Brown bread ice cream is unique to Ireland. Just as other European cuisines have their own iconic dishes used to stretch the last of ingredients which might otherwise go stale. Since home baked Soda bread is best eaten within a day or two of baking, you don’t want to waste any. It is wonder simply spread with butter on the first day, fabulous toasted on the second day but, by day three, it might be more brick than brioche. Brown bread ice cream was a way to use up the old (not quite stale) bread. Similar traditions exist in cuisines all over the world. In France the 'pain perdu', is used in many different recipes. In Italian cuisine, 'gremolata' dishes make use of the day old bread, turning the stale bread into breadcrumbs, and in England, bread and butter pudding makes use of the nearly stale sliced pan.
An English friend of mine was bemused one day when I mentioned the ‘heel of the loaf’ – a term she had never heard of to describe the crusty end slices. Just as every English language speaking country has colloquial terms, every country seems to have a recipe up its sleeve for using up stale bread. From panzanella to pangritata, fattoush to bread and butter pudding, the uses for breadcrumbs and stale leftover bread are many and varied.
Our answer, is brown bread ice cream. The combination of creamy vanilla ice cream with crunchy, caramelized, toasty crumbs is an absolute winner. Green grass from our cool, damp climate enables our cows to produce rich thick milk and cream, perfect for ice cream. This could explain our abiding love of a random scoop, in all weathers. The rise of food markets means we can now access small Irish producers selling handmade ice cream in hipster flavours such as gin and tonic, sea salt and seaweed, as well as rediscovering some old favourites like this brown bread ice cream. When we hosted International visitors for an Irish Cooking Class in my previous Cooking School in Dublin, I loved to see the jaw-dropping reaction of the international guests when they made brown bread ice cream from scratch. My recipe uses brown soda bread. It is the quickest and easiest bread to bake and means the ice cream has a true taste of Ireland. Different flavours such as fruit compote, rum and raisin and praline can be added to this basic vanilla ice cream recipe. The next time you turn to throw out the heels, why not immediately crumble and freeze them, ready for the next batch of ice cream?
For The Brown Soda Bread -
For Brown Bread Ice Cream -
See my recipe published in the Irish Times Weekend Magazine.
If you liked this recipe, why not take a look at our ONLINE Ultimate Irish Cooking Course? This at-your-own-pace on demand course is full of more traditional authentic Irish recipes like this one. Get a taste of the Emerald Isle at home! Find out more HERE.
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