Easy Sourdough Discard Crackers (Thin & Crispy)
This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure policy.
Made with only four ingredients, these thin and crispy sourdough discard crackers are so easy to make and are so, so tasty: buttery and flaky with a perfect tang. The seasonings can be adapted to your tastes and preferences, and the dough freezes well, too 🎉

If you are looking for a simple way to put your sourdough discard to good use, look no further. These crackers, made with three basic ingredients — flour, salt, and butter — plus a hefty amount of sourdough discard, will make you never want to discard your discard again.
The recipe and method produce a thin and crispy cracker, buttery and flaky, with the perfect tang. They’re delicious on their own, but even better topped with a slice of sharp cheddar cheese.
What’s more, while the recipe is simple, it can be gussied up in countless ways by using various flours, adding herbs or spices to the dough itself, or topping them with various seeds or seed mixes: sesame, everything bagel, dukkah.
Find step-by-step instructions below, and find notes in the recipe box on how to make the dough ahead of time or freeze it for future use.
PS: How to Build A Sourdough Starter From Scratch
How to Make Sourdough Discard Crackers, Step by Step
Place 200 grams of sourdough discard in a large bowl.

Add 1/2 cup of rye flour, 1/2 cup of all-purpose flour, butter, and salt. (You can use any mix of flours you like.)

Mix until you have a cohesive dough ball.

Cut the dough in half and pat it into two rectangles.

Wrap each in plastic wrap (or place in an airtight vessel) and chill for 30 minutes or longer.

Unwrap and roll the portion out as thinly as possible on a lightly floured sheet of parchment paper. Use the plastic wrap, too, to prevent sticking.

It’s OK if the finished shape is amoeba-shaped.

The key is to roll the dough thin.

Cut into cracker shapes — squares, rectangles, whatever you like. Brush with olive oil.

Season as you wish: everything bagel seasoning, sesame seeds, or simply flaky sea salt.


Bake for 20 to 25 minutes or until evenly golden — you do not want to underbake these.


Update! A Solution to overcooked edges? Bake the crackers on an upside-down sheet pan:



Store them in an airtight vessel at room temperature for 1 week or freeze for longer storage.

Such a treat to have on hand! And so simple!


Easy Sourdough Discard Crackers (Thin & Crispy)
- Total Time: 1 hour 5 minutes
- Yield: 48 1x
Description
Made with only four ingredients, these thin and crispy sourdough discard crackers are so easy to make and are so, so tasty: buttery and flaky with a perfect tang. The seasonings can be adapted to your tastes and preferences, and the dough freezes well, too 🎉
This recipe has been adapted from A Year at Catbird Cottage and King Arthur Flour. Melina’s recipe calls for 2 tablespoons of finely chopped rosemary, and King Arthur Flour’s recipe calls for 2 tablespoons of dried herbs, so feel free to add those if you have them.
Having made these several times now, I think there are two places where things can go wrong:
- Not rolling them out thinly enough.
- Not baking them long enough.
Once I made both mistakes, and the crackers were too thick and not crisp. That said, looking at the photos both on the KAF website and in Melina’s book, I think if you want to make them slightly thicker, though no thicker than 1/16-inch thick, you can as long as you bake them long enough — an even golden brown color is the visual cue you are looking for.
Notes:
- If you don’t have rye flour, you can simply use all all-purpose flour or you can use any other flour you have on hand, such as spelt, or any variety of freshly milled flour, etc.
- If you don’t have a starter but want to make these, stir together 100 grams water with 100 grams flour in a small bowl the night before you want to bake these. Cover the bowl with a towel and let it rest at room temperature. Use the entire mix as your starter the following day.
- If you want help getting started with sourdough bread baking, I have a free email course: Sourdough Demystified.
Ingredients
- 1 cup (200 g) sourdough discard (unfed sourdough starter)
- 1/2 cup (56 g) rye flour, see notes
- 1/2 cup (56 g) all-purpose flour
- 1 teaspoon (3 g) kosher salt (or 1/2 teaspoon if you are sensitive to salt)
- 4 tablespoons (57g) unsalted butter, room temperature
- olive oil, for brushing
- flaky sea salt for sprinkling or sesame seeds or everything bagel seasoning
Instructions
- Mix together the sourdough starter, flours, salt, and butter until you have a cohesive dough. It’s OK if it’s a little sticky. Turn the dough out onto a lightly floured work surface, divide into two portions, pat each into a rectangle, wrap in plastic wrap (or place in an airtight vessel), and refrigerate for 30 minutes, or longer — I’ve done this 24 hours in advance — until the dough is firm.
- Preheat the oven to 325°F.
- Working with one piece of dough at a time, unwrap the plastic wrap and reserve it. Very lightly flour a piece of parchment, a rolling pin, and the top of the dough.
- Place the dough onto the floured parchment paper, and place the sheet of plastic wrap on top of the dough. Roll the dough as thinly as possible (see notes above), using your rolling pin to disperse it as evenly as possible over the parchment paper. It’s OK if the edges are ragged, but do try to make the dough as thin as possible — if it’s too thick, the crackers won’t be crisp.
- Transfer the dough-topped parchment sheet onto a baking sheet. UPDATE: Transfer the dough-topped parchment sheet to an upside-down baking sheet. This prevents over-baked edges. Lightly brush with oil and then sprinkle the salt (and/or other toppings) over the top of the dough. UPDATE: To help keep the seasonings in place, lay a sheet of parchment paper over the crackers, and run your rolling pin across the surface to embed the seasonings into the dough.
- Cut the dough as you wish. I like to do long strips, about 1.25 to 1.5 inches wide. I use my bench scraper, but a pizza wheel works well here, too.
- Transfer the pan to the oven and bake the crackers for 20 to 25 minutes, until the crackers are evenly light brown. Depending on how thinly you’ve rolled them, they may be done closer to 25 minutes, but do check at the 20-minute mark.
- When fully browned, remove the crackers from the oven and place the pan on a rack to cool. I like to let the crackers cool completely on the sheet pan, which ensures they will be crisp ultimately.
- Repeat with the remaining portion of dough or keep it in the fridge or freezer until you are ready to use it.
- Store crackers in an airtight vessel at room temperature for up to a week. Freeze for longer storage.
- Prep Time: 40 minutes
- Cook Time: 25
- Category: Sourdough
- Method: Baking
- Cuisine: American
This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure policy.
376 Comments on “Easy Sourdough Discard Crackers (Thin & Crispy)”
I just made these, being new to sourdough and having lots of discard as I have been feeding my very first starter Lucy twice a day for almost 3 weeks, she’s so active and smells divine now, I feel confident to create my first loaf now! I love finding quick and easy ways to use the discard, as I quickly end up with a couple of small bowls in the fridge! I almost feel I could just bake with discard alone, the flavour is incredible! I made one piece of the dough with dukkah and the other with cracked pepper and salt. They’re SO AMAZING I will definitely make them for our next gathering for a cheese board.
Great to read all of this! Thanks so much for writing. And good luck as you embark on your first sourdough loaf… exciting!!
Can we sub the kosher salt with sea salt? Thanks!
Yes!
On my umpteenth go around with these, love ’em. But….
1 cup of discard = 200g
1/2 cup of flour = 56g
Something still not adding up there.
A cup of water is about 236 grams and a cup of flour is usually around 120, so a 50/50 flour/water starter would be 178, but I think 200 seems like a more round number. It’s definitely not a recipe that needs to be super exact.
Thank you for this, Patrick.
I’m so excited to say that I made my first sourdough discard recipe and first cracker today. They were very delicious! Thank you!
Great to hear, Serenity! Thanks for writing 🙂
Made these with a little extra flour to make the dough a little stiffer and used my pasta roller attachment to roll them perfectly thin!
I would love to make crackers. I have brown rice starter discard can I use this for making these crackers
Is it gluten free? I think you could… I worry about the crackers potentially being very crumbly, though rice flour usually works well in these applications.
I think this recipe has been over-complicated. Preheat your oven to 350 degrees. It does NOT need to be refrigerated before rolling out. Don’t wrap it in plastic, either. Just mix it up good with your hands and make a long log of it, placing it between two pieces of Parchment paper. Roll it out thin, and the parchment paper doesn’t stick to it. Remove the top layer of parchment, lift up the bottom edges of the remaining parchment paper and place on your baking pan. Score it using your pastry dough cutter, no need to let it bake any first (it will easily break apart when baked). Put your seasonings on and bake it about 20-25 minutes, watching the outer edges and you may need to remove those outer edges part way through so they don’t over bake. I didn’t care for the addition of whole wheat or rye. Bread flour gave it a crispier cracker mixed with the starter. I used Einstein Bagel seasoning and a sprinkling of cheddar cheese- which keeps topping from falling off. No brushing with oil is needed. NOTE: Alternatively, you can roll thin between two sheets of parchment paper, remove the parchment top sheet and season, then put the parchment back on top and give it one more last roll with the rolling pin. Place on baking pan, score with the pastry dough cutter, put the cheese on if you’re using that and bake!
New to discard recipes. Is the discard used straight from the fridge? Is it used a stage when it is still bubbly or once it has been sitting a while and has flattened out and fermented a bit?
Looking forward to trying this some time soon.
Thank you.
You can use it straight from the fridge! The beauty of using discard recipes is that you can really use the discard in its various phases. I would caution against using discard if it’s been in the fridge for a very long time (when a murky layer of liquid, the “hooch”, has begun to pool at the surface).
Do you think it would work to replace the butter with olive oil or 50/50?
I need to reduce animal fats in my diet.
I do! Go for it. You may need to adjust with flour to feel, but it should work.
I made these with rye and inborn
Soooo good .
Great to hear!
I made these with unbleached whole wheat flour …superb taste ❤️
Great to hear, Tanvi! Thanks for writing 🙂
“inborn”? Is that a typo? Don’t know what that would be.
I bet they meant einkorn
These were so easy I made them with my toddler and she had a blast brushing on the oil and sprinkling the topping over them. The taste was great too! Almost ate them all with my toddler too! We have to make this again with doubling the recipe so we can be sure to have enough to share with her dad when he gets home from work hahaha
Awww so sweet, Lauren! So nice to read all of this. Thanks so much for writing 🙂 🙂 🙂
I used a vegan butter substitute and topped with a store-bought “everything bagel” seasoning and these turned out delicious. This is a great way to use my sourdough discard. Thank you.
Great to hear! Thanks for writing and sharing these notes 🙂
Made these crackers for the first time. Thank you so much for the recipe. They came out so delicious!!! I added ground rosemary to the dough and used flake salt to the top.
Can’t wait to make them again.
YUM! That all sounds outstanding. Thanks for writing and sharing 🙂
This has been my “go to” cracker recipie since I found the recipe here. I’ve mixed and matched flours, but prefer it exactly the way it is written.
Question: I always have a great deal of almond pulp left over from making almond milk. Aside from drying it and using it as almond flour, I am wondering if you have suggestions on how to incorporate the wet pulp into this recipie. Increase flour? Add more butter? Any suggestions would help or – if you have a recipie somewhere that uses both discard and almond pulp, I’d love to know.
Love your site and have loved all the recipies I’ve tried!!
Suzanne, thank you for your kind words… means a lot. And apologies for the delay here!
Unfortunately, I have never used almond pulp, so any advice I offer on this matter is just a guess. My hunch is that adding wet pulp would definitely require more flour, and I think you could add flour until it feels right… it’s a forgiving recipe in this regard, so I say go for it! Good luck with your experiments 🙂
Great recipe! I added italian herbs to dough. I also used a tortilla press to make super thin crackers. They were done in 15 mins.
Love it! Thanks so much for writing and sharing your notes 🙂
I made these today and they are DELICIOUS. The only deviation from your recipe was that I gave them a couple extra minutes in the oven. I can’t believe that I just made crackers and they are a savory masterpiece. Thanks so much for all the knowledge and techniques you share here. My very best to you and your family for 2025.
So nice to read this Tim! Thank you for your kind words. It’s my pleasure. Happy New Year to you and your family as well 🎉🎉
Loved this recipe! Worked perfectly and MMM do they ever taste great! I put rosemary and Mrs dash..and sometimes garlic salt..or dried onion bits..so good.. today I put cinnamon, nutmeg and sprinkles of sugar on the dough for a dessert cracker..
YUM to all of the above! Thanks for writing and sharing these notes 🙂
Thank you so much for this recipe! I use it for ALL of my sourdough discard because its, well, epic! I have a few suggestions to make it a snap. My first suggestion is to use non-stick foil on the bottom instead of parchment. Dampen the surface first and the foil will stick beautifully to simplify the rolling process. Roll super thin then sprinkle with flaked salt or your preferred seasoning. Place the cling wrap (I use Press’N Seal as its what I have) over the seasoning and gently roll lightly to press it into the dough. Dock the entire surface by pricking with a fork, then cut the strips. I recently forgot to use the olive oil and found I prefer the crackers without it. Rosemary with flaked salt is our favorite (using 2T fresh rosemary.) The last batch I made was roasted garlic and parmesan. So good!
Thanks so much, Julie! These tips are so helpful. Love the sound of roasted garlic and parmesan, and I’ll try no oil next time around 🙂
I’ve been using your sourdough focaccia recipe and it’s been perfect! I’m making these sourdough crackers from my discard for the first time right now. My dough is very dry and crumbly. I’ve put it in the fridge for now but nervous about how I will roll it out super thin. Any suggestions or advice on what I should do for a wetter/stickier dough? Thanks!
Hi! Are you using a scale to measure?
Yes using a scale. Followed all the amounts exactly. Half AP half Rye.
Hmmm… OK, it sounds as though next time you may need to reduce the amount of flour. But I’d wait to see how they bake before making adjustments.
Another great recipe and such a good use for discard! I always feel so guilty throwing it away.
What would your instructions be for frozen dough. I made a few batches but only baked off one yesterday. They flew and my kids are asking for more. Thanks!
Great to hear, Cristy! Can you clarify your question: did you freeze the dough or the baked loaves? I actually don’t have great success freezing the dough — I just find that the bread never has as much oomph after it’s been frozen. If that’s what you did, I hope your experience is different — some commenters over the years have noted that they have no problem freezing sourdough. If you did freeze the dough, I would thaw it in the fridge overnight; then proceed with the recipe. If you froze the baked loaves, simply remove from the freezer and let thaw at room temperature 🙂
Hi Ali – sorry for the confusion. I froze the cracker dough. I wasn’t sure if it should be thawed at room temp or in the fridge and for how long? Thanks!!
Oops! My bad… the frozen cracker dough should freeze just fine! I would thaw it in the fridge overnight if possible; then proceed with the recipe. If you are pressed for time, you could thaw at room temp for a couple of hours… I’m not exactly sure how long it will take to thaw.
I think my starter was ready for baking. My dough seems a little dry. I wrapped in wrap and placed in fridge. When I roll it out should I add some oil or water??? Thank you
I think it will be hard to incorporate oil or water at this phase. I would just leave it and try to proceed with the recipe. Are you using a scale to measure?
Thank you. I did not add water but did wet my hands when I rolled out the dough. I did use a scale to measure the starter and measuring cups to measure the flower. I baked them and they came out pretty good. Just a few in the middle were a little thicker but all and all I was pleasantly surprised they came out so good. Thank you for replying
I think using a scale to measure the flour will help you get the dough to be closer to the proper texture the next time around.
These crackers were delicious… at least those that didn’t burn. I made everything as the recipe suggests but half my crackers were wayyy too dark brown (lightly burned) when I checked in on them at 12 minutes. Might be worth noting to check them more frequently so others don’t make this same mistake! I’ll be trying this recipe again and cooking for much less time. (Maybe I just rolled them out WAY too thin lol).
So glad I found this, I’ve tried two other recipes for discard crackers, and this one is simply the best. I subbed whole wheat flour for rye, and had to melt my butter since it was cold- didn’t have any room temp. My schedule got pushed around I actually had to let the dough rest in the fridge for three days. I used a pasta roller to get them thin, and topped with asiago everything seasoning from Aldi. They are so tasty and easy.
Great to hear, Katie! Thanks so much for writing and sharing this. Love that melted butter worked fine, and I love the idea of asiago + everything seasoning… yum!!
I’ve made these before and they are delicious! However, I halved the recipe but forgot to halve the butter 🤦🏼♀️ The dough is sitting in my fridge right now overnight. Would you add more flour and if I can or what would you recommend?
Hi! Apologies for the delay here… what did you end up doing? I would just as soon bake them as written. They’ll probably be delicious if perhaps a bit thinner and crisper.
Sorry, found it! Reading too fast!
Glad you found it!
Great flavor, crunchy texture… my husband loved them so much he called them cookies.
(They’re extra good with caraway seeds on top!)
Great to hear! Thanks for writing 🙂
I was very skeptical at how long these crackers would stay crisp without going stale, but I’m amazed to find that even a week later they’re still as good as the day I made them! Definitely making again!
Great to hear, Nat! Thanks so much for writing and sharing this 🙂
I loved the crackers, so good, but my sesame seeds didn’t stick very well. I tried making them with egg wash and milk and both worked better for the seeds to stick in, but I do think that olive oil brush gave them a special taste as well. Any ideas what I should to to make seeds stick better with the olive oil?
hi! I would read back through the comments and see what others have noted… I think some people have had success sprinkling the seeds on, then covering with plastic wrap and using a rolling pin to roll/press the seeds into the dough.
This recipe is wonderful, my first attempt and couldn’t be happier with the results. Everyone loves them. Already prepping my next batch. Yummy.
Great to hear, Patti! Thanks so much for writing and sharing 🙂