Welsh cakes and bara brith: Anna Jones’ family recipes | The Modern Cook (2024)

Some families have a wealth of handed-down recipes, carefully written into notebooks with welcome splatters and curling corners. My family does not. My dad is one of 12 brothers and sisters, so my nan (or, “mam”) didn’t have time to go to the corner shop, let alone write down a recipe.

On my mum’s Irish, Catholic side, there was just my grandma, and while she and my mum both loved food, their life in a bedsit on a budget meant neither of them were keen cooks. So my food inheritance was simple Sunday roasts, egg and chips, and the odd treat: chocolate bars, fruit pies and – the favourite – Welsh cakes.

Another treat was always a slice of fruit cake, which even as a kid I loved. This bara brith comes from my husband’s mum, Sian, but I’ve taken a few liberties with the recipes to update them with flavours I now love. Recipes to me are like a food tapestry, with new threads being added as the old ones fray.

Sour cherry and vanilla Welsh cakes (above)

Traditionally, these are made with raisins and a little bit of nutmeg. You could stick to these flavours if you like, but I love them with a hit of citrus, sour cherries and vanilla. They are best eaten warm, and can be heated for a couple of minutes in an oven, pan or even in the toaster.

Prep 20 min
Cook 25 min
Makes around 20

350g plain flour
2 tsp baking powder
175g unsalted butter or dairy-free spread
Sea salt
115g golden caster sugar, plus extra for dusting
100g sour cherries
1 vanilla pod, seeds scraped out, or 1 tsp vanilla bean paste
Zest of 1 unwaxed lemon
Zest of 1 unwaxed lime
1 egg, beaten
2-3 tbsp milk

Sift the flour and baking powder into a bowl. Use your fingertips to rub in the butter or dairy-free spread until the mixture resembles breadcrumbs, then mix in the salt, sugar, sour cherries, vanilla and citrus zests. Mix in the beaten egg and two tablespoons of the milk, then bring together with your hands to form a firm dough. If it seems a bit dry, add another tablespoon of milk.

Lightly flour a clean work surface and roll out the dough to about 1cm thick. Use a 6cm round cutter to stamp out circles, bringing the dough back together and recutting until it has all been used up.

Heat a large, heavy frying pan or flat griddle over a low heat (no need to add any oil) and cook the Welsh cakes five at a time. This should give you plenty of room to flip them over and will ensure they cook evenly. Cook for about two to three minutes each side, until deep golden.

Cool the cakes on a wire rack, and dust with caster sugar and a little salt. Eat warm on the day you make them, either on their own or with butter and jam.

Bara brith

Bara brith translates from Welsh as “speckled bread”, which I find adorable. I use Earl Grey in this recipe, because that’s the tea I like to drink, but you can use whatever black tea you like. If you’re using a less strong tea, such as Earl Grey, brew it using two teabags. Traditionally, raisins, currants and sultanas are used in bara brith, but I like to mix in dates, dried apricots and sour cherries, too. Basically, a mixture of whatever I have.

Welsh cakes and bara brith: Anna Jones’ family recipes | The Modern Cook (1)

Prep 20 min
Soak 1 hr
Cook 1 hr 30 min
Makes 1 x 2lb/900glarge loaf

250ml strong, hot tea (I use Earl Grey)
450g dried fruit (sultanas, currants, raisins, chopped dates, chopped apricots)
1 organic egg, beaten
Zest of 1 unwaxed lemon
200g dark brown sugar
1 tsp baking powder
200g plain wholemeal flour

Heat the oven to 180C (160C fan)/350F/ gas 4. Make your tea nice and strong, and let it brew for a few minutes longer than you would a cup of tea. Put the dried fruit in a large bowl, pour over the tea and leave it to soak for at least an hour – you can leave it overnight, if you like, but I find an hour is long enough.

Mix the egg into the soaked fruit (reserving any remaining soaking liquid for later) and add the lemon zest: if you have soaked the fruit overnight, the liquid should be soaked up, so just add the zest.

Mix the sugar, baking powder and flour in a bowl with a whisk to break up any clumps, then mix this into the fruit and eggs. If you haven’t soaked the fruit overnight, add two tablespoons of the reserved liquid and stir through.

Grease a 2lb/900g loaf tin and pour in the mix. Bake for 90 minutes: it’s ready when a skewer inserted comes out clean. Eat warm with salted butter.

Welsh cakes and bara brith: Anna Jones’ family recipes | The Modern Cook (2024)

FAQs

How old are Welsh cakes? ›

Welsh Cakes have been tea-time favourites in most parts of Wales since the second half of the nineteenth century. They were usually cooked on a bakestone and the Welsh names given to these cakes were usually based on the different regional Welsh name for the bakestone.

What is eaten on St David's Day? ›

Celebrate St David's Day, it's on 1 March each year. Feast on the best of Welsh produce and recipes, including Welsh cakes, Welsh rarebit and more, to celebrate 'Dewi Sant', as he's known in Welsh.

Do you eat Welsh cakes hot or cold? ›

Welsh cakes can be eaten hot or cold, though the vast majority of Welsh people will tell you how to eat Welsh cakes is eating them while they're still warm. You can heat them up easily in a pan, toaster oven, standard oven, or even your microwave.

What are Welsh cakes called in England? ›

They were usually called Pica ar y Maen in south Carmarthenshire, West Glamorgan and South Glamorgan. In English, they would be called 'bakestone cakes' or simply 'bakestones'.

How long do Welsh cakes last? ›

Cook the Welsh cakes in batches, for about 3 mins each side, until golden brown, crisp and cooked through. Delicious served warm with butter and jam, or simply sprinkled with caster sugar. Cakes will stay fresh in a tin for 1 week.

What is in a full Welsh breakfast? ›

Some people count bacon and eggs as a full breakfast, whereas for others it must include sausages, beans, tomatoes, mushrooms, toast or fried bread, hash browns, black pudding and even bubble and squeak or potato cakes!

What is the most popular dessert in Wales? ›

Welsh cakes

Perhaps the best-loved of all Welsh treats, these small, circular cakes are dusted in sugar and provide the perfect accompaniment to a hot cup of tea. Traditionally cooked on a bakestone, Welsh cakes can also contain sultanas and chocolate chips for a sweeter twist on the original recipe.

What is the oldest cake in the world? ›

The Egyptians gave us the world's oldest known cake–and also the world's oldest Tupperware as it happens. During the reign of Pepi II from BCE 2251 to 2157, bakers mixed up a wheat dough for flatbread and filled it with honey and milk. The dough was poured into two pre-heated copper molds that fit tightly together.

What is the oldest fruitcake ever found? ›

Even older is the fruitcake left behind in Antarctica by the explorer Robert Falcon Scott in 1910. But the honor for the oldest known existing fruitcake goes to one that was baked in 1878 when Rutherford B. Hayes was president of the United States.

What is the oldest form of cake? ›

Yeast cakes are the oldest and are very similar to yeast bread. Such cakes are often very traditional in form and include such pastries as babka and stollen.

Where does Welsh cakes come from? ›

Welsh Cakes originate from the country of Wales in Great Britain. The cakes are a cross between a cookie, a scone, and a pancake but they are truly unlike any of these things when it comes to taste and texture.

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