Seeded Soda Bread

31 Comments on Seeded Soda Bread
Seeded Soda Bread

Wholesome soda bread studded with three types of seeds

Waking up and eating is a joy. I adore breakfast and can’t imagine a day without it, so it pains me that so many people skip this meal on a regular basis.

While people around the world are making resolutions to restrict their diets, I’d like to suggest you add something to yours. If you don’t eat breakfast every day, why not make the time to do so? It kick starts your metabolism, limits snacking and overeating and is recommended by pretty much every nutritionist out there. It’s so wonderfully satisfying to start the day with a delicious meal, however small, and the perfect opportunity to try a whole host of recipes and flavour combinations.

Seeded soda bread

Nutty, crunchy & packed with flavour

Fruit and some sort of oats or yoghurt feature regularly on the little loaf breakfast menu and it will come as no surprise that I like to bake my own bread. However I appreciate that yeast is an ingredient that scares many people off and that baking bread is something that usually requires a little forethought. A regular loaf requires several hours between waking and baking with time set aside to knead and prove the dough: not exactly an immediate breakfast solution if you wake up ravenous.

Seeded Soda Bread

Sliced & toasted this is the perfect breakfast loaf

This simple soda bread is the perfect solution. With no yeast, no kneading and no proving time, this lovely loaf can be on the table and ready to eat in around half an hour, twenty minutes of which you can get on with making coffee and picking up a paper as it bakes. Made with only wholemeal flour and a mixture of pumpkin, poppy and sesame seeds to add texture and crunch, this loaf is a truly hearty, wholesome way to start your day.

Seeded soda bread

Soft & surprisingly light, this bread is delicious toasted

We ate this loaf last weekend in our pajamas, mine topped with smashed avocado (I’ve mentioned this obsession before), Carnivorous Fiancé’s hidden under bacon, black pudding and a runny yellow-yolked egg (you wonder where he gets his nickname . . .). We then went in for seconds, slicks of salty butter running over the edges of softly dense and crunchy toast. Sometimes you can find happiness is the simplest of things.

After kick-starting 2013 with a drunken plum tart and chocolate-glazed pistachio éclairs, I hope you’ll appreciate the fact that I’ve posted something a little more wholesome here today. As I’ve said before, eating is all about balance and enjoying what you love. Breakfast is what I love: I hope you’ll join me in enjoying it.

Seeded soda bread toast

Seeded soda bread: the perfect start to the day

Seeded Soda Bread (adapted from my Feta & Thyme Soda Bread)
(makes one small loaf)

Ingredients:

300g wholemeal flour
Big pinch sea salt
2 tsp baking powder
75g mixed seeds (I used poppy, pumpkin & sesame)
245ml buttermilk

Method:

Preheat the oven to 230 degrees C and place a baking stone or tray in to heat up. Lightly oil a small baking tin.

In a large bowl, mix together all the dry ingredients. Add the buttermilk and using a dough scraper (if you don’t have one, your hands will do), mix together for about two minutes until just combined.

Flour your hands and the work surface, tip out your sticky dough and shape it into a rectangle. Place in the baking tin, seam side down, slash the top then place directly onto your baking stone (or tray).

Bake for 20 – 25 minutes or until the crust is golden and the bottom sounds hollow when you tap it on the bottom. Leave to cool on a wire rack before slicing and eating.

31 RESPONSES TO Seeded Soda Bread

  1. Seems we’re both in the breakfast mindset! I often make something very similar to this too – I like mine with ricotta cheese and slices of mango. Or, failing that, homemade jam!

  2. What a fantastic bake! Thanks so much for sharing! =)

  3. This looks so comforting and wholesome – perfect for this time of year. Love your description of the bacon and eggs to go with it. I have a bit of a healthy breakfast and bread baking obsession at moment too and have been making soda bread with herbs and leftover cheese. Your addition of seeds sounds great though.

  4. This looks delicious, and I love your idea of mashed avocado. One of my new year’s resolutions is to add more avocado into my life in 2013.

    Thanks!

  5. Soda bread for breakfast sounds like an amazing idea! I’m going to have to give this loaf a try this weekend!

  6. amy -

    Like you, I love breakfast and also like to vary it. It’s such a great meal for baking experimentation and practice. I am also a fan of soda bread on occasions. This sounds like a good one.

    • Elly – I’ve never really been into making my own jam…maybe all that will change in 2013 as I do love it 🙂

      My Dear Bakes – my pleasure, enjoy.

      Andrea – cheese in soda bread is gorgeous too, something about the texture. Yum.

      Mehrunnisa – homemade granola is gorgeous. I’m on a bit of a bircher muesli kick at the moment but must make more granola soon!

      Kirsten – that is a very good resolution 🙂

      Bianca – it is! It toasts up light yet dense at the same time, so so delicious.

      Jenny – hope you like it as much as I do.

      Amy – it certainly is, so many different variations on a theme. So glad to find a fellow breakfast lover.

  7. I’m definitely a breakfast lover, too! Although sadly, I only indulge on weekends. This bread looks amazing! I bake mine own, too, every single week. This recipe is so happening this weekend. Pinning!

  8. This recipe is ideal – so quick, by the time the coffee machine has heated up, it will be ready to come out of the oven.. I have no excuse for diverting away from my usual breakfast of porridge to try this, thanks. Tracey

  9. That bread looks lovely. One of my NY resolutions is to try more bread recipes.

  10. This sounds like the perfect breakfast idea. Grabbing a slice of seedy bread out of the toaster oven as I run out the door is exactly my style. 🙂

  11. Sacha -

    I am a devoted breakfast eater (weekdays usually mean yogurt) and do not like to start my day with anything sweet. This definitely fits the bill!

  12. I don’t eat this kind of bread that often – usually as a treat for stuff like Christmas or Easter breakfast but you’ve got me craving it now. I love seeds in my bread.

  13. Emiko -

    Wow, wholesome indeed and just the thing for a good breakfast! I love the simplicity of this recipe, I must try this!

    • Nicky – only on weekends? You need to sort that out! 😉

      Tracey – enjoy!

      Nickki – me too, it’s so easy to get stuck in a bread rut when you find one that you love. Not that that’s necessarily a bad thing.

      Eileen – I like a slightly more relaxed breakfast, but each to their own!

      Sacha – glad to see another dedicated breakfast eater here 🙂

      Sarah – you should definitely make this more often, I’d say it’s an everyday bread rather than a treat!

      Emiko – it’s so simple, just what I love about soda breads.

      Iris – thank you. Me too 🙂

  14. Very simple indeed! I want to bake some bread this Sunday I think… perhaps a soda bread would be a nice idea. Thanks! It looks really fab!

  15. Susan -

    Whole foods are lovely, but so are happy decadent sweets like pistachio eclairs and drunken plum tarts. 😀 I quite like the sound of both of your breakfasts.

  16. What a lovely way to start the day – my mornings usually involve some kind of yoghurt/fruit/granola combination but I really like the idea of a slice of wholesome bread as an extra treat.

    • Frugal Feeding – hope you enjoyed the loaf!

      Susan – exactly, it’s all about balance 🙂

      Kathryn – this is a lovely alternative to granola – lots of lovely crunch from all the seeds!

  17. The additions to this bread are so many, and whole wheat flour is perfect for breakfast! I´m one who skips breakfast… I should start having dinner earlier, otherwise I get hungry many hours after waking up.

  18. Looks delicious! By the way, can I replace the baking powder with baking soda? I mean it is soda bread and I did make the effort of buying baking soda in a pharmacy by using my mangled French here… so I would like to start using it 🙂

    • Yep, absolutely fine to use baking soda instead! Poss reduce the amount ever so slightly x

      • Thank you 🙂 It is the recipe I was looking for before I found baking soda! haha I didn’t know you could make it with baking powder… now i wonder why I never tried! :-p

        • The Fabulous Baker Brothers recommend baking powder but both definitely work. Do try my feta & thyme soda bread too-that’s my favourite!

  19. Mae -

    Question how long can this bread keep ? As I will be the only one eating it. Husband is a white bread dude.

    • thelittleloaf -

      Hi Mae, it’s best eaten within a couple of days but you could always slice and freeze – that way you can pop single slices in the toaster and it can last much longer x

      • Mae -

        Thank you:)

      • Mae -

        Hi! I’m bakin it now… Well first it doesn’t really need to “fold” into rectangle as it doesn’t feels like a dough.. And while its baking (now) doesn’t expand.. I used double action baking powder..

        Am I doing anything right or wrong?

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