
Today is St. Patrick’s Day, so what better time to share an old family recipe for potato bread!
For many years, boiled, mashed potatoes have been a staple accompaniment to meals in Northern Ireland. The traditional way of preparing potato bread is by throwing a few extra spuds in the boiling water when you’re cooking. You then have some left over to make into potato bread, following this recipe.
Servings
This will make 8 rounds of potato bread.
Timings
15 mins to boil the potatoes, 5 mins to turn into mash, then 10 mins to cool. Another 15 mins to make the bread.
You Will Need
- 250g potatoes (weight is after peeling)
- 30g butter
- half tsp salt
- 70g plain flour
- butter and granulated sugar to serve (optional)
Method
- Peel and cut the potatoes into chunky pieces. Pour over boiling water from the kettle, and simmer for 15 mins.
- Drain, then add the butter and salt. Mash to a creamy consistency, then set aside to cool in the saucepan.
- Sieve in the plain flour, and mix together with your hands, while still in the saucepan, to form a dough.
- Transfer to a lightly floured surface and roll out to a thickness of half to 1cm (see photos below).
- Use a cookie cutter (mine is 78mm diameter) to cut rounds from the dough. You should get about 4 rounds initially, then another 4 by combining and re-rolling the remaining dough.
- Lightly grease a heavy-bottomed frying pan with butter. Warm it on the hob, then put in the rounds, 4 at a time.
- Fry lightly on each side for about 5 mins, till dappled and golden brown (see my photos). Remove to a warm plate.



The potato bread can then be served as a savoury, along with bacon, eggs, sausages, or grilled tomatoes as part of a fry.
My favourite, however, is to serve it sweetened. Melt a sliver of butter on it while warm, and sprinkle with a spoonful of granulated sugar – see below. Serve with a pot of strong tea. Delicious!

I actually have a separate St. Patrick’s Day Playlist on Spotify, curated over a number of years, so there are many tracks I could choose from for today’s musical accompaniment. Let’s settle on this one from Dundalk’s famous musical family, The Corrs – So Young.
Happy St. Patrick’s Day!
5 replies on “Irish Potato Bread”
These look delicious. They remind me of my mom’s fried mashed potatoes! Love that you used a cookie cutter!
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Those sound tasty! The addition of flour means mine definitely taste like a bread.
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[…] all my Irish Potato Bread now eaten, I’m moving on to the next round of Irish-influenced good food and great music, in […]
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These look great. Have never tried potato bread. I have got to try this recipe.
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Thanks – I hope you like it!
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