Brown Soda Bread Loaf With Caraway Seeds and Rye

Brown Soda Bread Loaf With Caraway Seeds and Rye
Andrew Scrivani for The New York Times
Total Time
1 hour
Rating
5(146)
Comments
Read comments

Some regional variations on Irish soda bread, from Donegal and Leitrim, call for caraway seeds. I love caraway seeds in bread, but in my personal food memory bank they will always be paired with rye. So I decided to add a little rye flour to this already dark brown, grainy and moist bread.

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Ingredients

Yield:1 loaf, about 12 slices
  • Soft butter for the bread pan
  • 125grams (approximately 1 cup) whole-wheat flour
  • 32grams (approximately ¼ cup) unbleached all-purpose or bread flour
  • 25grams (2 heaped tablespoons) steel-cut oats, either regular or quick-cooking (optional)
  • 40grams rolled oats
  • 60grams (approximately ½ cup) rye flour
  • 4grams (approximately 1 teaspoon, tightly packed) brown sugar
  • grams (½ teaspoon) salt
  • 2teaspoons caraway seeds
  • 10grams (2 teaspoons) baking soda, sifted
  • 290grams (approximately 1¼ cups) buttermilk
Ingredient Substitution Guide
Nutritional analysis per serving (6 servings)

199 calories; 3 grams fat; 1 gram saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 1 gram monounsaturated fat; 1 gram polyunsaturated fat; 37 grams carbohydrates; 5 grams dietary fiber; 4 grams sugars; 8 grams protein; 530 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Butter an 8½ x 4½ x 2½-inch bread pan.

  2. Step 2

    In a large bowl, mix together flours, steel-cut oats, rolled oats, brown sugar, salt, caraway seeds and sifted baking soda. Mix well with your hands.

  3. Step 3

    Make a well in the center of the flour mixture. Pour in the 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 dough to fill the pan evenly (pan will be filled only about halfway.)

  4. Step 4

    Place in oven and bake 40 minutes, until dark brown and a tester inserted comes out clean. Remove from pan and cool on a rack.

Tip
  • Advance preparation: This keeps for about 4 days and can be frozen.

Ratings

5 out of 5
146 user ratings
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Comments

Currently eating this fresh out of the oven with butter and homemade lemon curd. Yum! I studied abroad in Ireland years ago, and did graduate research at Trinity, and this is THE bread that I remember! This is the best Irish soda bread recipe I’ve found on the Internet—and trust me, I’ve looked a lot.

YOu are correct about 1/2 cup. Changing the misprint so it reads 60 grams.

This is a fine recipe, and reminds me of a soda bread I had in Youghal. The cook used bulghur wheat. But this is over the top. No eggs or butter either. We did not have caraway seeds but used our bronze fennel seeds, it grows wild here.

This was okay. Flavor was not bad, but very dense and had a somewhat chalky aftertaste -- maybe from the oats? It was improved by toasting and serving with jam.

Great recipe to which I added soaked bulgur and buckwheat, fennel, anise, poppy and dill seeds as well as caraway.

I had no whole wheat flour but did have rye meal so used that instead. Delicious toasted with a little cream cheese and plum jam. Wonderful recipe!

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