Easy Irish Soda Bread

Easy Irish Soda Bread

Irish Soda Bread is a popular bread served in the days leading up to St Patrick’s Day around the world. It was introduced in the late 1830s when bicarbonate soda was brought to the U.K. The bread grew in popularity, as a necessity, when Ireland was in its poorest state and when food needed to be made using basic and inexpensive ingredients like flour (mostly wheat in those days), baking soda, salt and soured milk (what’s been replaced by buttermilk in today’s recipes).

This past weekend, my fiend Marge posted an awesome picture of a freshly baked loaf of Irish soda bread and it enticed me to get in the kitchen and make one too. She uses the same recipe every year around St Patrick’s Day, Ina Garten’s Irish Soda Bread recipe.

I made a couple changes to the recipe:

  1. I used 1 ½ teaspoons of baking soda for a bit more soda taste
  2. I used half golden raisins and half red currants instead of only currants as I love the look of golden raisins in bread
  3. I baked the bread for 50 minutes and it was perfectly-done
Butter and Soda
Buttermilk and Egg
Currants & Golden Raisins
Dried Fruit Coated in Flour
Dough After Kneading in the Bowl
Pre-Baked Bread with Cross

Note: while the recipe said the batter would be “very wet”, mine wasn’t. It was moist and instead of kneading it on the counter with more flour, which would have made the load way too dry, I gave the dough a few kneads by hand in the bowl it was mixed in and then simply plopped it on my baking sheet – saved a step and I feel it spared me from an overly-dry bread. Also, while the recipe calls for you to cut an X in the dough prior to baking, us Catholics know it’s really a cross, not an X 😊.

I had a delicious slice with dinner which consisted of my Creamy Chicken Noodle Soup and it was awesome.

Hope you try baking a loaf!

Veronique  

Dutch Oven No Knead Bread

Dutch Oven No Knead Bread

I’ve been meaning to try out one of the gazillion no-knead bread recipes on Pinterest since I’ve been on reduced work hours and home with no work trips and finally gave it a go last weekend.

I started the dough the afternoon before I was going to bake since the rising time is sooooo long, 8-18 hours.

When I woke up the morning I was going to bake, I couldn’t wait to see what was happening under the plastic wrap. Like magic, my dough had risen and was literally alive! I punched it down and plopped it on a floured piece of parchment paper and molded it into a ball with floured hands.

Dough Fermenting

As indictated in the recipe directions, I’d placed my Dutch oven in the oven for 30 minutes then removed it and carefully lifted my dough using the corners of the piece of parchment and placed it in the Dutch oven with the cover on.

Dough Right Before Going Into the Oven

The aroma of bread baking is like no other and this was no exception. I followed the recipe and baked my bread for 45 minutes with the lid on then 15 minutes with the lid off. Next time I make it, I might add two-three minutes to the with-lid cooking time as the bread was moist inside (which I love), but might be even better with a bit more time in the oven.

The exterior was perfectly crusty and the inside nice and chewy and fantastic. I highly-recommend this recipe by RED STAR YEAST.

Cheers, Veronique