Bara brith in Welsh apparently means “speckled bread” – the “speckles” being the currants/raisins/sultanas that generously dot the bread. This is a tea bread – literally, because the dried fruit are soaked overnight in strong black tea, and also because it’s meant to be eaten at tea-time… or so I imagine. I can’t vouch for the second half of the previous sentence but I can tell you the first half is undoubtedly true. I got the recipe from a TV cookery competition show that I watched on and off (whenever I remembered) last year.
I don’t really know why this is regarded as a tea bread rather than a fruitcake. Texture-wise, the crumb was not really cake-y… not even fruitcake-y - insofar as you could see the crumb in between all that fruit, that is. (I might have overdone the dried fruits just a tad). I guess it was more like bread, somewhat denser than cake. Bara brith is meant to be eaten spread with butter, just like bread. It’s also meant to be yum, and it sure was. (Not that anybody would deliberately cook anything that wasn’t meant to be yum… but y’know it had to be said.) Easy-peasy recipe, too.
Recipe for: Bara brith (Welsh tea bread)Ingredients:
250gm mixed dried fruit (currants, sultanas and/or raisins)
100gm dark brown muscovado sugar
225ml strong hot tea (no milk)
1/4 tsp salt
1/4 tsp cinnamon powder
1/4 tsp nutmeg powder
1 large egg, beaten
250gm self-raising white or brown flour
Method:
1. Put the dried fruit and sugar into a large mixing bowl. Pour over the hot tea and stir well. Cover the bowl and leave to soak overnight.
2. When you are ready to bake the bara brith, spray a 450gm loaf tin with Pam and set aside. Preheat oven to 160C.
3. Drain any remaining tea from the fruit. Add the salt, cinnamon and nutmeg and stir well with a wooden spoon. Add the beaten egg and stir again.
4. Mix in the flour and transfer the batter to the prepared loaf pan.
5. Bake in the heated oven for about an hour (but start checking at around 40 minutes) till the bara brith is done and a tester inserted in the centre comes out clean.
6. Leave the loaf in the tin for 15 minutes, then turn it out onto a wire cooling rack and let it cool completely.
7. Serve thickly sliced and buttered.
RECIPE: BARA BRITH (Welsh tea bread)
Ingredients:
250gm mixed dried fruit (currants, sultanas and/or raisins)
100gm dark brown muscovado sugar
225ml strong hot tea (no milk)
1/4 tsp salt
1/4 tsp cinnamon powder
1/4 tsp nutmeg powder
1 large egg, beaten
250gm self-raising white or brown flour
Method:
1. Put the dried fruit and sugar into a large mixing bowl. Pour over the hot tea and stir well. Cover the bowl and leave to soak overnight.
2. When you are ready to bake the bara brith, spray a 450gm loaf tin with Pam and set aside. Preheat oven to 160C.
3. Drain any remaining tea from the fruit. Add the salt, cinnamon and nutmeg and stir well with a wooden spoon. Add the beaten egg and stir again.
4. Mix in the flour and transfer the batter to the prepared loaf pan.
5. Bake in the heated oven for about an hour (but start checking at around 40 minutes) till the bara brith is done and a tester inserted in the centre comes out clean.
6. Leave the loaf in the tin for 15 minutes, then turn it out onto a wire cooling rack and let it cool completely.
7. Serve thickly sliced and buttered.
2 comments:
loved this recipe---bookmarked !will make this soon !!
That looks so rich.. Delicious!
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