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A Bite of Britain: Welsh Bara Brith Tea Cake

A Bite of Britain: Welsh Bara Brith Tea Cake

Today is St. David’s Day, and since St. David is the patron saint of Wales, Ruby Moukli celebrates with a classic Welsh tea cake.
By Ruby Moukli

What do you know about Wales? If you’re not British, then the answer is probably ‘not much’. Take popular culture as an example. Hollywood waxes poetic about the Scottish highlands, the English countryside and London fog. But can you name a single major motion picture set in Wales? And yet Wales, with its Black Mountains, sandy beaches, sleepy villages and medieval castles, is nothing short of a living, breathing movie set.

Wales is the smallest of the countries that make up Great Britain (the others being England and Scotland). In England it gets short shrift, often stereotyped as a ‘backwater’ bereft of cultural or economic value. What a shame. It’s true that Wales is economically depressed compared to the rest of Britain, mainly because of the decline of the coal mining industry. But the Welsh are a proud people and have made great strides toward rebuilding their economy based on tourism and the service industry.

Growing up I was always curious about my Welsh heritage. Yes, I know I’ve said before that my mom was English but that’s only half true. My grandmother, with her telltale combination of dark hair, blue eyes and beautiful singing voice, has family roots planted firmly west of the border. And so, just as anyone with a drop of Irish blood will wave it in your face on St. Patrick’s Day, I’m going to flaunt my Welsh 25% today.

‘OK’, you say, ‘so why have you chosen today of all days to shove Wales down our throats?’ Well, because today is the 1st of March, St. David’s Day, and St. David is the patron saint of, yes, you guessed it, Wales.

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Tradition would have you slurping a celebratory bowl of Cawl, a lamb stew or soup. But I think the name puts me off (I must be thinking of caul, but still), not to mention the lovely newborn lambs currently bouncing in the fields, so I opted for a more benign treat.

Bara Brith on Welsh slate

When visiting friends in North Wales last year, my kids fell in love with Bara Brith. The name means ‘speckled bread’ in Welsh and that’s pretty much what it is. Bread speckled with dried fruit. You’ll find it either baked with yeast or as a quick bread. I’m averse to yeast, so I make the quick bread version and it’s lovely. There’s no added fat beyond the one egg and then flour, fruit and tea. Some recipes include jam or marmalade, and a great deal of the flavor comes from the mixed spice, which is a common ingredient in Welsh baking. And because there’s no butter or oil in it, you can feel free to spread a thick slice with butter and enjoy it with a cup of tea while you plan a visit to Wales.

As the Welsh say, Mwynhewch eich bwyd! (Bon appétit!)

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A Bite of Britain: Bara Brith


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4 from 7 reviews

  • Author: Ruby Moukli

Description

Welsh tea cake, recipe makes 3 small loaves (or 1 large and 1 small)


Ingredients

Scale
  • 450 g / 2 ½ cups dried fruit (I used raisins and cranberries, but currants and even dates work wonderfully)
  • 400 ml /1 ¾ cups brewed black tea
  • 225 g / 2 cups self-raising flour (white)
  • 225 g / 2 cups plain wholemeal flour
  • 175 g / ¾ cup unrefined sugar
  • 2 tsp baking powder
  • 1 ½ tsp mixed spice (or ½ tsp cinnamon, ½ tsp allspice, pinch of ground clove and a pinch of ground ginger)
  • ½ tsp salt
  • 1 egg
  • 2 Tbsp marmalade or jam (I used low-sugar apricot jam)

Instructions

  1. Night Before: Set the fruit to soak in the tea overnight
  2. Baking Day: Preheat oven to 175 C / 325 F and grease and line two loaf pans (one large and one small, or else three small)
  3. In a large mixing bowl, sift together the flours, then add the other dry ingredients and mix.
  4. Beat the egg and add it to the mixture, along with the jam and fruit (with remaining tea) and stir until just mixed.
  5. Divide into loaf pans and bake for 1 hour (or until a skewer poked in center comes out clean). (Check the smaller loaves at 45 minutes.)
  6. Cool in pans for 15 minutes, then gently turn them out and cool completely before storing in an airtight container (or wrap).

 

View Comments (13)
  • The only thing I know about Wales is that Catherine Zeta-Jones is from there. Lol, don’t even know why I know that useless fact. Anyways, Wales looks like a lovely place. Your tea cake looks delicious, and great photos too!






  • Nice recipe, but ….
    Caerleon is not in Anglesey – it’s in South-East Wales.
    Also, Prince Charles (the Prince of Wales) is the son of the English monarch – the last native Prince of Wales (Llywelyn the Last) was slain by the English in 1282 and, unfortunately, since then the people of Wales have had English ‘Princes’ imposed on them.






  • Thank you so much for sharing this recipe! Writing from Illinois in the U.S. here; this takes me back to the sweetbreads that my Grammie would make as I was growing up, and now I get to enjoy this with my children! Very delicious for any time of the day, but especially at tea in the afternoon every Friday when the kids come home from school. Thanks again!

    Best Regrds,

    Cory Wyant






  • In your ‘random facts about Wales’, you state that Caerleon is in Anglesey (northwestern Wales). This is incorrect! Caerleon is on the northern outskirts of Newport, Monmouthshire, South Wales – 12 miles NE of Cardiff.

  • I was in Wales for a short time last spring, I thoroughly enjoyed it. Thanks for the article, I’m looking forward to trying the recipe!






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