Irish Soda Bread is the easiest bread you’ll make – no proofing or kneading required and the dough comes together in 5 minutes. Soda bread has a soft and tender crumb with a Biscuit-like texture.

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We love freshly baked bread, from Banana Bread to Homemade Focaccia and Cornbread. If you are a fan of easy bread recipes, this Irish Soda Bread is a must-try!
You’ll Love this Soda Bread!
I fell in love with Soda Bread the first time I tried it. Its lightly sweet crumb reminded me of our Paska Easter Bread and Hot Cross Buns, but it’s amazing how fast and easy it was to make a traditional Soda Bread.
What is Irish Soda Bread?
This Irish-American Soda Bread is traditionally baked for St. Patrick’s Day. It is a quick bread that uses Baking Soda (a.k.a. Sodium Bicarbonate) as the leavening to make it rise. Unlike traditional yeast bread, there is no proofing or rising time. Once the dough comes together, you score the top and bake right away.

Ingredients
We love adding raisins for the holidays, but the raisins are optional. If you want to make it without buttermilk, then kefir works just as well to activate the baking soda.
- Flour – all-purpose flour works best
- Sugar – 1/4 cup makes it a lightly sweet bread
- Salt – every good bread needs a fair amount
- Baking soda – leavening which makes the bread rise
- Butter – gives the bread a scone-like texture (use cold, unsalted)
- Buttermilk – activates the soda (use cold, low-fat)
- Egg – for a finer, richer crumb
- Raisins – optional and can be substituted for dried cranberries

Tips for the Best Soda Bread
- Do not over-mix – as with scones, the dough really just has to come together before baking.
- Sticky dough – the dough will feel sticky. Dust your work surface and hands with just enough flour to handle the dough.
- Cold ingredients – there’s no reason to bring ingredients to room temperature. Keep buttermilk, egg, and butter chilled.
- Generously grease the pan – buttering your cast-iron skillet before baking allows the bread to rise without sticking to the pan.
- Cool on a rack – Once out of the oven, transfer the soda bread to a rack to cool so it doesn’t steam and soften on the bottom.

How to Make Soda Bread
You’ll be amazed how fast and easy it is to form a loaf of this Irish-American Soda Bread.
- Prep – Preheat oven to 375. Grease a 10″ cast-iron pan with butter.
- Whisk dry ingredients – in a large mixing bowl, whisk together flour, sugar, salt, and baking soda.
- Add butter and raisins – cut butter into dice then work it into the flour mixture with clean dry fingertips until crumbs form. Stir in raisins.
- Buttermilk – In a large measuring cup, beat together buttermilk and 1 egg and pour into dry ingredients. Stir with a wooden spoon until moistened and the dough starts to come together.
- Form the loaf – transfer the dough to a lightly floured surface, dust hands with flour, and form dough into a round loaf. If too sticky to handle, dust with flour.
- Bake – transfer dough to the buttered pan and score the top with a deep “X”. Bake at 375˚F for 50-55 minutes.

How to know when Soda Bread is done baking? We bake for 50-55 minutes. When you tap the loaf it should sound hollow inside.
Common Questions:
You can omit the raisins, or even substitute them for dried cranberries or other bits of dried fruit like chopped apricots.
The buttermilk activates the baking soda, making the bread rise. You can substitute the buttermilk with a low fat plain Kefir.
It tastes similar to scones or biscuits but is very lightly sweet.
We love to serve soda bread is delicious served as a side with Irish butter and honey, or jam. It’s a lightly sweet bread so it pairs well with coffee or tea.
Scoring the top gives it extra surface area to brown and crisp.
Over-mixing or over-kneading the dough can make it tough. The less you handle it, the softer the bread will be.
Soda bread freezes really well. If you freeze it the day it’s baked (be sure it’s cooled to room temperature first), it will taste great thawed and toasted.

This Irish Soda Bread recipe is sure to become a holiday favorite for you. It’s so easy and you’ll impress everyone.
More St Patrick’s Day Recipes
If you love this Soda Bread, then you won’t want to miss these St. Patrick’s Day-inspired recipes.
- Green Smoothie Bowl – perfect for a St. Patty’s breakfast
- Zeppole – a special treat loved by all
- Spinach Artichoke Dip – your new favorite dip
- Guacamole Stuffed Deviled Eggs – you’ll love the green
- Roasted Brussels Sprouts – crispy with bacon
- Broccoli Apple Salad – with creamy dressing
Irish Soda Bread Recipe

Ingredients
- 4 cups all-purpose flour, plus 1/4 cup more for dusting
- 1/4 cup granulated sugar
- 1 tsp sea salt
- 1 tsp baking soda
- 6 Tbsp cold unsalted butter, plus 1/2 Tbsp to grease pan
- 1 3/4 cups cold lowfat buttermilk or kefir
- 1 large egg, cold
- 1 cup raisins or dried cranberries, optional
Instructions
- Preheat oven at 375˚F. Generously grease a 10” cast-iron skillet with 1/2 Tbsp butter.
- In a large mixing bowl, whisk together flour, sugar, salt, and baking soda. Cut butter into small pieces and use your fingers to work the butter into the flour until crumbs form stir in the raisins, breaking up any clumps of raisins. Make a well in the center.
- In a large measuring cup, whisk together the buttermilk and egg then add this mixture into the flour mixture. Use a wooden spoon and mix just until lightly moistened and dough barely starts to come together.
- Transfer to a floured surface and use floured hands to shape the dough just until it forms into a round loaf. It should be shaggy. If it’s too sticky to handle, dust lightly with flour. Do not over-mix or bread will be tough.
- Transfer to the buttered pan, use a knife to score the top with a large and deep “X”. Bake in the center of your preheated oven at 375 for 50-55min. When you tap on the bread, it should sound hollow inside. Transfer bread to a wire rack to cool. Enjoy within 2 days of making it and refrigerate leftovers up to a week.



I am trying this recipe today. I am both excited and nervous. I am generally terrible at making dough and any dough related items. However, I have been making your No Knead Dough for years and it always turns out perfect every time.
I also got the ingredients for the Borsch recipe as well, so I will try that tomorrow. My mom used to make this when I was a child.
I hope you love this recipe, Kate! These recipes are so special and you’re going to do great!
Made this and it was fantastic, easy and crowd pleasing. Lasted 1 day!
That’s just awesome! Thank you for sharing your wonderful review, Judy!
I didn’t have buttermilk so I substituted milk with lemon juice. The dough was very sticky and I baked it in a double cake pan. But it was incredibly good. A lot of soda bread recipes are dry, this one was soft and just right. Very good flavor. I omitted the raisins because I don’t care for them. I will definitely make this again
Thank you for sharing, Diane. Please do try again. It’s worth it!
What would be another pan to bake the Irish soda bread? I don’t have a cast iron skillet.
Hi Peg, I can’t say for sure without testing it myself, but you can also bake it on a baking sheet without a cast iron pan, and it will work, but it will be slightly more flat.
Needed to bring Irish soda bread to dinner gathering and the stores were out. I made yours and it was a hit. From now on I’ll be making this recipe. Thanks for saving the day. Love your videos.
Hi Pam, that’s great! I’m glad that you tried homemade, it is so much better than storebought and much more rewarding!
Easy to put together, used craisins, and food processor to combine dry ingredients and cut in butter. Finished in a mixing bowl. Great toasted with butter and jam. Leftovers made great french toast!
Hello Robin, thank you for your good comments and feedback. Glad to know that you enjoyed making this recipe!
This bread came out great! I actually used a hand held grater for the butter, which made it much easier to mix it in with the dry ingredients. I used dried cranberries. It was moist and delicious. A real keeper! Thanks so much for sharing.
I’m so happy to hear it’s a keeper, Cathy! That’s just awesome!
Made this exactly, except it turned out I only had 1 1/2 cups of buttermilk, so topped it to 1 3/4 with light cream. Delicious with such a tender, light texture! Will definitely keep this recipe! Thank you!
I’m so glad you enjoyed it, Lisa!
I loved this recipe! I did use gluten free all purpose flour though and instead of buttermilk I did ~300ml oat milk and ~25ml white wine vinegar and it was still moist and amazing!
Thank you so much for sharing that with me!
About to dive in to this amazing looking, smelling goodness. I did it without raisins(family consent😉) If it tastes as good as it looks…then, Wow!!😁😋
I hope you love it! Enjoy!
Hi Natasha. Praying for Ukraine! 🇺🇦 I have a question about the Irish Soda bread. Can I use full fat buttermilk. That’s what I have on hand.
Hi Sherry, thank you for continuing to pray for Ukraine. Regarding the bread, that should work fine.
Excited to try this recipe – can the flour be split 2 c all purpose, 2 c whole wheat? Or do you maybe have an Irish brown bread recipe I could try?
Hi Shannon, I haven’t tried that with both to advise. If you experiment, let me know how you liked the recipe.
My mom used to make Irish bread every March. I don’t have her recipe, but I knew I could trust yours. It’s so delicious, and easy too. I just added some caraway seeds to the dough, like my mom used to do. And I sprinkled some turbinado sugar on top because I like that extra bit of sweetness and crunch.
That’s just awesome! Thank you for sharing your wonderful review, Nancy! I’m so glad you enjoyed it!
My recipe is very similar to this one. I add 2 tsp caraway seeds and 1/4 tsp of anise seeds to the dough. Try adding them, you might like it.
Thank you for sharing!
Is it really 13/4 cups buttermilk? Dough was so wet. Came out very flat but taste was good.
Hi Jackie, the measurements written are correct. Also, the dough should not be wet and if it’s too sticky to handle, dust with flour. Make sure you are measuring the ingredients correctly without any substitutions. It sounds like maybe not enough flour was used.
This was my first time ever making Irish soda bread. Your recipe is spot on. It is so tasty . Thank you so much for sharing it. I will definitely be making this again. 😊
You’re welcome! I’m so happy you enjoyed it, Jenn! Thank you so much for sharing that with me.
Hi Natasha I made the soda bread this morning. Cast iron pan definitely made the bread so much better tasting.especially the crust . Thank u for all your great recipes.
You’re welcome, Mary! I’m so happy you enjoyed that!
This turned out delicious! Thanks for the recipe. It was gone in one day.
You’re welcome! I’m so happy you enjoyed it, Elaine!
I made this exactly as the recipe says, but next time I will add more sugar…I’d double the sugar and a little more salt. It is a great base for soda bread.
Thank you so much for sharing that with me.
I use baking powder and milk for my Irish soda bread, from my Mother-in-law Pat, how does your bread rise without baking powder?
Hi Mary, we list in the ingredients we use 1 tsp of baking soda to help it rise. I hope that helps!
I have a question a have another soda bread recipe and it makes two loaves and uses less flour is the amount correct 4 cups
Hi Mary Ann, yes, we make the recipe as written. I hope you try it soon!