Buttermilk soda bread is a simple baking skill that anyone can do, and the recipe only requires a few ingredients. Make it with this Easy Way to Make Buttermilk and you can have a hot fresh loaf ready to eat with soup for lunch or spread with butter and jam.
No yeast is needed to make traditional soda bread; to make the dough rise, it relies on the interaction between the Bicarbonate of soda and the acid in buttermilk. It is also slightly denser in texture than traditional breads and is best eaten on the day it is made. These Easy Fruity Hot Cross Buns are also delicious eaten on the day they are made.
Ingredients and Substitutions
This is just an overview of the ingredients I used for making this recipe, with possible alternatives and why I may have used them. A full list can be found in the instructions below.
Flour - I used White Spelt flour for this recipe, but you can use plain white/all-purpose flour.
Bicarbonate of soda - This reacts with the buttermilk, which helps the dough rise.
Salt - I prefer to use crushed Sea Salt or crushed rock salt. Table salt is fine as an alternative.
Buttermilk - Try this Easy Way to Make Buttermilk if you cannot get hold of it in the shops and have a glut of milk that needs to be used up.
Step by Step Instructions
To make soda bread with buttermilk, follow these step by step instructions.
Equipment
1 Baking tray
Mixing bowl
Ingredients
450 g white spelt flour or plain white flour
1 level teaspoon crushed sea salt or crushed rock salt
1 level teaspoon bicarbonate of soda
350 ml buttermilk.
Preheat the oven to 200c/400f/Gas 6 oven and have ready a baking tray lined with baking parchment or a silicone baking sheet.
Step 1: Sieve together the flour, salt, bicarbonate, and soda into a large mixing bowl. Make a well in the centre and add the buttermilk. Using your hands, bring all the ingredients together until you have a soft but not too sticky dough. Tip: Work quickly, and do not over-mix the dough.
Step 2: Place the dough onto a prepared baking tray and make a deep cross in the centre. Irish folklore says that doing this lets the fairy out, or they may bring bad luck to your bread!
Bake in the centre of the preheated (hot) oven for 30 - 40 minutes or until baked golden on the outside and baked in the centre. It should sound hollow when you tap the base of the soda bread. I test all my loaves using a thermometer around 94 - 95 deg and I consider it done.
Serve this old fashioned buttermilk soda bread while still warm, with salted butter and jam. Or with soup as a light lunch.
Storage
Room Temperature - I find soda bread is best eaten on the day it is made. It will store in an airtight container for a few days. Gently reheat in a moderate oven if you wish, or toast a few slices for breakfast the next day.
Freeze - I imagine it would freeze well, but this is not something I have tried.
Tips and Faq
Tip 1: Work quickly when mixing the soda bread ingredients, and do not over-mix the dough.
What Makes Soda Bread Rise?
The reaction of the bicarbonate of soda and the acidity in buttermilk makes soda bread dough rise in the oven. Once the buttermilk and bicarbonate of soda are mixed together with the dry ingredients, you need to work quickly.
As always, Happy Baking.
Lynn x