Brack is a traditional Irish cake baked at Halloween. The name comes from the Irish word 'breac', which means speckled.
Fruit freckles every slice of this delicious cake or bread. Tea in the name refers to the practice of soaking dried fruit in cold tea overnight, before adding it to the cake batter.
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Brack - An Irish Halloween Tradition
What makes this cake so much fun is the tradition of baking trinkets inside. I remember chewing each slice, hoping I would be the lucky one to bite into the ring. I wasn't interested in marriage at six years of age, but just fancied the ring. Each trinket had a meaning:
- Ring = marriage within the year
- Coin or bean = wealth
- Cloth or pea = poverty
- Thimble = continue to be a spinster
- Button = continue to be a bachelor
- Religious medal = join a religious order
There are two types of brack: barmbrack and tea brack. Yeast is used as a raising agent in barm brack, while tea brack rises with the aid of baking powder.
You can learn all about the differences between tea brack and barmbrack here.
Today, I am going to share a recipe for tea brack, an Irish sweet bread with lots of dried fruit.
This version is a little lighter than the tea brack of my youth. The end result is just how my kids like it.
Ingredients for Irish Tea Brack
Here you’ll find a quick list of what you’ll need for this recipe.
Check out the printable recipe at the bottom of this post for US and Metric equivalent versions of the recipe.
There you can choose the measurement system that works best for you.
Here's what you will need:
- raisins
- golden raisins
- light brown sugar
- black or orange flavored hot tea
- cake flour
- baking powder
- pumpkin pie spice or mixed spice
- eggs
- grated orange zest
- orange marmalade
- squeezed orange juice
Ingredient Tips and Substitutions
The spice mix used to give tea brack a warming taste is known as mixed spice in Ireland. You can substitute pumpkin pie spice for this spice blend if you wish.
Pumpkin pie spice has more ground cinnamon than a typical mixed spice. You might like to make your own mixed spice for an authentic taste of Ireland and the British Isles.
I use cake flour rather than all-purpose flour for this recipe. It yields a much lighter cake, with that is moist and airy. I also use baking powder, instead of choosing self raising flour. You can add a pinch of salt to the flour if you wish.
Dried currants would be used in a tea brack in Ireland. For my American version of this recipe, I only use raisins. Currants are difficult to find in American grocery stores. We discovered the reason why when I reminisced about blackcurrants.
I don't use any mixed peel in my recipe, but you could add some candied orange or lemon if you wish.
I bake my tea brack in a round baking pan but you could choose to bake it in loaf tins instead. A 2lb loaf tin should work for this recipe.
Directions for Irish Tea Brack
Here you’ll find step-by-step photographic instructions to help you recreate this recipe successfully. There are plenty of tips included along the way.
Soak the dried fruit
The key to tea brack success is soaking the dried fruit in tea overnight. The night before you plan to make your brack, put the raisins in a glass bowl that can handle high heat.
Add the brown sugar to the fruit.
Make a pot of tea and let it brew for a little while. You can use a strong black tea such as English Breakfast Tea, or I chose to use an orange infused tea to add flavor to the fruit.
Add 2 cups of hot tea to the fruit and sugar. Stir it well at this stage to dissolve all of the sugar.
Cover the bowl and leave it overnight. It is best to leave it at room temperature to maximize soakage. The fruit tends to contract a little in a refrigerator.
Some people just pour cold tea over the fruit, but I find the raisins get plumper when I start off with hot tea.
Prepare a baking pan
On baking day, preheat the oven to 325 degrees F. Grease a 9-inch round cake pan.
In olden days, it was necessary to butter the pan, and then line it with parchment paper to avoid sticking.
I just use a non-stick, quick-release pan, which I spray with flour infused oil. I love this stuff for baking. You have a prepared pan in double quick time.
Prepare the dry ingredients
Next sift the flour, baking powder and pumpkin pie spice into a bowl.
In Ireland we use mixed spice, which has a very unique combination of cinnamon, coriander, caraway, nutmeg, ginger, cloves, allspice, and mace. It adds a very distinctive flavor to Irish and British baking.
The best American alternative is pumpkin pie spice mix.
Wet ingredients for teabrack
In another bowl add two eggs, the orange juice and orange zest.
Beat them together.
Next, add the marmalade and beat it all together.
Marmalade is not a traditional ingredient to add to the batter. However, I find it gives this cake a deliciously moist texture, with a hint of orange flavor.
Make the batter
You are now ready to add the soaked fruit to the egg mixture and blend all the wet ingredients together.
Next step is where wet meets dry.
Add about one third of the flour mixture to the eggs and mix it together.
Add the next third, and mix well before adding the remainder of the flour.
The batter is a fairly gloopy mess. If you plan to add trinkets to your cake, now is the time to do it.
First wrap them in parchment paper. I did not add any, this year. I don't fancy any choking hazards for my trio of four-year olds. Make sure you don't use anything plastic or toxic material that might melt.
Pour the batter into the cake pan.
Here's how it looks in the cake pan before cooking.
Place it in the oven for 90 minutes.
The cake is cooked when a toothpick is inserted and comes out clean.
Cool it in the pan for one hour after removing it from the oven. Then transfer it to a wire rack to finish cooling.
Here's the finished product.
It can be sliced up and buttered to accompany a cup of tea or coffee, or it can be stored in an airtight container or cake box.
Slices of speckled brack - absolutely delicious.
Lots of fruit speckles means this is an authentic brack (remember breac in the Irish language means speckled.)
Printable Recipe for Irish Tea Brack
The printable recipe is outlined below. Please feel free to save and print this recipe for your kitchen files.
Tea Brack
Ingredients
- 1½ cups raisins
- 1 cup golden raisins
- 1 cup light brown sugar
- 2 cups tea black or orange flavored hot tea
- 3½ cups cake flour
- 2 teaspoons baking powder
- 2 teaspoons pumpkin pie spice
- 2 large eggs
- 1 teaspoon grated orange zest
- ¼ cup orange marmalade
- 2 tablespoons orange juice freshly squeezed
Instructions
- The night before you plan baking this brack, put the dried fruit and brown sugar into a large bowl. Pour the hot tea over the fruit, stirring to dissolve the sugar. Cover and leave overnight to allow the fruit to soak in the tea and swell.
- Grease a 9 inch round x 3 inch high cake pan. Preheat the oven to 325 degrees F.
- Sieve the flour, baking powder, and pumpkin pie spice together in a bowl.
- Beat the eggs, marmalade, orange zest and orange juice in another large mixing bowl. Add the tea-soaked fruit and mix well.
- Add the spice and flour to the wet raisin mixture in portions (about one third at a time). Mix the flour with a large spoon after each addition.
- Pour the cake mixture into the prepared cake pan. Smooth the top and bake in the preheated oven for 90 minutes.
- Leave to cool in the pan for about 1 hour before turning the cake out onto a wire rack to fully cool. When it is cold it can be cut in slices to serve, or stored in an airtight cake box.
Nutrition Information is estimated based on the ingredients and cooking instructions as described in each recipe and is intended to be used for informational purposes only. Please note that nutrition details may vary based on methods of preparation, origin and freshness of ingredients used.
Wishing you all happy baking days and a very happy Halloween. I hope you enjoy a few slices of tea brack with a nice cup of Irish breakfast tea.
Click here for other recipes you might like.
Thanks for following my recipes and ramblings.
Slán agus beannacht,
(Goodbye and blessings)
Mairéad -Irish American Mom
Pronunciation - slawn ah-gus ban-ock-th
Mairéad - rhymes with parade
Here are some more recipes and ramblings you might enjoy...
The Irish History of the Jack O' Lantern
Colcannon - An Irish Halloween Tradition
Halloween - The Irish Connection
Plus here's a pinnable image for any Pinterest fans out there.
- Stacked Sugar Witch Cookies With Video Tutorial For Halloween
- How To Make Easy Delicious Pumpkin Brownies
- Halloween Chocolate Pumpkin Cupcakes
- Witch's Broomstick Snacks: Easy And Delicious
- Broomstick Witch Snacks For Halloween
- Scary Halloween Food and Dishes
- Barmbrack - A Traditional Fruity Bread From Ireland
- Homemade Chocolate Pretzel Spider Webs For Halloween
Grannymar
I love your version of tea brack and will give it a shot very soon. I like the warm friendly look of your blog and will return again to explore further.
Irish American Mom
Thanks for checking out my blog. My tea brack is a lot lighter than a typical Irish one, since I used orange flavored tea and light brown sugar. Also, by soaking the fruit in the tea with dissolved sugar, most of the sweetness is in the fruit and not the actually dough. I have just discovered your site, and will be checking out your great recipes over the coming days.
Caithleen
Hi there Irish mom,
I just took me Bram Brack out of the oven get my recipe from Annie in Dublin some 30 years ago.They made it for Halloween I make it for Christmas.Im not a baker but this one never fails me.I use Cyleon Black tea!!! what a great little cake. Thanks for sharing it.
Julie
This looks so delicious. Now if I can convince my husband to eat raisins, I'm set!
dennis
would you be having a recipe for Easter Hot Cross buns? My Mother was born in County Lietrim and she made them every year for Easter! Love your website!!!!!!!! You and your family have a Blessed and Happy Easter.....God be with you!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Irish American Mom
Dennis - I plan to post my recipe for hot cross buns later this week. I will be baking them tomorrow and taking photos. If I get the photos edited and the post written quickly I'll try to get it published on Wednesday, in time for Easter cooking. Easter Blessings to you and your family too!
Penny Wolf
In step 4 I am uncertain if to add the remaining tea from the soaked fruit or just the fruit? Also I believe I will bake this in a cast iron chicken fryer/skillet for a nice crust. I can't wait! 🙂
Irish American Mom
Penny - Add the soaked fruit AND the remaining tea - no need to strain the fruit. I have never tried baking a tea brack in a cast iron skillet, but it will probably turn out great. Enjoy!
Penny Wolf
I just had a slice of your bread and it turned out wonderful! I did bake it in an iron skillet with no problems. Also I used whole wheat flour which made the bread batter drier and as a result it baked in 60 minutes. The next time I may add some walnuts only because I love them not because they are needed. Thank you very much.
Are you familiar with a yeast version? If so what are your thoughts and comparisons.
Irish American Mom
Penny - I am so glad to hear you enjoyed this tea brack. I have only made a yeast brack, or barm brack as it is called in Ireland, two or three times. Since I am quite a tea drinker I always have plenty of tea on hand for soaking fruit, so making a tea brack is easy in my house. I also tend to shy away from using yeast very often. I think I am not patient enough to let my dough rise. Barm brack has a lot less fruit than this tea brack, and has a doughier quality to it. If I have time I will dig out my old recipe, and make a barm brack before Halloween.
All the best,
Mairead
Sara
Thank you for your lovely website. It brings good memories of Ireland back to me, culinarily.
I'm eager to try the recipe for Brack. Is there really no butter or shortening in it at all?
Irish American Mom
Sara - No butter in this particular recipe. Soaking the fruit in tea, together with the eggs and marmalade add moisture, but it is closer to a bread than a true cake. Thanks for checking out my website. So glad my ramblings bring back good memories of Ireland.
All the best,
Mairead
Judy
Mairead,
Just a little note to say how I love your website. My life parallels yours it seems, having my first at 39 as well. I'm now at a stage where I reminisce about "all things Irish" in my life that I took for granted so many years ago. As times change, and loved ones pass, I find it more important to imprint the loveliness of those times; the conversations, the food,the stories, and the way of looking at things "that all works out in the end", on my son who has been back to Ireland three times. So I be back for the recipes and have a wonderful Thanksgiving to you and yours....Judy
Irish American Mom
Judy - I too have lovely memories of my childhood in Dublin. Sometimes I feel Irish literature and films paint a very bleak picture of growing up in Ireland. I wonder if people around the world think we were all in a constant state of misery. Here on my blog, I try to share my happy stories, "to imprint the loveliness of those times" as you so beautifully put it.
It seems like we both have a lot in common. I'm glad to hear your son has been blessed to visit Ireland three times. So happy you found my website and enjoyed my recipes and ramblings.
Best wishes for a very happy Thanksgiving.
Mairéad
Elizabeth Mulcahy
I have made your tea brack many times and always get raves. Last time it was called 'extraordinary'!
Irish American Mom
Hi Elizabeth - An "extraordinary" tea brack - now that is praise indeed. Thanks so much for giving this recipe your two thumbs up. I really appreciate hearing from readers who enjoy my recipes.
Best wishes and have a lovely weekend.
Mairéad
Deborah
Thanks so much for all your hard work in putting this information up here and for sharing. I'm also grateful for your explanation of the trinkets that were added to the dough before cooking. I couldn't remember what was included and what each trinket represented.
We didn't have brack, though and I can't remember if we had them in potatoes or pancakes on Halloween. I think we had them in mashed potatoes (a la colcanon) at Halloween, because of all the candy we'd be collecting afterwards. (And there were years that we had to go home to empty our bags to have room for more candy!) No sense in having syrupy pancakes before all that candy!
On Pancake Tuesday I'm not sure if we just got coins in our rather flat pancakes, or if we got coins and all the trinkets again, though I'm not sure about the thimble - my mother's pancakes were never THAT fluffy. Ha! Ha!
Thanks for the memories!
Irish American Mom
Hi Deborah - So glad this blog post brought back happy memories. I have never added these trinkets to my Shrove Tuesday pancakes but that sounds like a wonderful fun idea. But you're right - you wound need very fluffy pancakes to add a thimble.
All the best, and thanks for stopping by.
Mairéad
Paulette
In the Irish Tea Brack - can I use a tiny bit less water to soak the fruits and make up the difference with a little whiskey? Also - what is allspice too strong to use, instead of pumpkin pie spice???
Thanks!
Irish American Mom
That should work great Paulette, adding a drop of whiskey. Be sure to let the fruit soak it up. All spice will be stronger so use a little less than the pumpkin pie spice.
All the best,
Mairéad
Eileen Cadogan Carter
Dear Irish American Mom. I'm from Lovely Ireland also, from an Island off Baltimore & Schull called Cape clear . A beautiful island in the summer , Lots of visitors in the summer. Bird Watchers from all over the world come there to see the birds take a rest on their trip from the west .i do love your blog brings back so many wonderful memories of times gone by 😍 I enjoy all things Irish especially baking, I do make the yeast barmbrack, my American friends love to get it as a gift when I visit. The photos of north west are amazing. homesick me ☘. Thank you sooo much reading your blog makes me happy. Eileen
Irish American Mom
Dear Eileen - I am so glad you enjoy my blog and that my recipes and ramblings bring back lovely memories of your Irish childhood. Cape Clear is such an amazing place. My mother is from Skibbereen so I know your little corner of the world. I spent a lot of time near Skibbereen as a child. Last year I took my kids to West Cork for the first time and they fell in love with it. My little girl can't wait to go back to skip some more stones into the sea. West Cork beaches have lovely flat, slate like stones which are just perfect for hopping across the water. For Halloween this year I should photograph the steps for making a yeast barmbrack. I'll put that on my "to do" list. So nice to hear your American friends enjoy a little taste of Ireland.
Thanks again for your kind words.
Best wishes,
Mairéad
Ana
Nothing better than brack and butter
Irish American Mom
And don't forget a cuppa tea also. Thanks for checking out this recipe, Ana.
Best wishes,
Mairéad