I have a method for making a really nice, lactic-acid-tang sourdough bread that was handed down to me from my dad. He got the recipe from some neighbors who are farmers in Washoe Valley, Nevada, the List family. I call it San Fransisco Style because it's nice and sour like that style of bread, but this recipe was actually a little different as practiced in Northern Nevada at a high altitude. My dad always said he wished he could get a thicker crust like they do in San Fransisco. I think that his thin, crisp crust was likely a result of the dry, high-elevation climate he baked in. I make it in Portland, Oregon and wish I could get the thin, crisp crust I grew up with in Nevada.
As for SF Sourdough proper, I know I had it as a kid growing up in the 80's. San Fransisco was the nearest big city, about a 3 hour drive, and we would go there to do big city stuff, including getting some authentic SF sourdough bread. I was pretty young though and I don't remember the bakeries we went to. We'd always visit the wharf. What I do remember very clearly is my dad's sourdough he made every weekend, and the sourdough discard pancakes we'd have on Sunday. I really missed this bread once I moved away and when I got into making sourdough about ten years ago, I was able to recreate this recipe gluten-free with a lot of help from kind people here on TFL including Mini Oven. You can find my 24-hour sourdough recipe here on my blog: https://glutenfreegourmand.blogspot.com/2014/03/gf-24-hour-sourdough-bread-recipe.html
I'm now working on a version that gives the recipe more of the look of SF SD with a more "white flour" visual, though due to the practicalities of gluten free it's still about 60% whole grain.

I mentioned this method in another thread and Paul (pmccool) and Alcophile asked me to post separately so it didn't get buried. Keep in mind that all of this should be taken with a grain of salt because I have not made the wheat version of this bread myself, and it's been so long for my dad that he doesn't remember the nuances. He did like my GF version when he tried it this spring though, and said it tasted right. (The texture is different, but palatable enough to my family members who eat wheat.) Here's roughly how I interpret the original wheaten version of the recipe as my dad baked it.
Starter:
My dad made a liquid white starter using commercial yeast, but I made my GF starter using the Ars Pistorica/Ian Lowe 3-day method with whole grains as outlined here: https://weightloss-slim.fit/node/69051/sourdough-starter-ready-use-37-days%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E%3Cp%3EFor this bread, I find that using the starter when very, very ripe works for me. The idea is to slow down the bulk ferment considerably, so to my mind using the starter at peak is contraindicated.

It looks stunning. Thanks for sharing!
Thanks Marta!
That's a wonderfully thorough write-up with even more information available via the links.
Paul
Hi Paul,
You're welcome, it was good to revisit this method and think about the wheat version again. In the last 15 years, I've baked with wheat once to show my niece some bread making techniques. There are so many things that are the same, but handling the dough is so different. I'm sure it would take me several tries to nail this recipe again with wheat. Maybe my niece will get into sourdough!
Gina