Sourdough Soft Pretzels
Sourdough pretzels have a deep flavor from long fermentation and the satisfying chew and crisp crust of a classic soft pretzel. These pretzels are a fun, hands-on baking project for the whole family.

Table of contents
Why you’ll love this recipe
This recipe uses active sourdough starter for both leavening and flavor, resulting in a dough that’s complex yet easy to work with.
The process includes a quick dip in an alkaline (baking soda) bath for that signature “pretzely” crust.
I like to start the dough in the afternoon/evening of day 1 and then roll the pretzels the next morning.
If you work on this schedule you’ll have fresh hot pretzels by early afternoon. The baked pretzels freeze really well. Just pop them in the oven to re-warm before eating.
We ate these Sourdough Soft Pretzels with my Jalapeño Cheddar Dip, only this time instead of a fresh jalapeño I made the sauce with chopped up Pickled Jalapeños. YUMMMMMY!
If you don’t have one, check out my post to learn How to Make a Sourdough Starter. Then check out my system to Feed and Maintain Sourdough Starter or you can learn How to Keep a Small Sourdough Starter.
I know you hate to throw away that sourdough discard. Check out these recipes that use sourdough discard.
Ingredients

Ingredient Notes
- All Purpose Flour – Medium content AP flour makes a pretzel with a soft crumb but with enough elasticity to shape into the iconic pretzel twist.
- Sourdough Starter – The recipe was developed using a 100% hydration starter. If your starter is not 100% hydration you will need to adjust the flour or water in the recipe as needed.
- Baking Soda – The baking soda bath is alkaline (not acidic). The alkaline bath gives the pretzel the classic slightly bitter crust. The alkaline bath also aides in browning so the pretzels become deeply golden brown in the oven.
Process Photos
See the recipe card for detailed measurements and instructions.

- Combine the active starter with water and some of the flour. Set it aside for 1 hour. This give the flour time to absorb the water and begins the process of gluten development.
- Add the sugar, salt and remaining flour to the sponge.
- The dough will start out quite shaggy.
- After 5 minutes of kneading the dough should be cohesive, cling to the hook and clear the sides of the mixing bowl.

- Set the dough aside at room temperature for the initial fermentation.
- Every hour fold the dough over itself to aerate the dough and redistribute the yeast.
- After a night in the refrigerator the dough is ready for shaping.
- Divide the dough into 12 equal pieces and roll each piece into a tight ball.

- Roll the dough to a long rope. Pull up the two ends to form a “U”.
- Twist the ends 2x.
- Lift the twisted end toward the center of the “U”.
- Lift the pretzel by the top to transfer to the baking sheet. Set the pretzels aside for 1 hour.

- Boil the pretzels in the baking soda bath for 10 seconds per side.
- Transfer the boiled pretzels to a cooling rack to drain. Continue with the rest of the pretzels.
- Transfer the boiled pretzels to the baking sheet. Brush with egg white and sprinkle with salt.
- Bake until golden brown.
Storage
The pretzels are best warm from the oven or within a few hours of baking. Pack left over pretzels into storage bags and freeze up to a month. Re-warm the pretzels in a low oven to serve.
More Pretzel Recipes
More Sourdough Recipes

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Sourdough Soft Pretzels
Video
Ingredients
- 8 oz active sourdough starter (1 cup, 100% hydration)
- 10 oz warm water (1 ¼ cups)
- 17 ½ oz all-purpose flour (3 ½ cups, see note)
- 1 tablespoon granulated sugar
- 1 ½ teaspoons table salt
- 2 quarts water
- 2 ½ oz baking soda (⅓ cup, for boiling)
- 1 egg white (lightly whisked)
- salt and seeds for garnish
Instructions
- Combine 8 oz active sourdough starter and 10 oz warm water in the bowl of a stand a mixer with the paddle attached (or mix by hand).
- With the mixer running on low add 10 oz (2cups) of the flour and mix to form a smooth batter. Cover the bowl and set it aside for 30-60 minutes.
- Switch to the dough hook and add 1 tablespoon granulated sugar, 1 ½ teaspoons table salt and the remaining 7 ½ oz flour. Knead on medium speed for 5 minutes. The dough will clear the bowl and cling to the hook after kneading. If mixing by hand knead the dough hand for 5 minutes, sprinkle with extra flour as you knead if required.
- Scrape the dough into a lightly oiled bowl, turning once to coat. Cover the bowl and set aside at room temperature.
- After 30 minutes uncover the bowl, lift one side of the dough and fold it into the middle of the dough. Repeat with the other three sides of the dough then flip the dough over. You're basically turning the dough inside-out to redistribute the yeast. Cover the bowl and after 60 minutes repeat the procedure again.
- Cover the bowl and after 60 minutes turn the dough one more time. By now the dough should be lively, elastic and airy. If the dough is still sluggish give it another hour or two at room temperature. Cover tightly and refrigerate overnight.
Make the Pretzels (Day 2)
- Remove the dough from the refrigerator. Line 2 baking sheets with parchment paper and sprinkle the paper lightly with flour.
- Turn the cold dough out onto a floured surface and divide into 12 equal pieces and roll each piece into a smooth ball. Shape a dough ball into a rope. Using flat hands, roll the dough back and forth moving your hands in opposite directions from the middle of the rope towards either end. If the dough gets sticky dip your hands in flour and continue. The dough should stick to the surface just a little so that the friction will allow you to pull the dough into a long rope. The longer and thinner the rope the more open the pretzel shape will be. Try to get the rope to about 20"-24"
- To form a pretzel lift the dough rope on either end and allow the middle to sit on the surface, forming a "U" shape. Twist the ends of the rope together 2x and fold the twist over and rest on the center of the "U". Lift the pretzel by the two top loops and place on the baking sheet.
- Cover the tray with plastic wrap and set aside to for 1 hour to bring the dough to room temperature.
- Meanwhile, combine 2 quarts water and 2 ½ oz baking soda in a large pot and bring it to a boil. Preheat the oven to 475 °F.
- Drop the pretzels into the boiling water for 10 seconds, flip and boil another 10 seconds. (I can fit about 3 at a time in my pot, don't overcrowd the pan). Set the boiled pretzels onto a cooling rack set over a clean baking sheet. Continue boiling all the pretzels.
- Transfer the pretzels back to the baking sheets. Brush each pretzel with egg white and sprinkle with coarse salt and/or seeds of your choice. Bake until puffed and golden brown, about 15 minutes. Turn the sheets halfway through baking so they brown evenly.
- They’re best eaten warm from the oven. They also freeze really well.
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I just made these on a cold and rainy spring morning and oh my goodness did they turn out nice! I’ve made pretzels a couple times before, but never sourdough (I’m relatively new to the sourdough bread-making hobby), and I won’t ever make them another way again. Thank you so much for the clear instructions.
One tip, I actually used my wok to boil the pretzels. Woks have a good surface area to volume ratio, so I suspect it made the process a bit easier than using a pot. I also rolled the dough out and let it rest for a few minutes, then rolled and rested some more, and then a third time, and I was able to get fairly large pretzels like you find at the ballpark. I think if I were to divide the dough into eight rather than twelve, I could get them even closer to that size.
I’ve made soft pretzels before using dry active yeast that turned out really great. The step with the baking soda bath was a bit different. I boiled water in my electric kettle, then poured 2 cups into a bowl and dissolved 2 tablespoons of baking soda. Then I just dipped each pretzel in the hot water briefly, before transferring to a baking sheet. They baked perfectly and tasted like pretzels should. Do you think I can do the same thing for the sourdough pretzels instead of dropping them into the boiling soda water? Thank you!
Sure. That should work.
The recipe says to add 3 1/2 cups of flour but in the recipe directions it says to only add 2 cups of flour when mixing. What’s the right answer here? My dough was more sticky than ever so the 2 cup typo might cost me my whole batch, we’ll see.
Step three instructs you to add the remaining flour. “Switch to the dough hook and add the sugar, salt and remaining flour.”
@Katie, I did the right amount of flour and it still is too sticky. How did yours come out ?
In the next step (step 3) it says add sugar, salt and remaining flour, so that is when you add the other cup and a half
How do you reheat after freezing?
In a 200F oven. You can either let them defrost first or put them in frozen.
These measurements don’t work. A cup of my active starter is about 6 oz. I’m going to try this anyway, but now I’m concerned about the ratios.
Everyone’s starter will be slightly different based on the condition of the starter, the hydration percent, etc. Mine generally weighs close to 8oz. Of course if it’s super active it could be lighter. But that’s as exact as I can be with volume measure. If you have a scale you should be using the weight measurements. The volume measurements are only there for folks who don’t have a scale and must use volume measure. Volume measure will never be as accurate as weight measurements.