Grandma’s Irish Soda Bread

Irish Soda Bread is a quick bread that does not require any yeast. Instead, all of its leavening comes from baking soda and buttermilk. This Irish soda bread recipe is my grandmother’s and has been cherished in my family for years. It’s dense, yet soft and has the most incredible crusty exterior. Buttermilk and cold butter are the secret to its delicious success!

Irish soda bread loaf

Welcome to my favorite Irish Soda Bread recipe. I shared this no yeast bread recipe on my blog a few years ago and decided to revisit with fresh new pictures and a video tutorial. This recipe is my grandmother’s. She passed away in 2011, 2 weeks before I started this food blog. I dedicated my 1st cookbook to her. Full of energy and the creator of the best homemade pie crust on earth, she would be in her 90s today. St. Patrick’s Day is her birthday.

grandma harlett
Irish soda bread cut into slices

Irish Soda Bread is a Quick Bread

Does the thought of homemade bread send you running for the hills? Sometimes homemade bread feels daunting, but you’re in luck today. Irish soda bread is a quick bread made with baking soda, not yeast. Like my easy no yeast bread, this is a shortcut bread that doesn’t skimp on flavor. (If you want a yeast bread, I recommend my sandwich bread recipe!)

  • What’s the texture like? 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. It’s so good.

My grandmother’s Irish soda bread contains some sugar, but it’s not overly sweet. It’s a wonderful companion for savory dinners like hearty stew or you can serve it with butter, honey butter, jam, and/or cheese. The raisins are optional, but Grandma would never let you skip them.


Video Tutorial: Homemade Irish Soda Bread

Irish soda bread dough in cast iron skillet before baking

Overview: How to Make Irish Soda Bread

The full printable recipe is below. Irish soda bread dough comes together in about 10 minutes. You need buttermilk, egg, flour, sugar, baking soda, salt, and butter.

  1. Whisk buttermilk and 1 egg together. Whisk the flour, sugar, baking soda, and salt together in another bowl.
  2. Cut cold butter into the flour mixture. Like scones and pie crust, cutting cold butter into the flour is a key step. Coating the flour in cold butter guarantees a lovely flaky texture. You can use a fork, your hands, or a pastry cutter. Add the wet ingredients.
  3. Bring the dough together with your hands. Using a very sharp knife, score the dough. This allows the center to bake.
  4. Bake until golden brown.

Buttermilk is the Secret

Irish soda bread only requires a few ingredients, including buttermilk. Buttermilk reacts with the baking soda to provide the bread’s leavening. It also adds wonderful flavor! We use buttermilk for the same reasons in my regular no yeast bread, too. If you’re interested, I have plenty more on this topic in my Baking with Buttermilk post (including a DIY buttermilk substitute recipe).

Feel free to Skip the Egg

Irish soda bread can be made with or without an egg. 1 egg adds richness and density. Feel free to skip it to make a slightly lighter loaf. No other changes necessary, simply leave out the egg.

Irish soda bread in a cast iron skillet
Irish soda bread cut into slices

3 Success Tips

  1. Don’t over-work the dough. It’s supposed to look a little shaggy.
  2. Score the top of the dough with an “X” before baking. This helps the center bake through.
  3. You can bake Irish soda bread on a baking sheet, in a baking pan, or in a cast iron skillet. I recommend a cast iron skillet because it helps guarantee a super crispy crust. Here’s how to keep your cast iron cookware seasoned.

If you’re baking for St. Patrick’s Day, you’ll love my Guinness Brownies, Baileys and Coffee Cupcakes, Guinness Chocolate Cake, Guinness Chocolate Cupcakes, Lucky Charms Treats, and shamrock St. Patrick’s Day Cookies, too.

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Irish soda bread cut into slices

Grandma’s Irish Soda Bread

5 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars 2 Stars 1 Star 4.8 from 552 reviews
  • Author: Sally McKenney
  • Prep Time: 10 minutes
  • Cook Time: 45 minutes
  • Total Time: 55 minutes
  • Yield: 1 loaf
  • Category: Bread
  • Method: Baking
  • Cuisine: Irish
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Description

Irish Soda Bread is a quick bread that does not require any yeast. Instead, all of its leavening comes from baking soda and buttermilk. This Irish Soda Bread recipe is my grandmother’s and has been cherished in my family for years. It’s dense, yet soft and has the most incredible crusty exterior.


Ingredients

  •  1 and 3/4 cups (420ml) buttermilk*
  • 1 large egg (optional, see note)
  • 4 and 1/4 cups (531g) all-purpose flour (spooned & leveled), plus more for your hands and counter
  • 3 Tablespoons (38g) granulated sugar
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 5 Tablespoons (71g) unsalted butter, cold and cubed*
  • optional: 1 cup (150g) raisins


Instructions

  1. Preheat oven & pan options: Preheat oven to 400°F (204°C). There are options for the baking pan. Use a regular baking sheet and line with parchment paper or a silicone baking mat (bread spreads a bit more on a baking sheet), or use a seasoned 10-12 inch cast iron skillet (no need to preheat the cast iron unless you want to), or grease a 9-10 inch cake pan or pie dish. You can also use a 5 quart (or higher) dutch oven. Grease or line with parchment paper. If using a dutch oven, bake the bread with the lid off.
  2. Whisk the buttermilk and egg together. Set aside. Whisk the flour, granulated sugar, baking soda, and salt together in a large bowl. Cut in the butter using a pastry cutter, a fork, or your fingers. Mixture is very heavy on the flour, but do your best to cut in the butter until the butter is pea-sized crumbs. Stir in the raisins. Pour in the buttermilk/egg mixture. Gently fold the dough together until dough it is too stiff to stir. Pour crumbly dough onto a lightly floured work surface. With floured hands, work the dough into a ball as best you can, then knead for about 30 seconds or until all the flour is moistened. If the dough is too sticky, add a little more flour.
  3. Transfer the dough to the prepared skillet/pan. Using a very sharp knife or bread lame, score the dough with a slash or X about 1/2 inch deep. (“Score” = shallow cut.)
  4. Bake until the bread is golden brown and center appears cooked through, about 45-55 minutes. Loosely tent the bread with aluminum foil if you notice heavy browning on top. For a more accurate test, the bread is done when an instant-read thermometer reads the center of the loaf as 195°F (90°C).
  5. Remove from the oven and allow bread to cool for 10 minutes, and then transfer to a wire rack. Serve warm, at room temperature, or toasted with desired toppings/spreads.
  6. Cover and store leftover bread at room temperature for up to 2 days or in the refrigerator for up to 1 week. We usually wrap it tightly in aluminum foil for storing.

Notes

  1. Freezing Instructions: Baked and cooled bread freezes well up to 3 months. Freeze the whole loaf or individual slices. Thaw in the refrigerator or at room temperature, then reheat as desired.
  2. Special Tools (affiliate links): Cast Iron Skillet, 9-inch Round Cake Pan, 9-inch Pie Dish, Dutch Oven, or Baking Sheet with Silicone Baking Mat or Parchment Paper | Glass Mixing Bowl | Whisk | Pastry Cutter | Bread LameInstant-Read Thermometer
  3. Baking Pan: There are options for the baking pan (see Special Tools Note above). You can use a lined large baking sheet (with or without a rim), a seasoned 10-12 inch cast iron skillet, or a greased or lined 9-10 inch cake pan or pie dish. I don’t recommend a loaf pan because the loaf may not bake evenly inside. This dough is best as a flatter loaf.
  4. Buttermilk: Using cold buttermilk is best. Buttermilk is key to the bread’s flavor, texture, and rise. The bread will not rise without it. If you don’t have any buttermilk on hand, you can make a homemade buttermilk substitute. Whole milk or 2% milk is best, though lower fat or nondairy milks work in a pinch. Add 1 Tablespoon of lemon juice or white vinegar to a liquid measuring cup. Add enough cold milk to make 1 and 3/4 cups. Whisk together, then let sit for 5 minutes before using in the recipe.
  5. Egg: 1 egg adds richness and density. Feel free to skip it to make a slightly lighter loaf. No other changes necessary, simply leave out the egg.
  6. Cold Butter: The colder the butter, the less sticky the dough will be. Make sure it’s very cold, even frozen cubed butter is great.
  7. Smaller Loaves: You can divide this dough up to make smaller loaves. The bake time will be shorter, depending how large the loaves are. An instant read thermometer will be especially helpful. Bake the loaves until an instant-read thermometer reads the center of the loaf as 195°F (90°C).
sally mckenney headshot purple shirt.
About the Author

Sally McKenney

Sally McKenney is a baker, food photographer, and New York Times best-selling author. Her kitchen-tested recipes and step-by-step tutorials have given millions of readers the knowledge and confidence to bake from scratch. Sally’s work has been featured on TODAY, Good Morning America, Taste of Home, People, and more.

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Reader Comments and Reviews

  1. Laurel says:
    October 13, 2024

    Amazing! Best soda bread I’ve ever had!

    Reply
  2. Gloria Valenzuela says:
    October 12, 2024

    I would like bake this bread , I eaten it before..

    Reply
  3. J wright says:
    October 9, 2024

    The bread was dry and flavorless. I added currants but that didn’t help. I followed the recipe exactly

    Reply
  4. Joan says:
    October 1, 2024

    This is excellent! My second try. Next I will be making a few loaves for a church Bake Sale. I’m sure they’ll be snapped right up

    Reply
  5. Shana says:
    September 28, 2024

    I made this recipe gluten free using Edmond’s plain gf flour with about 1 1/2 cups of millet, brown rice, and buckwheat flour (with a dash of xantham gum). I used buttermilk and 1 egg. The dough was quite sticky ( but this is common in gf baking) but I didn’t add extra flour. I used canola oil spray to knead it. It turned out quite beautifully. It rose quite well and is lighter than expected. It was delicious and held together well.

    Reply
  6. si says:
    August 31, 2024

    The dough turns out very wet and loose. I had to add so much flour that it messed up the sugar-flour and salt-flour ratios.

    Reply
  7. Charu Soneja says:
    August 27, 2024

    Can I use whole wheat flour for the recipe

    Reply
    1. Lexi @ Sally's Baking says:
      August 27, 2024

      Hi Charu, We don’t recommend whole wheat flour, the bread will be extremely heavy. Feel free to use half whole wheat and half all-purpose, but the bread will still be quite dense. Let us know what you decide to try!

      Reply
  8. Sarah Richards says:
    August 21, 2024

    Can you use bread flour or cake flour instead?

    Reply
    1. Lexi @ Sally's Baking says:
      August 21, 2024

      Hi Sarah, bread flour is OK to use. The bread may taste chewier and even a bit denser. We don’t recommend cake flour.

      Reply
  9. Mike Person says:
    July 23, 2024

    This was a great recipe

    Reply
  10. Dianne H says:
    June 25, 2024

    Hi, I tried the Irish Soda Bread recipe, but I used Bob’s Mill Gluten Free Baking Flour. I’ve had to be gluten free for 15 years and this recipe turned out wonderfully!! The buttermilk makes all the difference! My nephew and niece were visiting and it was gone the next morning. Just a great recipe.

    Reply
  11. Rachel says:
    June 6, 2024

    Where do you recommend putting it in the oven? Top? Or Middle?

    Reply
    1. Lexi @ Sally's Baking says:
      June 7, 2024

      Hi Rachel, we recommend middle rack.

      Reply
  12. Frederic Kahler says:
    June 2, 2024

    I followed the recipe exactly (making my own buttermilk with vinegar) and used a mixture of golden and brown raisins. The dough was a bit wet, so it took some effort to knead it. I baked it in a cast iron skillet for 47 minutes and it came out divine! I’ve never made Irish Soda Bread, but I sure will now. Thanks for your Grandmother’s recipe!

    Reply
  13. Mean Jean says:
    May 26, 2024

    First time my husband called my baking “Fantastic!” I followed you recipe to the letter except I used the Dutch Oven option. Too bad you don’t accept pictures.. mine was beautiful!

    Reply
  14. Nicky says:
    May 17, 2024

    I made the soda bread in the Dutch oven and oh my goodness what a difference, it cooked so much better than when I cook it in cake pan. Love my Dutch oven I will cook it with that from now on. Woooo hooo lol

    Reply
  15. Nicky says:
    May 15, 2024

    I have a question about using a Dutch oven, should I pre heat the oven with the Dutch oven inside? Will it cook in the same amount of time ?

    Reply
    1. Trina @ Sally's Baking says:
      May 15, 2024

      Hi Nicky! It certainly would not hurt to preheat the dutch oven. Happy baking!

      Reply
  16. Jan Haga says:
    April 27, 2024

    Love this bread and especially how quick it comes together.

    Reply
  17. Wicks Barton says:
    April 27, 2024

    I make this bread every 3rd day. I substitute sunflower and sesame seeds for the raisins. Delicious! Thank you.

    Reply
  18. Jules says:
    April 21, 2024

    It’s fantastic! I have been making this bread on repeat all Spring. I use kefir rather than buttermilk because I always have it on hand, and freeze then grate the butter to make incorporating it much easier. My favorite is with cranberries and almonds, the crust is perfect!

    Reply
    1. Melissa says:
      March 15, 2025

      Thank you for the idea! I’m going to try that next!

      Reply
  19. Sabrina says:
    April 12, 2024

    Have you tried this with gluten-free flour?

    Reply
    1. Trina @ Sally's Baking says:
      April 13, 2024

      Hi Sabrina, we haven’t tested this bread with a gluten free flour, so we’re unsure of the results. Let us know if you do give it a try.

      Reply
    2. Faith Imholte says:
      April 26, 2024

      So, so excited to find this recipe! I am GF, DF and also egg free and yeast free so many traditional breads are out for me. I used Bob’s Red Mill All Purpose flour with xanatham gum added and Macadamia Nut ‘buttermilk’ as subs. Turned out absolutely fantastic!!! I added in some cinnamon as well as a bigger handful of raisins, but also excited to try this plain with jam!!!

      Reply
  20. Aurelia says:
    April 9, 2024

    Great will keep making it…this time i made it with jalapeño pepper….

    Reply
  21. Janet says:
    April 4, 2024

    Most Irish Soda Breads I’ve had are very dry; not this one! Delish and even better toasted!

    Reply
  22. Sue Austin says:
    April 2, 2024

    Could I use olive oil instead of butter?

    Reply
    1. Lexi @ Sally's Baking says:
      April 2, 2024

      Hi Sue, no, cold butter is key to this breads success and preparation method.

      Reply
  23. Upstste Shoppet says:
    March 28, 2024

    Can you make soda bread scones or muffins using this recipe?

    Reply
    1. Sally @ Sally's Baking says:
      March 28, 2024

      Absolutely, by dividing up the batter. I’m unsure of the best bake time, though.

      Reply
    2. Laurel says:
      October 13, 2024

      Best soda bread I’ve ever had! Will make it on a regular basis!

      Reply
  24. Gitta Smith says:
    March 26, 2024

    I didn’t put in raisins and I forgot to add in the sugar. Even without the sugar It turned out great! I baked it on a baking stone and it came out with a delicious crunchy outside. It’s the best Soda bread I’ve had yet! Definitely a keeper. Thank you for sharing it Sally

    Reply
  25. Lisa says:
    March 25, 2024

    This tasted amazing!!!! Ty!

    Reply
  26. Karen says:
    March 24, 2024

    I only have spelt flour would it work with this recipe?

    Reply
    1. Michelle @ Sally's Baking says:
      March 24, 2024

      Hi Karen, We haven’t tested spelt flour in this recipe but let us know if you do!

      Reply
  27. Geri Enos says:
    March 23, 2024

    Can you use bread flour in place of all purpose flour, as you can in your soda bread?

    Reply
    1. Michelle @ Sally's Baking says:
      March 23, 2024

      Hi Geri, bread flour is OK to use. The bread may taste chewier and even a bit denser.

      Reply
  28. Nancy S. says:
    March 20, 2024

    Delicious. Made without the egg due to allergy. Added raisins, but only 1/2 c. Divided into 2 smaller loaves. Used air bake baking sheet with parchment. Nice with melted butter. Demolished quickly! TY!

    Reply
  29. Elaine Berger says:
    March 20, 2024

    Can I make this in my food processor? Thx,

    Reply
    1. Lexi @ Sally's Baking says:
      March 20, 2024

      Hi Elaine, we recommend using a pastry cutter, forks, or even your fingers. A food processor will quickly overwork your dough, though can work in a pinch.

      Reply
  30. Dianne says:
    March 20, 2024

    This was by far the best Irish soda bread recipe my family has ever eaten ❤️

    Reply