Granny's Wild Garlic Soda Bread: Tales of Springtime Nostalgia – Bangers & Balls

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Food plays such an important part in our life. Recipes are passed down from generation to generation which creates tradition, nostalgia and a sense of belonging. This is what we want to share with you through foraging. A memory that you and your children will always have and pass down to the next generation when you are long gone.

Soda Bread always transports me back to my Granny’s Kitchen Table in Ireland. I would love to eat it still warm, with my feet dangling down from the kitchen table. We would discuss the outfits that had been on Dallas that week as we lathered on the thick butter. It was a really special time.

It’s a true joy to be able to continue these traditions with my own daughters.

My Mama baked soda bread too and it wasn’t until I started school that I realised other children had their sandwiches made from a different bread! A single slice brings my mind back to my Mama and her brilliant ability to bring history alive and tell stories of the Ireland she grew up in. She used to say “Chomh searbh le craomh” – “as bitter as wild garlic” if someone was a bit mean. That bitterness of garlic is only felt near the end of the season when it is past its sensational best.

Whenever we went to the Wild Garlic patch for the first time my Mama would tell the story of Sweeny, a 7th century King of Dal Araidhe, who was banished to walk the Irish countryside as half-bird and half-man. He was left to wander madly because he was hostile towards Christianity that had started to flood the emerald isle and he assaulted a esteemed cleric Ronan.

Legend had it that while Father Ronan was marking out the boundary of a new church, an angry Sweeney grabbed the Father and flung him to a ice cold lake where he sank with no trace. Ronan was meant to have cursed Sweedy saying “He shall roam Ireland, mad and bare. He shall find death on the point of a spear.”

I was told that the exiled King lived among the plants and wild animals and it is wild garlic that helped him to stay alive as he took all the nutrients from the forest floor. Which only helped to build this sense of wild garlic as being magical!

Old Irish Brehon laws highlight the importance of this magical plant – the fine for taking wild garlic, seaweed or wild apples from private land without permission was to the value of two and half dairy cows!

There’s no greater joy than taking my daughters out to the Wild Garlic patch, and telling them the magical tales my mama told me. It’s so special to be able to share these moments and I know I’ll treasure the memories for years to come.

Our youngest Daughter Athene’s first trip to the Wild Garlic Patch!

We’ve been helping families acros the UK and Ireland create these pockets of magic in their own lives in our Wild Garlic Festival.

The doors to the festival might be closed, but there’s still time to enjoy the wild garlic season, with the newest installment of our Foraging Fairytales Series: Wild Garlic Festival. We’ve be travelled the world in Wild Garlic folklore, form the ancient forests of the UK, to the star carpeted glades of Ireland and the legendary Romanain mountains.

Between the pages, you’ll find all the info you need to forage your own Wild Garlic, and 23 of our finest Wild Garlic recipes: from Friday Night Fakeaways the whole family will adore, to simple wild garlic preserves that will keep the flavour alive in your kitchen long after the season has passed.

Wan’t to get your hands on a copy? Sign up to our mailing list- you’ll be the first to know when it’s released! In the meantime, take a look at our other wonderful Wild Garlic Blogs.

An Irish classic with a vibrant spring twist!Photo Credit: Tilly Hogrebe, who made this magical recipe as part of our 2022 Virtual Wild Garlic Festival!

  • 3 1/2 Cups All Purpose Flour
  • 3/4 Tsp Baking Soda
  • 1/2 Tsp Fine Sea Salt
  • 1 1/2 Cups Buttermilk or Kefir Milk (Have Some Spare In Case You Need More) See Notes
  • 1/2 Cup Wild Garlic Leaves
  • Pre heat your oven to 230C.
  • Wash and chop your wild garlic.
  • Stick it in a blender with your Milk and whiz up. I do this to give it a greener colour – you can add the chopped wild garlic straight in if you prefer.
  • Add your Flour, Salt and Baking Soda to your mixing bowl.
  • Make a well in the centre and pour in the Wild Garlic milk.
  • Mix in the flour from the side of the bowl with your hand. You want the dough to feel soft but not wet and sticky.
  • Knead the dough gently for a few seconds.
  • Shape into a circle, 1 – 2 inches thick.
  • Use a sharp knife to cut a deep cross into the centre making sure it reaches the sides.
  • Butter a baking sheet and pop on top.
  • Turn the oven down to 200C and bake for 30 mins. When baked, the top should be golden brown and the bread should sound hollow when tapped.

To make your own buttermilk, simply mix 1 tbsp of lemon juice with each cup of milk and leave to stand on the side for 5-10 minutes. It may look curdled or a little lumpy once rested- don’t worry!

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