Description
A delicious twist on traditional Irish Soda Bread for St Patrick’s Day. Enjoy a slice fresh out of the oven, thickly spread with butter, or as an interesting accompaniment to homemade soup.
Ingredients
Scale
- 500g plain flour
- 2 tsp bicarbonate of soda
- 1 tsp fine sea salt
- 75g mature cheddar cheese, diced
- 75g apple, diced
- 75g walnuts, chopped
- Approx 400ml buttermilk
- A little milk, if necessary
- 25g mature cheddar cheese, grated (to sprinkle on the top before baking)
Instructions
- Sift the flour and bicarbonate of soda into a large mixing bowl and stir in the salt.
- Add the diced cheddar and apple and the chopped walnuts. Give them a mix to make sure they are evenly distributed.
- Make a well in the centre and pour in the buttermilk, stirring as you go. If necessary, add a tablespoon or two of milk to bring the mixture together; it should form a soft dough, just this side of sticky.
- Tip it out on to a lightly floured work surface and knead lightly for about a minute, just long enough to pull it together into a loose ball but no longer – you need to get it into the oven while the bicarbonate of soda is still doing its stuff. You’re not looking for the kind of smooth, elastic dough you’d get with a yeast-based bread.
- Put the round of dough on a lightly floured baking sheet and sprinkle the grated cheese over the top.
- Mark a deep cross in it with a sharp, serrated knife, cutting about two-thirds of the way through the loaf. Put it in an oven preheated to 200°C and bake for 40-45 minutes, until the loaf sounds hollow when tapped underneath.
- Cool on a wire rack if you like a crunchy crust, or wrap in a clean tea towel if you prefer a soft crust. Soda bread is best eaten while still warm, generously buttered, and great as an accompaniment to soup. If you have some left over the next day, it makes fantastic cheese on toast.
- Prep Time: 15 mins
- Cook Time: 45 mins