Whole Wheat Soda Bread With Raisins (Spotted Dog)

- Total Time
- 1 hour
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 310grams (approximately 2½ cups plus 1 tablespoon) whole-wheat flour
- 125grams (approximately 1 cup) unbleached all-purpose or bread flour
- 7grams (scant 1½ teaspoons) baking soda, sifted
- 7grams (1 teaspoon) salt
- 8grams (2 teaspoons, packed) brown sugar
- 125grams (¾ cup, tightly packed) raisins, any variety or a mix (more to taste)
- 1egg
- About 356 grams (1½ cups) buttermilk
Preparation
- Step 1
Preheat oven to 425 degrees. Line a sheet pan with parchment. In a large bowl, mix together flours, soda, salt and brown sugar. Swish mixture around with your hands to distribute salt and soda through the bread. Add raisins and toss mixture together to coat raisins with flour.
- Step 2
Beat egg and place in a measuring cup. Add buttermilk; the liquid in the cup should measure about 1¾ cups.
- Step 3
Make a well in the middle of the flour mixture. Pour egg/buttermilk mixture into the well. Working from the center of the bowl in concentric clockwise circles, with fingers outstretched, stir buttermilk mixture 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 sticky and ragged.
- Step 4
Dust your work surface with flour, clean and dry your hands and dust with flour. Scrape out dough and very quickly and gently pat it into a 1½- to 2-inch-high round and tuck the bottom edges under. (Alternatively, place in a lightly buttered 10-inch round cake pan.) Place on parchment-covered baking sheet. Moisten a knife and cut a deep cross across top of bread.
- Step 5
Place in oven and immediately turn the heat down to 400 degrees. Bake 40 minutes, until the loaf is dark brown and makes a hollow sound when tapped. Remove from oven, wrap loosely in a kitchen towel (to soften the crust) and place on a rack to cool.
- Advance preparation: Soda bread is best eaten within 2 days of baking. If it dries out you can still enjoy it toasted.
Private Notes
Comments
I bake this bread often, and it's wonderful if you like hearty, dense bread. We eat it for breakfast with jam or marmalade. I add some walnuts. It's very easy if you put all the dry ingredients into a bowl, get the raisins (and nuts) ready, get the egg and buttermilk ready, put some flour on a board for the last step, and then do it all at once, mixing everything with your hands, not stopping to wash.
Made this to accompany staff meal of corned beef at the restaurant. Worked out well, quick and easy. Tried it with some different dried fruits, figs, etc... very adaptable
Made this to accompany the Mississippi Roast. Followed directions and had a wonderful loaf of dense, slightly sweet bread that begged for a spread of butter.....rave reviews from those in attendance.
My mother always soaked the raisins in boiling water or a cup of tea from the pot while she organized the ingredients. They plumped nicely and tasted better in the baked product.
This was quite good. Just the right balance of whole wheat and bread flour. I didn’t have raisins handy so I scrounged up some sorta dry cranberries, soaked them in some whiskey for half hour. Next time I’ll double sugar and add some “non authentic” caraway seeds. I’m looking forward to eating this over the next few days v
Using a flexible bench scraper can be helpful to get all the dough bits out of the bowl and off of your fingers. I doubled this recipe and it turned out great.