Traditional Irish Batch Bread Loaf Recipe (#SP) | GastroGays (2024)

“We used to be sent out to the local bakery to get a loaf of batch (bread), still warm from the oven. By the time we got home there was a huge hole in the middle as we couldn’t resist tearing warm, fluffy chunks from it”… It makes our hearts sing when our parents talk about simpler times growing up in small town Ireland – especially when these stories revolve around food. Both sides of GastroParents have visceral memories of savouring this truly iconic and traditional Irish loaf, and so have we. This, to us, is the *ultimate* loaf for any #BreadLover!*

Traditional Irish Batch Bread Loaf Recipe (#SP) | GastroGays (1)

In celebration of National Bread Week (11th – 17th September 2017), we’re taking part in the Love Your Loaf campaign and sharing our secret recipe for the perfect batch loaf. A staple of every Irish person’s palate, pretty much everyone has childhood recollections of savouring this iconic blackened loaf which might not look like much but it’s a real wonder. Fittingly named as it comes inbatchesof two, four or more, then pulled apart, the crumb is firmer than your run of the mill loaf yet pillowy and chewy whilst the crust is gnarly, flaky and looks like its accidentally hit the top of the oven but that iconic blackened top adds serious depth to the flavour.

Traditional Irish Batch Bread Loaf Recipe (#SP) | GastroGays (2)

Made from just salt, water, yeast and flour (plus one extra special, essential ingredient which you’ll find in the recipe below), this is bread you’ll seriously find yourself making excuses to bake again and again and the scent of it baking will make your home kitchen feel like it’s a traditional bakery!

When we wanted to share this recipe on the blog, we were baffled that there were no other recipes online that we could find. Even after tweeting out for help and scouring the internet, it was a mystery that we couldn’t solve, even though most bakeries in Ireland produce a bread like this! It was expert baker and cherished friend of ours Dan Lepard who came to the rescue by giving us some baking pointers by simply looking at a PICTURE of this loaf – Dan, this one’s a testament to your incredible skill and advice! So good, in fact, a number of very *very* similar recipes (method, ingredients, ratios) have now crept up online on the years since we’ve published this post –– it has been noted.

Traditional Irish Batch Bread Loaf Recipe (#SP) | GastroGays (3)

Serves 4

  • 650g strong bread flour
  • 10g fine salt
  • 10g fast action dried yeast
  • 35g beef dripping or lard (we always use James Whelan Butchers’ award-winning Beef Dripping – the Great Taste Supreme Champion 2016 winner!
  • 450ml (approx.) warm water, body temperature and split in two measures
Traditional Irish Batch Bread Loaf Recipe (#SP) | GastroGays (4)

1. Dissolve the hard fat in half of the water and dissolve the yeast in the other half of the water. Stir both and leave for 5-10 minutes as you combine the flour and salt in a stand mixer.

2. Add the wet mixtures and beat on low speed until incorporated. You may need to add extra water until the mixture comes together and leaves no flour on the sides. Beat on medium-low speed for 10-15 minutes.

3. When pillowy soft to the touch and gluten-formed-stretchy, put the dough in a bowl (you can lightly oil if you want), cover with cling film or a shower cap and allow to rest and rise until doubled in size. This may take up to two hours.

4. Punch the dough back and then shape into four equal sized balls – weigh them out because these need to be precise. There are lots of video tutorials online of how to do this so that the balls are taught and the seam isn’t exposed – this is important for both proving and baking later. We flatten each piece, bring each of the corners tightly wrapped into the centre, turn the dough piece over and then roll vigorously under a claw-shaped hand to make it taut and hide the seam underneath. Put each piece in the four corners of a lightly greased baking tin with very tall sides if possible (we use a heavy, square cake tin with a removable bottom, 10″/25cm square or so) to help give the bread uniform height. Again, cover with cling film or a shower cap until the bread has doubled in size.

5. Pre-heat the oven to as hot as it possibly goes (240º-260º or so) whilst also putting a large, lipped baking tray in as the oven heats.

6. When just about to put the dough in to bake, boil a kettle with two cups or so of water. Open the oven door and splash the water as carefully as possible in to the heated tray. It may splash so be careful.

7. Put the bread in the middle shelf of the oven and bake for 35-45 minutes. Check after 20 minutes in case you need to turnto ensure even colouring on the top, at this point you can also take out the water underneath. You want the top to be blackened, so do push it to the limit.

8. Once baked, remove from its tin and allow to cool on a cooling rack. Best eaten warm but will keep for a couple of days, covered.

Traditional Irish Batch Bread Loaf Recipe (#SP) | GastroGays (5)

Serving suggestion: Warm from the oven, sliced thickly, slathered in butter. Repeat. Show us your own creations of traditional batch loaf by tagging us on Instagram, Twitter or Facebook!

Traditional Irish Batch Bread Loaf Recipe (#SP) | GastroGays (6)

*Sponsored: This post was part of a paid collaboration in support of 2017’s Love Your Loaf campaign for National Bread Week. Tofind out more about bread and National Bread Week, visit
www.nationalbreadweek.ie or follow on Twitter @loveyourloaf and on Facebook.

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Traditional Irish Batch Bread Loaf Recipe (#SP) | GastroGays (2024)

FAQs

What makes batch bread different? ›

The name “batch” comes from the way this bread is baked in batches, commonly four or nine loaves in a single tin which are then ripped apart into smaller loafs once baked. One of our favourite sandwiches to serve at lunch is the all-time classic BLT.

What's in a plain loaf? ›

It has a dark, well-fired crust on the top and bottom of the bread. There is no crust on the sides due to the unbaked loaves being stuck together in batches, baked together then torn into individual loaves afterwards.

What is the meaning of batch of bread? ›

1. a group or set of usually similar objects or people, esp if sent off, handled, or arriving at the same time. 2. the bread, cakes, etc, produced at one baking. 3.

What is the difference between batch and loaf? ›

A batch is a loaf baked with several others in one large tin, so that as they cook their sides partially merge together, and the finished loaves when separated have a crustless side or sides.

What is the batch formulation for bread? ›

Thus, in a recipe for one white loaf, use 500g of strong, plain flour and 315g water. 315 is 63 percent of 500. If you decide to make more dough than that, weigh the flour first and then calculate the water accordingly. While you're at it, you can calculate the amount of yeast (1%) and salt (2%) in the same manner.

What is the best flour to make bread? ›

While bread flour is the best option, it can sometimes be used if you don't have bread flour. “Check the protein content,” advises Chef Jürgen, since it can vary from brand to brand, and an all-purpose flour that contains protein on the higher end of the range, 12 to 13 percent, will produce a better outcome.

What is a Scottish loaf? ›

Scottish Plain Loaf has a characteristic dark and hard crust on the top and bottom of the loaf. There is no crust on the sides because they are baked in batches and then separated.

Why is Scottish bread different? ›

Scottish bakers developed a batch-baking technique whereby loafs of high-gluten imported wheat were baked together in a large iron box. These loafs were leavened not with baker's yeast, but with the traditional “barm” (a yeasty liquid from the brewing industry), and had the traditional long fermenting time.

Why is a batch called a batch? ›

The Old English root, bæcce, means "something baked," from bacan, "bake."

Where is batch bread from? ›

Batch is a traditional Irish bread, it triggers so many childhood memories for people and is something we bake every day at the bakery.

Who calls bread a batch? ›

Take the Coventry 'batch', which comes from an old Germanic word meaning 'to bake' ('bacan' in Old English).

Why is a bread roll called a batch? ›

Some of the words for a small round loaf of bread are Germanic in origin – "batch," which is also used more generally to describe a group of small objects, may come from "bachen," or "bake", says Robinson. "Roll" comes from French and would have arrived with Norman invaders later.

Why was Wonder bread different from other bakery breads? ›

These breads were made with an albino wheat variety that does not have the more pronounced taste of whole red-wheat flour.

What is the difference between farmhouse bread and regular bread? ›

The term 'farmhouse' implies an old-fashioned, in an unrefined style of baking, similar to the breads that were commonly baked by farmers way back when. This bread is denser and chewier than that of store-brand breads. Due to the use of freshly milled, whole grain flours, natural yeast, and slow fermentation.

Why does homemade bread taste different than store-bought? ›

Homemade bread contains no chemicals, artificial additives, preservatives, or enzymes. These are often used in store-bought bread to make them stay fresher for longer and enhance the taste.

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