Irish Soda Bread: Quick Bread Finish Temps (2024)

As we approach St. Patrick’s Day, the minds of Americans turn to three foods: corned beef, cabbage, and soda bread. But unlike corned beef, the Irish in Ireland actually eat soda bread! Known by various names according to its flour content and shape, soda bread is eaten all over the Emerald isle. And while the cuisine of the British isles and Ireland is not always lauded as the finest the world has to offer, this bread is well worth giving a regular place at your table.

What is soda bread?

Soda bread is a bread, usually made with lower-protein soft wheat flour, that relies on the combination of baking soda (sodium bicarbonate) for its leavening. The ingredients are simple and few: salt, baking soda, flour, and buttermilk.* The flour should be relatively low in protein (gluten) so, cake or all purpose flour is your best bet (we use King Arthur All Purpose flour below for its consistent quality). In Ireland, they sometimes make it with varying proportions of whole wheat flour, creating what they often refer to as brown bread.

As for the leavening, the acid in the buttermilk reacts withthe soda to create carbon dioxide. Because this reaction happens instantly, itis best to have your oven well preheated and ready to go before you startpreparing the dough. Waiting to bake the bread may allow gas to escape from thedough, resulting in a denser, less airy bread.

How to make good soda bread

If you’ve ever tried Irish soda bread and not liked it, don’t go running off yet! Chances are good that the bread you ate suffered from one of three common problems: improper amount of baking soda (a gross, salty-bitter taste), over cooking (a dry, chalky texture), or undercooking (a soggy, doughy center). The solution to the first of those problems is, well, a good recipe—which we here provide! Some people think that soda bread should taste like baking soda, and that is false. First, baking soda itself just tastes bad. According to SeriousEats.com, “even an extra gram can produce an unpleasantly soapy loaf of bread.”

But even more importantly, the soda should be used up and balanced by the buttermilk. After all, if there’s soda left over, then there is leavening potential that has been left behind. Granted, there may be a faint hint of soda flavor left, but it shouldn’t overpower the creamy taste of the soda bread itself. One of the nice things about soda bread is that the added alkalinity will help the sugars in the crust to brown more easily, giving you a beautiful loaf and a very slight pretzel-y flavor. In the end, it takes surprisingly little soda to leaven a loaf, so don’t go overboard.

The other common problems of over- or under-cooking, can easily be solved with a leave-in probe thermometer like the ChefAlarm®. In the final analysis, soda bread is just a dense quick bread like banana bread, and dense quick breads should be cooked to 200–205°F (93–96°C), an internal temperature that assures that enough water has been absorbed or cooked out so that it is no longer soggy, but not so hot that the crumb dries out. Use the same temperature for banana bread, pumpkin bread, or pound cake!

Soda bread is best baked in the same manner as sourdoughbread—in a hot cast-iron pot or Dutch oven. Starting the bread in a liddedpot traps steam, creating a delicious, browned and crispy crust. Allow thebread to cook for 40 minutes with the lid on, then remove the lid and insert athermometer probe, cooking un-lidded until the center of the bread comes totemperature.

*Some people add raisins, some people add caraway. That’s fine, but we’re going to stick to a more classic version here.

Irish Soda Bread Recipe

Based on the recipe from our friends at SeriousEats.com

Indgredients

  • 15 oz all-purpose flour (about 3 C), we used King Arthur
  • 1 3/4 tsp kosher salt
  • 1 1/8 tsp baking soda (don’t use more!)
  • 2 1/4 C low-fat cultured buttermilk

Instructions

  • Preheat your oven to 450°F (232°C) with a heavy, lidded cast-iron pot in it. Allow it to preheat fully before preparing the dough.
  • When the oven is hot, whisk together the flour, salt, and baking soda. Whisk everything together very well, especially making sure there are no lumps of soda left, which will cause brown, weird tasting spots in your bread.
  • Add the buttermilk and fold the ingredients together with a flexible spatula, like our Hi-Temp silicone spatula. Fold together just until no visible pockets of dry flour remain.
    • If you want a chewier bread, fold it together for another 20 seconds to develop extra gluten.
  • Remove the Dutch oven from the oven, place on a heat-safe trivet on the countertop. Remove the lid.
  • Scrape the dough from the mixing bowl onto a sheet of parchment paper in the hot cast-iron pot and form it into a boule-shaped mound.
  • With a sharp knife, cut a large X across the top of the whole ball. This will allow the bread to expand into quarters, speeding the cooking of the center.
  • Replace the lid on the pot and place the pot in the oven.
  • Set a timer, like the , for 40 minutes. Bake the bread.
  • When the timer goes off, remove the lid from the pot and insert a ChefAlarm‘s probe into the center of the loaf. Set the high alarm for 205°F (96°C) and continue to bake.
  • When the alarm sounds, remove the bread from the oven and tip it carefully out to allow it to cool.
  • Slice and enjoy with butter and preserves or, yes, even corned beef and colcannon.

With a good recipe and proper temperature monitoring, you’ll find that soda bread is so easy and so tasty that you will want to make it all the time. The ingredients cost so little and the payoff is so big. Just remember to use your ChefAlarm to apply the 200–205°F (93–96°C) doneness for quickbreads and you’ll have warm, lovely smelling bread for any meal!

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Irish Soda Bread: Quick Bread Finish Temps (2024)

FAQs

What temperature is Irish soda bread done at? ›

Bake the bread for 50 minutes to 1 hour, or until a cake tester inserted into the center comes out clean; the interior of the bread will measure 200°F to 210° on an instant-read thermometer. Remove the bread from the oven, loosen its edges, and after 5 minutes turn it out onto a rack to cool.

What temperature should quick bread be when done? ›

Quick breads like Banana Bread or Lemon Loaf are done when they reach an internal temperature of 200 to 205°F. Cakes are done when they reach an internal temperature of 205 to 210°F.

How do I know when my soda bread is done? ›

The most traditional doneness test calls for thumping the hot bread in the center to hear if it's hollow-sounding. A more foolproof indication is temperature; the loaf will register 200°F to 205°F when an instant-read thermometer is inserted in the center of the bread. Let the bread cool.

How do you know when quick bread is done? ›

Follow directions to determine doneness. Quick bread loaves will usually rise about the edge of the pan and the top will crack. The streak of batter visible through the crack will appear dry and the bread will pull away slightly from the sides of the pan when it is done.

Why is my Irish soda bread so doughy in the middle? ›

Chances are good that the bread you ate suffered from one of three common problems: improper amount of baking soda (a gross, salty-bitter taste), over cooking (a dry, chalky texture), or undercooking (a soggy, doughy center).

How to fix undercooked soda bread? ›

Fixing Undercooked Bread

Heat the oven to 350 F, return the bread to the oven, and bake for another 10 to 20 minutes. This will work even if the loaf has cooled, which is similar to par-baking bread. If you are concerned about the bread browning too much, tent the loaf with foil.

What temperature is bread finished at? ›

Most breads are finished baking at about 190°. Breads enriched with butter, eggs, or milk are finished when the internal temperature is closer to 200°.

How long should quick bread cool before wrapping? ›

Let the bread cool in the pan for 10-15 minutes, and then transfer it to a wire rack to cool completely.

Why does my quick bread sink in the middle? ›

Quick bread was underbaked and cell structure wasn't set. When the cell structure doesn't set, the air spaces created by the leavening in the recipe collapses, causing the bread to sink. Oven temperatures vary over time. To insure the correct temperature each time you bake, always use an oven thermometer.

Why is my Irish soda bread so dry? ›

It's important to remember no to overmix your ingredients. Irish Soda Bread is a dense bread, similar to a scone, but can easily become dry if overmixed. Quickly add the wet ingredients to a well you've made in the dry ingredients, and mix with your hands or a dough hook until it just comes together.

Why is my Irish soda bread gummy? ›

And finally, don't immediately cut into the Fast Irish Soda bread when you pull it out of the oven. Although this bread is best served warm, cutting into it too quickly will turn the bread gummy.

Why is my Irish soda bread chewy? ›

You spent too much time kneading the dough. Baking soda starts to react and release its gas as soon as it comes into contact with the sour milk. Take too long and the gas will escape before the bread is baked. Kneading will also cause chewy gluten to form.

What is the final temperature of quick bread? ›

Quick breads have a doneness temperature of 200°F and up to 205°F (93°C up to 96°C). Your recipe almost certainly gives the time to cook rather than the temperature, so start checking the internal temps with a Thermapen at the low-end of the provided time scale, i.e. at 20 minutes on a recipe that says 20–30 minutes.

What happens when you overstir a quick bread? ›

Add liquid ingredients to dry ingredients all at once. Using a wooden spoon, mix just until the dry ingredients are moistened, 15 to 20 light strokes. There should be some small lumps. Overmixing can cause quick breads to be tough, bake unevenly or cause elongated holes (or tunnels).

Should Irish soda bread be served warm? ›

Although soda bread is ideal for serving at room temperature, it is better to serve it warm. The thick and cakey texture of the bread and warm temperature brings out its hearty flavors. If you can't have it fresh from the over at least have it toasted.

Is Irish soda bread supposed to be heavy? ›

The best Irish soda bread, like this recipe, has a golden brown crust with a dense, tight crumb. The bread isn't heavy, it's actually quite tender and soft inside. The crust is nice and crisp when it comes out of the oven and becomes a little chewy on day 2 and 3.

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