Traditional Foods of Ireland
Soda Bread | Spotted Dog | Brown Bread | Barm Brack | Leek & Potato Soup | Nettle Soup | Irish Stew | Bacon & Cabbage | Colcannon | Champ | Christmas Pudding | Christmas Cake | Christmas Mince Pies
Almost everyone when asked about Irish food mentions two things - Irish Stew and Corned Beef and Cabbage. And almost every visitor to Ireland is surprised to find that neither features commonly on restaurant menus!
In fact corned beef is not traditionally Irish at all - Bacon and Cabbage is. That isn't to say that such dishes are no longer eaten, they are, but they are homely dishes, served to family, rather than ones which would be chosen on an evening out.
Most traditional Irish foods use simple, basic and cheap ingredients, a reminder of the fact that they originated in a less affluent past. Many have been given a modern twist by a new generation of chefs or incorporated into dishes that better suit the tastes of a more widely travelled population.
Is it really traditional?
Whiskey in Irish Cooking
There is a tendency to take any recipe at random, add a dollop of whiskey and then append the word Irish in front of its name! I have even seen it mentioned - horror! - in recipes for bread.
Truth is that Whiskey is not much used in traditional Irish recipes - the Irish always preferred to drink it rather than cook with it!
So when you come across, as I did recently, a recipe for Irish Brack that included peaches, apricots, prunes and pumpkin pie spices, you can be sure that there is nothing Irish about it - the previous generation of cooks in Ireland would never have heard of some of those ingredients, much less have been able to obtain them!
Traditional Irish Foods and Recipes
More recipes and information soon.
Bread & CakeSoupPotato Dishes
| Main CoursesChristmasMore about Christmas in Ireland In another section of this site we have included some very good Irish Cream Liqueur Recipes |
Your Comments
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Posted by: tommy
14 Jun 2007, 14:27
Nice, i grew up on this same stuff, came over at 3, mum cooks but not
often, so nice to have some old school food.
Posted by: Neil
26 Nov 2007, 15:01
re Christmas Pudding: I believe "Plum" in Plum Pudding was originally
"Plumb" and refers to the raisins and/or currents in the pudding.
Posted by: lulu
15 Mar 2008, 14:12
Wow, this is great, I love my own home cooking, I love Irish stew!!
Posted by: Megan
17 Apr 2008, 09:35
I love Irish foods,. I am 96% Irish and that makes it seem even tastier.
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