Irish Soda Scones — Unwritten Recipes (2024)

Breads, Breakfast

Felicia Levinson

Flour, Cake Flour, Sugar, Baking Soda, Cream of Tartar, Salt, Butter, Buttermilk, Eggs, Raisins, Currants

Comment

Breads, Breakfast

Felicia Levinson

Flour, Cake Flour, Sugar, Baking Soda, Cream of Tartar, Salt, Butter, Buttermilk, Eggs, Raisins, Currants

Comment

Irish Soda Scones — Unwritten Recipes (1)

Irish Soda Scones — Unwritten Recipes (2)

Happy St. Patrick's Day!!! I'm not Irish and I don't usually make a big deal over the holiday, but I saw this recipe for Irish Soda Scones and thought, "Blarney, this looks fun!" And it was! These are slightly dense with a wonderfully bumpy, chewy exterior, a nottoo sweet doughy centerand full of tangycurrants and raisins. Absolutely delicious on their own or with a little butter and jam. And they are totally easy to make!

Irish Soda Scones — Unwritten Recipes (3)

I've never been toIreland but really do hope to go one day.When my sister was doing a semester abroad in Copenhagen, we visited her and she took us to this little bakery that served the most amazing scones--we often made major detours in our sightseeing to go back to that bakery and pick up a few to carry with us! Since then I've been hooked on scones but am usuallydisappointed in them--the ones you buy from bakeries are too often dry, stale, tasteless hunks of dough. Not so with these and they come together in under an hour!

You start by working softened butter into a mixture of flour, cake flour, baking soda, cream of tartar and salt, until the whole thing resembles coarse bread crumbs.

Then you add buttermilk, egg, raisins, currants and caraway seeds if you like (I didn't) and mix until the dough comes together. Next youturn the dough out onto a floured board and knead briefly. The recipe calls for making 8 balls of dough, leaving you with round scones, but most recipes for scones have you shaping them into triangles, so I went with that technique instead.

Irish Soda Scones — Unwritten Recipes (6)

Irish Soda Scones — Unwritten Recipes (7)

Then it's jut a matter of baking them for about 20-25 minutes, brushing them with a little melted butter when they're finished bakingand waiting for them to cool enough so that you don't burn your mouth!!

Irish Soda Scones — Unwritten Recipes (8)

Irish Soda Scones — Unwritten Recipes (9)

A cup or tea, a pot of jam and a warm Irish sodascone--whetheryou're Irish or not you're going tolove it! Happy St Patrick's Day!!

Irish Soda Scones — Unwritten Recipes (10)

Makes 8 large scones

Prep Time: 20 minutes; Baking Time: 20-25 minutes

Ingredients

  • 3 cups unbleached all-purpose flour

  • 1 cup cake flour

  • 1/4 cup sugar

  • 1 1/2 teaspoons baking soda

  • 1 1/2 teaspoons cream of tartar

  • 1 teaspoon salt

  • 4 tablespoons unsalted butter, room temperature

  • 1 1/4 cups buttermilk

  • 1 egg, lightly beaten

  • 1/2 cup raisins (I used yellow)

  • 1/2 cup currants (you could omit these and just increase the raisins to 1 cup)

  • 1 tablespoon caraway seeds (optional--I didn't use them)

  • 2 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted (for brushing on scones after baking)

The Recipe

1. Position oven rack into middle of oven and preheat to 400ºF. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper and set aside.

2. Whisk together both flours, baking soda, cream of tartar and salt in a large bowl. Using a pastry blender, a fork or your own fingers, work the butter into the mixture until it becomes a coarse meal.

3. Add in the buttermilk, the egg, raisins, currants and caraway seeds if using, stirring with a fork until dough just begins to come together. Flour a board or your counter, turn the dough out onto it and knead it gently until the doughsticks together but don't overdo it. You want the dough to still be bumpy or you'll wind up with tough heavy scones.

4. Using a knife or metal dough scraper, cut the dough in half, then into quarters and then into eighths, which will leave you with 8 triangles.Transfer to the lined baking sheet, spacing them a couple of inches apart and score each scone on top, making a cross, to allow steam to escape as they bake. Bake for 20-25 minutes (original recipe calls for 15-20 but mine weren't done at that point-check yours early--all ovens differ). When scones are golden brown on top and a butter knife comes out clean after it's slid into the center of one of the scones, remove from the oven and immediately brush the tops with the melted butter. Allow to cool to room temperature (if you have the patience!!) Serve as is or with butter and jam.

5. Scones are best on the day they're made but taste quite good heated up on the 2nd and even 3rd day. Store them airtight at room temperature so that they don't dry out.

Enjoy!

Note: Recipe adapted from Brown Eyed Baker. I swapped out half the raisins for currants and cut them into 8 triangles instead of making balls of dough.http://www.browneyedbaker.com/irish-soda-bread-scones/

Irish Soda Scones — Unwritten Recipes (11)

Felicia Levinson

Irish Soda Scones — Unwritten Recipes (12)
Irish Soda Scones — Unwritten Recipes (2024)

FAQs

What ingredient did the rise to the Irish soda bread come from? ›

The four ingredients were soft wheat flour, salt, baking soda and sour milk (buttermilk is more commonly used today). Since yeast wasn't readily available, the combination of baking soda and buttermilk acted as the leavening agent, causing the bread to rise.

Why is my Irish soda bread so hard? ›

Too much kneading will create a hard dense crumb on the bread. Rule of thumb with no yeast breads, the less kneading the softer the crumb. Score the bread. This is an important step to helping to ensure that the center is cooked.

What's the difference between sourdough and Irish soda bread? ›

The main difference between sourdough bread and soda bread is in its leavening agent – sourdough bread rises due to the gasses released from yeast and bacteria fermentation, while soda bread rises from the gasses produced during the chemical interaction between baking soda and acids in the dough.

Do people in Ireland eat Irish soda bread? ›

Ireland, for one, has embraced it's kind of bread – the soda bread. It is a basic staple among the Irish that they call it Irish Soda Bread. It's common to see the locals pair this famous bread with a bottle of Guinness too.

Why is my Irish soda bread gummy? ›

And finally, don't immediately cut into the Fast Irish Soda bread when you pull it out of the oven. Although this bread is best served warm, cutting into it too quickly will turn the bread gummy.

Can you over knead Irish soda bread? ›

You spent too much time kneading the dough. Baking soda starts to react and release its gas as soon as it comes into contact with the sour milk. Take too long and the gas will escape before the bread is baked. Kneading will also cause chewy gluten to form.

Why is my Irish soda bread raw in the middle? ›

Your oven is too hot if it is uncooked in the center. Try lowering the temp on your oven by 25F and extending the bake time. Don't put anything on the top of the bread to aid in browning until the last few min. of cooking, and use an instant read thermometer (target temp to pull is 190F).

What happens if you put too much baking soda in scones? ›

Too much baking soda will result in a soapy taste with a coarse, open crumb.

What are Victoria scones? ›

Victoria scones are also sometimes called empire scones and are a cake baked to celebrate Queen Victoria's coronation and Jubilee. The scone is shaped into a round with a cross cut across the top. A glace cherry is placed in the center of each segment. To represent the jewels in her crown.

What is a substitute for baking soda in scones? ›

If you don't have baking soda, you can use baking powder, at three times what the recipe calls for. So if a recipe calls for one teaspoon of baking soda, you can use three teaspoons of baking powder. Baking powder also contains a little bit of salt, so it's also a good idea to halve the salt the recipe calls for.

How are you supposed to eat Irish soda bread? ›

How to Eat Irish Soda Bread. This versatile bread works for any meal, but Irish soda bread is a natural for breakfast, whether simply spread with (Irish) butter and jam or alongside that hearty fry-up known as a full Irish breakfast. It's also wonderful with a cup of tea in the afternoon or as a late-night snack.

What is another name for Irish soda bread? ›

Irish soda bread has a couple of other names, too: When we attended a class at the famous Ballymaloe Cookery School in County Cork, Ireland, they made this loaf and called it a Spotted Dog. It's also called white soda bread, American Irish soda bread, or fruit soda bread.

What's the difference between Irish bread and Irish soda bread? ›

However, the two loaves differ pretty significantly from there. Irish brown bread has a deep, nutty flavor because of its wheat flour and wheat bran while soda bread uses only white flour. Soda bread is slightly sweet and more scone-like while Irish brown bread is more savory with a tender interior.

How did Irish soda bread become popular? ›

It quietly had to wait its moment in culinary history. However, it wasn't until after the tragic Famines of 1845-1852, claiming the lives of one million Irish, that Soda Bread took center stage as a quick and easy bread that served as the base for other recipes..

What is the key ingredient in Irish soda bread that makes it different from other breads? ›

Irish soda bread is prepared without yeast. Traditionally it has just four ingredients: flour, baking soda, salt, and buttermilk. The baking soda and buttermilk react to cause the dough to rise.

What chemical reaction is Irish soda bread? ›

Irish soda bread rises due to the chemical reaction between bread soda, an alkali (base), and buttermilk, an acid, releasing carbon dioxide bubbles. Buttermilk is what is left over after churning cream to make butter.

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