Skip to main content

Gluten-Free Goddess Irish Soda Bread (and baking tips)

Gluten free and dairy free Irish soda bread with raisins


The mother of invention? If I call this new gluten-free bread an Irish soda bread, traditionalists will snicker. Raisins are not traditional in a "true" Irish soda bread, you see (if a soda bread has raisins in it, it's called Spotted Dog in the Emerald Isle, or so I'm told). 

I never knew this, growing up on the salt-kissed clapboard villages of the Connecticut shore. I was blithely ignorant of this quaint canine moniker, despite a streak of Irish blood. We ate more pierogi and kielbasa in our culturally eclectic house than Irish soda bread and tea. So my own first home baked Irish soda bread had raisins in it. 

And, actually, come to think of it, why the heck not? 

When it comes to traditions, I wiggle and chafe beneath constraint and "should" like an itchy Catholic school girl with pinching new Easter shoes gazing out the window at the unsettled spring sky. I admire traditions. At least in theory. In an abstract way. Experimenting, though, is more interesting to me than formula. When it comes to formula, I prefer to wing it. Don't fence me in informs my DNA.

Which is why I enjoy gluten-free baking. 

My skill set groove runs deep on the intuitive side. If a recipe calls for x amount of flour and I sense the dough is too wet, I'll add more flour until the dough feels "right" to me. Experience helps. No doubt about it. The process of trial and error gives you a feel for gluten-free dough, an inkling about the muffin batter and how it might behave on any given day. Which varies, I hate to tell you. So I pay attention to elements like humidity, and room temperature. Kitchen fairies. Weather. 

Bread dough will behave differently on a hot and humid July day than it will on a windy, cold March afternoon. Your kitchen changes with the seasons, you know. So recipes may have to change a wee bit, too. The amount of milk or gluten-free flour may need to be adjusted. Tweaked a tiny bit toward wet or dry. Or sometimes both. Confusing as that may seem.

Baking gluten-free is more of an art than a science. I recommend you tune in to your ingredients and learn how they behave. Learn how humidity affects flour- notice it's dampness. Or dryness. Why? Dry flours will soak up more liquid. Damp flours are heavier, and may need less moisture. A cool and drafty kitchen may require a longer rise time than a hot and sultry one. A thin metal bread pan may bake the outside of a loaf faster than the inside can keep up. Your oven may run a tad hotter than you imagined. Or lag behind and never quite pre-heat itself (do your gluten-free baked goods end up gummy in the center?). 

Gluten-free baking requires your full attention. Presence. A dash of patience. An intimacy with your ingredients. A willingness to adjust. And most of all, developing an intuition you can trust. 

Even if it goes against tradition. 

Karina xox


Gluten free Spotted Dog soda bread is an Irish classic with a twist

Karina's Gluten-Free Irish Soda Bread Recipe- with Spots

Tweaked from my original recipe posted in 2011-- by Karina Allrich. 

Feel free to use your favorite milk or non-dairy milk in this recipe. (But note-- a non-traditional coconut milk and a touch of coconut flour adds a subtle fragrant tenderness to this easy, rustic quick bread.) 

And if you cannot use coconut flour, try substituting the coconut flour with sweet rice flour.

Preheat the oven to 375ºF. Line a 7-inch or 8-inch cake pan with a piece of parchment paper.


Ingredients:

1/2 cup brown rice flour or rice flour
1/2 cup sorghum flour, or millet flour
1/2 cup almond or hazelnut flour
1/2 cup cassava, tapioca starch or potato starch (not potato flour!)
1/4 cup organic coconut flour
1/4 cup organic light brown sugar
1/2 teaspoon fine sea salt
2 teaspoons double acting baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1 1/2 teaspoons xanthan gum (lots of folks omit the gums these days)
3 organic free-range eggs or egg replacer
6 tablespoons light olive oil or avocado oil
3/4 cup coconut milk, soy milk or non-dairy milk
1 teaspoon fresh lemon juice
1/2 to 3/4 cup currants (or raisins)

Instructions:

Whisk the flours and dry ingredients together in a large mixing bowl.

Combine the wet ingredients together in a separate bowl.

Make a well in the center of the dry ingredients and slowly pour the wet into the dry ingredients, gently mixing as you go. I use a soft silicone spatula to do this. If you need a little more coconut milk to moisten the dough, add a tablespoon at a time and stir in.

When the dough is evenly moist and sticky, add the raisins and stir by hand to mix them in.

Scrape out the dough and plop it into the center of the lined cake pan. Use oiled or wet hands to mound the dough into a rustic round loaf. Dot with extra raisins, if you like and press them in a bit.

Slice a smallish criss-cross into the center of the dough.

Place the pan into the center of a preheated oven. Bake for about 30 to 33 minutes, until the loaf is golden and firm. Insert a wooden toothpick into the center to test for doneness.

Cool the pan on a wire rack for five minutes, then turn the loaf out of the pan to continue cooling (you don't want a steamy bottom!).

Serve slightly warm with your favorite buttery spread and some fruity jam.


Gluten free Irish Soda Bread with new flours


Recipe Notes: 

Rustic soda breads are really best eaten warm from the oven. This latest version is tender and slightly sweet- perfect for tea time. 
 
If you have leftovers, I would wrap and freeze the remaining bread to preserve the texture and taste. Thaw and warm it up in the oven or grill slices with a pat of butter.

This recipe is gluten-free and dairy-free. 
 
To make it vegan, use your favorite egg replacer equivalent to 3 beaten eggs- about 6 tablespoons of liquid. See below for a link to my vegan Irish Soda Bread with Millet.

Cook time: 30 minutes

Yield: 8 to 10 slices

Recipe Source: glutenfreegoddessblogspot.com

All images & content are copyright protected, all rights reserved. Please do not use our images or content without prior permission. Thank you. 



Karina


Gluten free Irish soda bread

More gluten-free Irish soda bread recipes:

My vegan Irish Soda Bread with Millet
Elana's Pantry Gluten-Free Irish Soda Bread
For substitution help, please see my guide to baking with substitutions here.


TRENDING NOW:

Sweet Potato Cornbread- A Gluten-Free Goddess Favorite

Sometimes a great notion... Cornbread is such a reliable quick bread for gluten-free bakers- there is no yeast to proof, no rise time to plan before baking, no complicated kneading or punch-down. Simply stir together the batter, pour, and bake. In roughly half an hour you have an invitingly warm and tender bread to pair with your hearty bowl of chili or stew, and a perfect companion to a plate of baked beans. What makes this recipe extra special- aside form being gluten-free- is the cooked sweet potato I was inspired to stir into the batter. It gives the cornmeal something to grab onto, with a touch of exotic sweetness and heft. Honestly? It's just so darn tasty. Sometimes intuition creates kitchen magic. Karina xo

Gluten-Free Goddess Coconut Cake

Let. Us. Eat. Cake. My husband's latest birthday marked another spin around the wheel of time. And yes, I baked a cake. And as I stirred the batter and scooped it into cake pans, I thought about the other cakes I have baked for him. The chocolate cake in our first year of marriage. Children beneath our roof. Blue balloons and candles. The newness of each others' dreams. The shine of our ideas. The belief in what was possible. We've shared twenty-eight of his birthdays now. And the single constant through these twenty-eight years is change. Change has woven its intricate design deep inside our marriage, our thirteen different living spaces in seven different states, our evolving work as artists and writers, our sons' own ever-changing lives. There isn't a piece of our life together that has not been burnished by change. I asked my husband what he felt about this birthday, if anything. He said at first he didn't feel anything about it. That is was just ...

Asparagus Leek Risotto Recipe

A Fresh, Light Risotto for Spring. May I just take a moment and express my deep appreciation for risotto? And tender-crisp spring asparagus? A week like we've had triggers a need for comfort food- but not the heavy, spice laced comfort food of winter. Something fresh and light and creamy. Asparagus risotto   to the rescue. Happy Daylight Savings! Karina xo

Gluten-Free Goddess Blueberry Muffins with Almond Flour

Blueberry Muffin Mornings. Blanched almond flour and blueberries make the perfect little gluten-free bite for a spring breakfast. Or, for that matter, a lazy summer brunch. Or afternoon tea. Or- you name it.  For right now, though, I'm thinking a blueberry muffin morning might be the perfect start to my day. This day. The recipe here is vegan- but if you prefer using eggs, darling, beaten eggs will work perfectly well in this favorite recipe (just use fresh free-range eggs in place of the egg replacer). Stay true blue this week, everyone- be well, be safe, make this week delicious. Karina xox

Asparagus with Maple Tahini Dressing

    The Queen of Spring. Asparagus. It's a welcome signal of warmer days (and nights!) when those bundles of slender green stalks are back, standing tall in elegant rows at the local market. Erect, perky little beauties. My deep and abiding craving for asparagus is surprising for someone who never tendered a single bite of fresh asparagus until my third decade here on planet Earth. Yes, you read that right. Three decades. I admit it. I was anti-asparagus. In my own defense, I must mention, in full transparency, that the only asparagus I was served in childhood came from a can. A CAN. And Darling! If you've never had the non-pleasure of noshing said limp and stringy excuse for a such a brilliant vegetable, I am here to assure you, it was tinny, flaccid, and disgusting with a capital D (and in full disclosure, it ended up buried deep inside my paper napkin, doomed for the garbage pail as soon as the parental and familial accomplices to this vegetable horror were occupi...

Coconut Split Pea Soup

Stormy weather comfort food.  Temps have plunged to zero here in New England. Oh, well. Perhaps I shouldn't exaggerate. Okay. It was 1 degree above zero. One. As in uno. As in eins. As in une. Translation? COLD. AKA soup weather. So I whipped up a wintry weather comfort food favorite. A creamy and delicious split pea soup. That just so happens to be gluten-free. Meat-free. Dairy-free. My secret? Coconut milk, darling. And a dash of spicy jalapeños. It was lip-smacking tasty. Trust me. You won't miss the ham hock. Stay safe and warm out there!  Karina xo

Gluten-Free Goddess Irish Soda Buns

Irish Soda Bread Inspired Rolls- er Buns. Or whatever.   Spring is poised to sprout. I just know it. Despite the frigid fingers of wind that unwrap your scarf and creep-sneak down your spine. Despite the tawny, snow nourished grass that twists between wind blown twigs and scattered crows pecking at patches of silvered oak leaves at the edge of the winter swept woods. Despite the wild and wooly roar of the coming March lion--- you can feel it. Right? Green is coming. Snow drops are sprouting! I spied some yesterday- swaying all jaunty and hopeful in the spring smelling air. So Happy (almost- it's coming- hold on) Spring! And to tempt you into celebrating this weekend, here is an Irish soda bread inspired bun-roll recipe to try. Bun, roll, mini-bread- whatever you call these tender tea worthy babies, one thing is for sure. They're delicious. If you are more inclined to bake a loaf rather than buns, see these Irish Soda Breads for inspiration. Karina xox