Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Bara brith

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Alternative names
  
Speckled bread

Place of origin
  
Wales

Type
  
Sweet bread


Main ingredients
  
Yeast, mixed fruit (such as raisins, currants and candied peel)

Variations
  
Without yeast, using self raising flour instead

Similar
  
Bread, Welsh cake, Cawl, Raisin, Barmbrack

Bara brith welsh tea loaf


Bara brith, sometimes known as "speckled bread" (the literal meaning of the original Welsh-language name), can be either a yeast bread enriched with dried fruit or made with self-raising flour (no yeast). It is traditionally flavoured with tea, dried fruits and mixed spices, and is served sliced and buttered at tea time. A decrease in popularity of it led to supermarket Morrisons removing it from their shelves in 2006, and a year later a survey showed that 85% of teenagers in the UK had never tried it. It has been subsequently championed by celebrity chefs such as Bryn Williams, and is known to be favoured by Charles, Prince of Wales. Several variations on bara brith have been made, including changing it into a chocolate and into ice-cream.

Contents

Traditional bara brith recipe in the bread kitchen


History

Bara brith 1000 ideas about Bara Brith on Pinterest Welsh recipes and Teabread

Bara brith derived its name from the Welsh language, "bara" meaning bread and "brith" translating as speckled. It is claimed to have been invented by a Welsh chef who added dried fruit and spices to a bread dough, creating the first version of the traditional Welsh tea loaf. It has subsequently been used as a coloqiualism - to "over spice the bara brith" means to do something to excess.

Bara brith httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

In 2006, British supermarket chain Morrisons withdrew bara brith from sale at 19 of its Welsh based stores. Complaints were issued in the press, but the company insisted that the bread was removed because of lack of sales. A survey conducted by British supermarket chain Sainsbury's in 2006 showed that 36% of teenagers in Wales surveyed had never tried bara brith. When responses across the UK were viewed, some 85% of teenagers had never tried the traditional Welsh bread.

Bara brith Bara brith BBC Good Food

Celebrity chef Phil Vickery cooked bara brith in Brynsiencyn, Anglesey, in 2011 for a segment on the ITV television series This Morning. He used a traditional recipe which had been handed down to local chef Nerys Roberts through her family. Her bakery had previously supplied British supermarket chain Safeway with bara brith, before it was bought out by Morrisons. Beca Lyne-Pirkis baked a bara brith for one her entries during the fourth season of the BBC television series The Great British Bake Off in 2013. Although she based it off her grandmother's recipe, she found it difficult to complete within the three hours allocated for that round. But, it won praise from judges Paul Hollywood and Mary Berry.

Recipe

Bara brith BBC Food Recipes Bara brith

The bread is made by mixing flour (either white or self raising), yeast (if not using self-raising flour), butter, mixed dried fruit (such as raisins, currants and sultanas), mixed spices and an egg. Some recipes favour soaking the dried fruit in tea overnight before the baking. This mixture is then proven to allow fermentation to take place. After an initial period, the air is knocked out of the mixture and it is allowed to prove once more. This period of preparation can take up to two hours, including the resting time for the bread mixture. It is then baked in an oven. Bara brith is traditionally served at tea time, alongside tea. It is normally sliced with butter spread on one side.

Variations

Bara brith Antics of a cycling cook Honey glazed Bara Brith

In Argentina, bara brith is also known as torta negra ("black cake"). One of the most traditional foods coming out of the Chubut valleys, it was brought by the Welsh settlers who started arriving in the country in 1865. Other variations exist within Wales. Lyne-Pirkis' version of the bara brith on The Great British Bake Off substituted a tea oil to replace the overnight soaking process for the fruit. In E. Smith Twiddy's The Little Welsh Cookbook, a cup of cold tea is included in the mixture, and marmalade is used as a glaze. Celebrity chef Bryn Williams uses lard in his recipe, and a combination of raisins and candied peel as the mixed fruit.

Bara brith BBC Food Recipes Bara brith

The flavours of a bara brith have also been made into other types of food. Pemberton's Victorian Chocolates in Llanboidy, Carmarthenshire, developed a bara brith inspired chocolate in 2009, using a tea flavoured cream filled chocolate complemented with dried fruit and possessing a cake-like texture. When Charles, Prince of Wales visited Ammanford, Carmarthenshire, in 2011, he tried bara brith ice-cream. It had been created by a local ice-cream parlour who knew of the Prince's fondness for the bread.

References

Bara brith Wikipedia


Similar TopicsBread
Cawl
Raisin