Super Simple Irish Soda Bread
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This simple Irish soda bread recipe requires only 5 minutes of hands-on time. Made with a simple dough that includes baking soda and buttermilk, it emerges from the oven with the perfect crumb, perfect for slathering with butter or marmalade. No yeast required! Ready in one hour, start to finish. ☘️☘️☘️☘️

I was all set to complicate Irish soda bread by making a yeasted version when I started looking into its history and discovered that the soda — the baking soda — is perhaps the most traditional part of the bread, much more so than butter, sugar, eggs, and raisins, which likely entered the equation when the bread crossed the pond.
Inspired by my research, I made a traditional loaf of soda bread with flour, salt, buttermilk, and baking soda, leaving out the yeast. And while it was perfectly edible, I found myself missing the richness of eggs and sugar — missing the scone-like texture created by the addition of butter…what can I say, I’m American!
And so here, I’ve added a bit of the riches back in: one egg, one tablespoon of sugar, and a couple of tablespoons of melted butter, which produces a loaf that resembles a giant biscuit, especially delicious toasted and slathered with softened butter and marmalade.
Irish Soda Bread in 4 Simple Steps
Whisk together the dry ingredients.

Add the wet ingredients: a mix of buttermilk, melted butter, and egg.

Form into a ball using floured hands, transfer to a cast-iron skillet (or other similarly sized baking vessel), and score:

Bake until golden.


When cool enough to handle, slice it up.

Slather with butter or orange marmalade.

This is the soda bread when made with a mix of all-purpose and whole wheat flour as well as wheat germ:

Whole grain soda bread, sliced:

Super Simple Irish Soda Bread
- Total Time: 45 minutes
- Yield: 1 loaf 1x
Description
This simple Irish soda bread recipe requires only 5 minutes of hands-on time. Made with a simple dough that includes baking soda and buttermilk, it emerges from the oven with the perfect crumb, perfect for slathering with butter or marmalade. No yeast required! Ready in one hour, start to finish.
Notes:
Inspired by Simply Recipes
If you want to use whole grain flour in your soda bread, see the notes below the recipe.
Salt: The rule of thumb with bread is that the weight of the salt should be 2 to 3% the weight of the flour. For this recipe that is 10 to 15 grams. I always use 12 grams of salt, and I do not find the bread to be too salty, but I have a high salt tolerance. Use an amount appropriate to your tastes and preferences. Finally, I use Diamond Crystal kosher salt, but you can use fine sea salt or whatever salt you like. If you measure by weight, use the weight listed; if you measure by volume, use half as much by volume if you are using Morton kosher salt or fine sea salt.
If you need to make the buttermilk from scratch:
- Place 2 tablespoons of vinegar or lemon juice in a 2-cup liquid measure.
- Fill cup with milk (2% or whole is best) until it reaches the 1.75-cup line.
- Let stand for five to 10 minutes. Stir.
If you want to use sourdough discard in place of some of the flour/liquid, you can use 100 grams of sourdough discard, 460 grams of flour, 12 grams salt, 13 grams sugar, 5 grams baking soda, 1 egg, 360 grams buttermilk, 2 tablespoons melted butter. Follow the same method outlined in the directions. Watch the video here for guidance.
Ingredients
For the Irish Soda Bread:
- 4 cups (510 g) all-purpose flour, see notes below for making it whole grain
- 2 teaspoons (12 g) Diamond Crystal kosher salt, see notes above
- 1 tablespoon (13 g) sugar
- 1 teaspoon (5 g) baking soda
- 1 cup dried currants, optional
- 1 egg
- 1¾ cups (410 g) buttermilk, see notes above
- 2 tablespoons melted butter
For finishing:
- room temperature butter
- flour
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 400ºF. Whisk together the flour, salt, sugar, baking soda, and currants (if using).
- In a medium bowl, beat the egg and buttermilk. Add the melted butter and stir to combine. Add the liquid ingredients to the dry ingredients and stir with a rubber spatula until combined. Mixture will be sticky. Grease a 9- or 10-inch cast iron skillet (or other similarly sized oven-safe vessel) with softened butter. Set aside.
- Lightly flour your hands and sprinkle a little flour over the sticky dough ball. Use your hands to scrape the dough from the sides of the bowl and to quickly shape the mass into a ball, kneading lightly if necessary. Transfer to prepared skillet. Sprinkle with a teensy bit more flour. Use a sharp knife to make an X across the top of the dough ball. Place in oven and bake for 35 to 40 minutes or until lightly golden and bottom sounds hollow when tapped. Remove from oven, transfer to cooling rack, and let cool for 15 minutes before slicing.
- To store Irish soda bread, tuck it into an airtight bag (such as a ziplock) or an airtight vessel. You can store it at room temperature for about 3-4 days or freeze it for up to 2-3 months.
Notes
For Whole Wheat Irish Soda, Use These Proportions:
- 2 cups (256 g) all-purpose flour
- 1½ cups (192 g) whole wheat flour
- ½ cup (55 g) wheat germ
- These proportions are inspired by an America’s Test Kitchen recipe.
- Prep Time: 5 minutes
- Cook Time: 40 minutes
- Category: Bread
- Method: Oven
- Cuisine: Irish
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325 Comments on “Super Simple Irish Soda Bread”
Delicious! Love this easy to follow recipe & instructions to make buttermilk. Reduced the salt to 1-1/2 top and added caraway seeds instead of currants. Delicious with the shepherd’s pie we had for dinner…thank you!
Great to hear, Margaret! Thanks so much for writing and sharing your notes 🙂
I always come back to this recipe. It’s the only Irish soda bread that truly captures my childhood. Paired with apple butter is a delightful nostalgic dream. Oh to be back there again ❤️thank you for sharing.
It’s so nice to read this, Dana 🙂 🙂 🙂 Thanks so much for writing and sharing this.
Hello, Ali! I’m really looking forward to trying this recipe. I’ve never eaten Irish soda bread, but have seen it on some videos and it looks like it’d be yummy.
Is it possible to cut the dough into 4 and bake them on a cookie sheet to have them come out kinda like scones or biscuits? Would I need to adjust anything?
I’m wanting to serve one on the side of each bowl of a one-pan sausage & apple stew.
Thank you!
P.S. I just discovered your site. It was the first recipe that came up when I Googled Irish soda bread recipe. Now I’m looking forward to trying your peasant bread recipe, too. And I can’t wait to see what other yummy sounding recipes you’ve got on here.
Hi Lea! Apologies for the delay here. I have not divided the dough into 4 portions, but someone recently commented saying she did just that… if you scroll to the next page of comments, you’ll see her comment. This is what she wrote:
“I’ve made this multiple times, only i cut dough into 4 pieces and bake free form on a parchment lined sheet. Reduce bake time 15 min brush w butter on coming out of oven.
Gives my family 2 person loaves to have for dinner.”
I forgot to say that I use a scale to measure everything and, even though I live in East Texas, I generally use the metric system to weigh everything and cooking temps on my oven because it seems more accurate. Plus, I use a cooking app which is from the UK and it’s easier than trying to convert everything to our imperial system.
Great to hear re scale!
Hi, can I make this without a cast iron skillet?
Thanks,
Ali
Yes! Any oven-safe pan will work here.
Can I use egg substitute or omit it?
I think either would be fine, but I would just as soon omit it for simplicity.
I just made this Irish soda bread recipe and it turned out absolutely amazing! The crust baked up perfectly crispy with that beautiful golden finish, while the inside was tender, soft, and incredibly mouthwatering. Every slice had that classic rustic texture and comforting flavor you hope for in true Irish soda bread.
This recipe was easy to follow and delivered bakery-quality results right at home. I’ll definitely be making this again — it’s a keeper! Thank you!
Great to hear, Kathleen! Thanks so much for writing and sharing this 🙂 🙂 🙂
Can I cut the ingredients in half and make a small loaf?
LeNoir
Yes!
This was absolutely wonderful. It tastes fantastic. I used unbleached whole wheat flour because I ran out of rye flour, which I usually use. But this was great. Thank you. I thought I saw in it somewhere a breakdown of the kcals and protein, but I couldn’t find it afterwards.
Great to hear, Leslie! Thanks so much for writing and sharing your notes. I do not proved the kcal info for recipes. My Fitness Pal dot com allows you to enter recipes into their nutrition calculator… hope that might work for you.