Brown Soda Bread With Oats
Updated Aug. 16, 2022

- Total Time
- 1 hour
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- Soft butter for the bread pan
- 125grams (approximately 1 cup) whole-wheat flour
- 62grams (approximately ½ cup) unbleached all-purpose or bread flour
- 25grams (2 rounded tablespoons) steel-cut oats, either regular or quick-cooking
- 40grams (approximately ⅓ cup) rolled oats
- 8grams (approximately 2 teaspoons, tightly packed) brown sugar
- 3.5grams (½ teaspoon) salt
- 10grams (2 teaspoons) baking soda, sifted
- 290grams (approximately 1¼ cups) buttermilk
Preparation
- Step 1
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Butter an 8½ x 4½ x 2½-inch bread pan.
- Step 2
In a large bowl, mix together flours, steel-cut oats, rolled oats, brown sugar, salt and sifted baking soda. Mix well with your hands.
- Step 3
Make a well in the center of flour mixture. Pour in buttermilk. Working from the center of the bowl in concentric clockwise circles, with fingers outstretched, stir buttermilk into flour mixture. (You can use a rubber spatula instead if you don’t like getting dough on your hands.) This should take about a half a minute at most. Dough will be quite moist. Use a rubber spatula to scrape into bread pan and smooth out the dough to fill pan evenly ( the pan will be filled only about halfway.)
- Step 4
Place in the oven and bake 40 minutes, until dark brown and a tester inserted comes out clean. Remove from pan and cool on a rack.
- Advance preparation: This keeps for about 4 days and can be frozen.
Private Notes
Comments
Made this as friends were coming over—prep was a flash and it slid right out of the pan. Served with tasty local cheeses and the bread became the main event of the meal. Everyone loved it. Not too sweet or soda-tasting for us! *only had quick-cook oats (sigh) so used those for the 65g of steel-cut/tolled oats and it worked just fine. *made ‘buttermilk’ with 280g whole milk and 10g vinegar.
This makes a delicious loaf, very much like the bread I had in Ireland. You do not need to use 2 teaspoons of baking soda. One teaspoon will be enough and you will not get that odd bitter taste from an excess of soda.
We are just back from Ireland and we loved the brown bread while we were there. This bread is excellent and very much like the best brown bread we had there. I followed the recipe exactly and think that the steel cut oats are essential for that toothsome texture that make it so delicious. And of course it needs some good Irish butter!
Belfast boy here. I've never felt the need to reduce the soda. The clue is in the name of the bread - it's supposed to have that slight tang. Granted it might not appeal to everyone, but the recipe ain't wrong.
Second time: increased the sugar and salt by just a bit. Topped with chopped walnuts and baked in an oiled 8” square pan. Even better than the first time, and very quick as fresh bread for supper.
Has anyone scaled this up for a typical 9x5x4 loaf pan? Can I increase all ingredients by 25% or...?? This was delicious but my final product was very short! :( I subbed molasses for the sugar per other comments... yum!
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