Buttermilk Irish Soda Bread
Submitted by CLARA
Buttermilk Irish soda bread with raisins and caraway seeds. A tender, slightly sweet round loaf made with butter, sour cream, and tangy buttermilk. The American holiday-table version.
YIELD
12 servingsPREP
20 minCOOK
50 minREADY
70 minThis is the American take on Irish soda bread. True Dublin-style soda bread is just flour, salt, soda, and buttermilk: bone simple, savory, and meant for slathering with butter. The Americanized version on this side of the Atlantic adds sugar, raisins, and caraway seeds, which technically makes it a ‘spotted dog’ or ‘spotted dick’ variation. Either way, it’s the kind of bread that shows up on every St. Patrick’s Day table from Boston to Chicago.
The buttermilk and a quarter cup of sour cream team up to do double duty here. Buttermilk reacts with the baking soda for the lift, and the combination of dairy fats produces a moist, almost cake-like crumb that traditional soda bread cannot match.
Caraway seeds are the love-them-or-hate-them detail. They add that distinctive licorice-rye warmth that some people will remember from grandma’s kitchen and others will pick out one by one.
Pro Tips
- Cut the butter in until it resembles small peas, no smaller. Tiny butter pockets are what make the bread tender. Overworked butter creates a tough, dense loaf.
- Stir the wet into the dry just until combined. Soda bread benefits from undermixing. Smooth batter develops gluten and turns the bread chewy.
- Cut a deep cross in the top before baking (a tradition believed to ward off evil spirits, but also genuinely useful for even rising).
- Let the loaf cool at least 20 minutes before slicing. Hot soda bread is gummy; cooled bread slices cleanly.
Variations
- Skip the raisins and caraway for traditional Irish white soda bread.
- Use currants instead of raisins for a more old-fashioned Dublin spotted-dog look.
- Add 1 tablespoon of orange zest for a bright citrus twist.
Ingredients
Directions
Preheat the oven to 350℉ (180℃).
Butter a 9” round cake pan.
Sift together the dry ingredients.
Using a food processor with the steel blade or a pastry cutter, cut the butter into the flour mixture until it resembles small peas.
Blend in the raisins and caraway seeds.
Beat the egg, buttermilk, and sour cream together until blended.
Stir the egg mixture into the dry mixture until just blended.
Transfer the batter to the pan and bake for about 50 to 55 minutes, until a tooth-pick tests clean.
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