you can bake at 375 F)
- Whisk together the egg and milk for the egg wash.
- Baste the buns with egg wash. Leave them plain, or sprinkle sesame seeds on top.
- Bake for 15 minutes. Rotate the pan and bake for another 10 minutes until the buns are golden brown.
- Remove and allow to cool for 30 minutes.
Notes
**** If you want to speed up the process, you can add a packet of active dry yeast to the dough. If you do the dough will only take 90 minutes total to rise, before you can shape and bake.
You can freeze these buns for extended storage.
11 comments
Hi Kaitlynn
I’m so excited about this recipe. Busy making the dough as I type. I was curious if adding steam to the oven is necessary, as with other sourdough bread? or possibly putting a lid on the buns for the first 15 min bake?
Steam isn’t necessary, but I am located in a very humid climate, so it may be different for you. If you want to add a little steam or humidity, you can throw a few ice cubes in the bottom of the oven with the first 15-minute bake.
Easy to make, delicious, and perfect for my gluten-sensitive family! I’ve made them with wheat flour and kamut and both turned out great.
The fluffy hamburger buns of my dreams. Straightforward instructions that made for a great result! My family is already asking me to make these again.
What a beautiful easy to follow recipe with fantastic results! This will be the recipe I use for all my hamburger buns!
Thank you for this review! Happy to hear you enjoyed the buns!
These buns are baking as I type! They are just beautiful! Another 5 star recipe from the cultured guru! Also-made my favorite recipe of all time-your rustic sourdough bread with rosemary-it comes out perfect every time! Still can’t figure out why this works for me when pretty much all other sourdoughs are a fail! If it ain’t broke-dont fix it!❤️
These buns turned out amazing! I used warm buttermilk and no yeast. I will definitely be making these again!! Great recipe!
Made these Memorial Day weekend. Didn’t get them done in time for burgers, but that was one me for not planning ahead. Ate them the next day with some Hannah Q pulled pork and homemade coleslaw. Very delicious and great use of sourdough discard.
Hi! If I am using yeast along with my starter, do I skip the stretch and fold steps and simply wait to shape and bake? Thanks!
you can still do all the steps, just reduce each waiting/resting/rising period by half