Welsh Bara Brith (Tea Loaf)

teas.co.uk · 15 min + 12 hr soak + 90 min bake · Serves 10 to 12 slices

You'll need

Method

  1. The night before, bring 400ml of water to a full rolling boil. Steep the four tea bags in it for four minutes, then lift them out and press gently; the brew should be a deep mahogany.
  2. Tip the dried fruit into a large heatproof bowl and pour the hot tea over so it just covers the fruit. Stir once to wet it all.
  3. Cover the bowl and leave at room temperature for at least 12 hours, ideally overnight. Do not refrigerate, as a cold soak draws less flavour into the fruit. By morning the fruit will have plumped up and absorbed nearly all the tea.
  4. Next day, heat the oven to 160C fan (180 conventional) and line a 900g loaf tin.
  5. Sift the flour, mixed spice and cinnamon into a large bowl and stir in the brown sugar.
  6. Stir the beaten egg and the treacle, if using, into the soaked fruit, then fold the fruit mixture into the dry ingredients until just combined. Do not over mix, or the loaf goes tough.
  7. Spoon into the tin, level the top, and bake for about 90 minutes, until a skewer comes out clean and the top is deep mahogany. Cover loosely with foil if it browns too fast.
  8. Brush the hot loaf with warmed honey and scatter demerara over the sticky top. Cool in the tin for 30 minutes, then turn out onto a rack.
  9. Wrap in greaseproof and foil and leave a day before slicing; bara brith improves overnight. Serve sliced with butter, or plain with a cup of the same tea.

Recipe: https://teas.co.uk/recipes/biscuits/welsh bara brith tea loaf/