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Call us at one of the numbers below or use the accompanying form to contact us.

The Irish Boutique - Long Grove, IL (847 634 3540)

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228 Robert Parker Coffin Road
Long Grove, IL, 60047
United States

847 634 0339

The Irish Boutique is an Irish import store that has been located in the Chicago land area for over 40 years.  The shop stocks a variety of products ranging from Irish jewelry, crystal, china, food, sweaters, caps, t-shirts and a wide variety of Irish gifts. 

Cooking Blog

Visit our blog to read about Michelle Barry's adventures in cooking and eating Irish cuisine and to learn about new products and upcoming events. 

 

Hargadon’s Brown Bread

john barry

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I made my own soda bread awhile back and it was brilliant. I was amazed that something so simple and easy to make could be so delicious. Then I made it with Odlum’s coarse wholemeal flour.  Predictably, it was even better.

I used a recipe that was given to my brother-in-law by a customer.  The recipe included her personal baking notes. I followed the recipe as altered by the notes.  Except that I didn’t bake it in a loaf pan because I was hungry and thought that it would be done quicker if I just shaped and baked it on a sheet pan. It still took 45 minutes but it was so worth it.  It reminded me why most soda bread in Ireland is made from this type of flour. More flavor, better texture.  Although not traditional, I sprinkled the loaf with poppy seeds before putting it in the oven.  

Once the bread was done, I immediately ate a huge hunk for lunch along with some Irish cheddar, a hard boiled egg and some tomato jam. It was the perfect simple lunch. I ate some later with peach-apricot jam from this little gem right across the way from Paddy's, creme fraiche and a cup of tea.  

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Of course I had to look up Hargadon’s after tasting this bread credited to it.  According to www.goodfoodireland.ie

 Back in the mid 1800’s, when this pub first opened, Hargadons was a well-loved, local hostelry with a truly unique quality. Despite the prevalence of music bars and the myriad traditional musicians in the country, Hargadons remained a ‘quiet’ bar, devoid of music and dedicated to its position as a genuine sanctuary. This policy remained in situ until fairly recent times and despite it being relaxed in the last years, it remains free of television and devoted to conversation, story telling and of course good food. The pub has been at the heart of Sligo life for over one hundred and fifty years and despite being closed for some of them, has recently returned to its rightful place, close to the heart of Sligo folk and visitors. 

It sounds like the kind of place where this bread must have originated.

If you are baking this, you must make sure to preheat your oven before you start to get your ingredients together.  This bread comes together so fast that if you don’t, you will be waiting for your oven - not the worst problem to have.

Hargadon’s Brown Bread  

  • 3 cups coarse wholemeal flour
  • 1 cup all-purpose flour
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1 tablespoon salt
  • ⅓ cup sugar
  • 1 ¼ cup buttermilk
  • 2 large eggs

Preheat your oven to 375F.

Mix all of the dry ingredients together in a large mixing bowl.

Beat the eggs and the buttermilk together in a small bowl.

Create a well in your dry ingredients and pour the buttermilk-egg mixture in.

Using a wooden spoon, or your hands (I found it was easiest to use my hands and that no additional buttermilk was necessary) mix the dry and wet ingredients until no dry flour remains.

Shape the dough into a round on a greased sheet pan and cut an X across the top. The X should go about ⅔ of the way deep into the loaf.

Top with poppy seeds (optional).

Bake for about 45 minutes or until a cake tester comes out clean.

Cut off a hot slice, slather with salted butter and enjoy.

My lunch date. She's getting so big and talkative. 

My lunch date. She's getting so big and talkative. 

Roasted Tomato and Ricotta Tart with Odlum’s Coarse Whole Wheat Flour French Pastry Crust

john barry

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One of the best things about cooking in the internet era is that almost always, someone, somewhere, has tried making what you have your tastebuds set on and written about it. So naturally, when I came up with the idea of using Odlum’s coarse wholemeal flour for something other than soda bread, I turned the the internet. I discovered that people add coarse wholemeal flour to yeasted loaves and quick breads other than soda bread, like muffins and scones, but I couldn’t find a recipe anywhere for a tart crust made from it.  

This surprised me because the coarse texture and nutty flavor, reminiscent of a digestive biscuit or graham cracker, seem like the perfect fit for either a sweet or savory tart base. Having had no luck finding the tart crust I was looking for, I started googling “whole wheat crust” and found multiple pie crust recipes as well as pizza crust recipes.  None of them really fit the bill.   

Eventually I came to the realization that I was just going to have to experiment a little and come up with my own. I decided to start with David Lebovitz’s French Pastry Crust recipe because it’s tough to mess up and, having made it before, it seemed like the type of crust I was looking for to complement the coarse wholemeal flour I wanted to use.

It’s an odd recipe.  First you put the butter, oil, salt, sugar and water in the oven until everything is melted together and the butter starts to brown. Then you take it out and stir in the flour until the dough comes together in a ball. When the dough is cool enough to handle, you press it into your tart dough, dock the bottom of the crust with a fork and blind bake it without even using pie weights. There’s so much to love about it.  Nothing needs to be cold, rested or rolled out and you don’t even need pie weights! It really is the best tart dough ever.

I adapted the recipe to use my beloved Odlum’s and filled the cooled crust with a roasted tomato and ricotta filling born out of my refusal to go to the grocery store for a few days too long.  Funny how back in late summer I was cursing my prolific cherry tomato plant and now I’m hoping that our next crop is just as large. Someone, please remind me not to be lazy about roasted and freezing those little babies. They come in handy in so many ways. I’ve been using them on grilled cheese sandwiches (genius, if I do say so myself), salads, pizzas, as part of a cheese plate, and now this.

I tested the crust recipe a couple of times.  Whole wheat flour doesn’t behave exactly like all-purpose flour so it took a couple of tries before I felt like I had the fat, water, flour ratio quite right. But as with the all-purpose flour version, the basic technique produced an impossible to mess up, delicious crust that was both easy to put together and held together well. The flavor and texture were just what I had in mind, a cross between a wheat thin and a digestive biscuit.

This tart, coupled with a salad (topped with more roasted tomatoes) makes a perfect, simple lunch. As for the crust, I’m already thinking about how I want to pair it with chocolate, a la chocolate digestives, or fruit. It would also be nice for a cheesecake.

Roasted Tomato and Ricotta Tart with Odlum’s Coarse Whole Wheat Flour French Pastry Crust

Makes 1 - 7 by 1-inch tart

 For the crust:

  • 4 tablespoons (2 oz) butter
  • 1 tablespoon vegetable oil
  • 1 tablespoon sugar
  • ½ teaspoon salt
  • 2 1/2 tablespoons water
  • 1 cup Odlum’s coarse wholemeal flour 

For the filling:

  • 8oz full fat ricotta cheese
  • ½ cup plus 1 tablespoon shredded parmesan cheese
  • ¼ cup pistachio nuts
  • 1 cup roasted cherry tomatoes (roasted red peppers would work well)
  • ¼ cup sauteed minced green onions
  • ¼ cup chopped parsley
  • 1 egg
  • Salt and pepper to taste

Preheat oven to 400F.  

 Add salt, sugar, butter, oil and water to a heatproof bowl and place in the oven for about 20 minutes or until butter begins to brown around the edges.

 Remove from oven and mix in 1 cup of Odlum’s Coarse Wholemeal Flour with a spatula until no dry flour remains.

This is what it looks like when it's ready to press into the tart pan. 

This is what it looks like when it's ready to press into the tart pan. 

 Once the dough is cool enough to handle, pat it into the tart pan.

Ready for the oven. 

Ready for the oven. 

Dock the bottom of the tart with the tines of a fork and place in the oven for 25 minutes or until the dough is brown all over.

Blind baked. I couldn't wait for this to cool. Probably not a good idea to start cooking projects when starving. 

Blind baked. I couldn't wait for this to cool. Probably not a good idea to start cooking projects when starving. 

While the tart crust is in the oven, combine all of the ingredients for the filling except 1 tablespoon of the parmesan cheese until they are well incorporated, it should be thick.  

When the crust is ready, remove it from the oven and allow it to cool completely before adding the filling.

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Once the crust is cool, pour in the filling, sprinkle the reserved parmesan on top of the tart, and cook until it is set and only jiggles slightly in the middle when you move the tart pan from side to side, 20-30 minutes.

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If you like, place under the broiler for about two minutes to brown the cheese on the top. Be careful you don’t burn the exposed top ring of  crust when you do this (I did - but it was easy enough to remove the burned parts afterwards (see below) whew!). You may want to cover yours with foil before you turn on the broiler to be safe.

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Rachel Allen’s Brown Scones with Black Treacle

john barry

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Having four kids under the age of 5 requires a lot of energy in every sense of the word.  This includes energy in the form of calories.  If I wasn’t before, I am now (justifiably, I think) ALWAYS hungry.  Now that the enormous quantities of Christmas cookies, brioche and other forms of simple carbs in my house have been successfully annihilated, I’m turning to something simple and a little more healthy for the energy (and carbs) I both need and crave. A touch more decadent than a simple brown soda bread, I discovered the recipe for these scones by Rachel Allen in her book Bake.

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I cannot say enough about the virtues of baking with Coarse Wholemeal Flour. The taste and texture it gives to baked goods is like nothing else. It has a warm, nuttiness, almost like almond flour, though it bakes up lighter and more moist than any nut flour.  The texture is coarse but unlike most other coarse flours, it is unevenly so, which gives it an unmistakable consistency. I got two bags of the good stuff from Paddy’s over the holidays which came in handy when I woke up one morning wanting a warm brown scone.

See what I mean about the texture?

See what I mean about the texture?

These scones are fabulous.  I made them on a school day in about 30 minutes all in (washing up included)! I love that they only have 2 tablespoons of butter in them and just one tablespoon of sweetener.  I still don’t understand how they taste so good but they do. I probably wouldn’t have tried these if the recipe came from someone other than Rachel Allen, my secret best friend. She proves that time and time again, simple totally works. I didn’t have any sesame seeds but I did add a small amount of cardamom, which I strongly recommend if you like cardamom. I sprinkled them with sea salt and coarse sugar before baking which was also a very good idea, if I do say so myself.  I loved the salty, sweet crunch it gave each one.

Try this! Please! You can find coarse wholemeal flour at Paddy’s on the Square, or you can stop by my house and I’ll give you a couple of cups if that’s what I have to do to convince you that you need this in your pantry. Seriously. You do.

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Rachel Allen’s Brown Scones with Black Treacle

Adapted ever so slightly from Rachel Allen's recipe that can be found here

Ingredients

  • 1 ½ cups all-purpose flour, plus extra for dusting

  • 1 ½ cups coarse wholemeal flour

  • 1 tsp salt

  • 1 tsp baking soda

  • 2 tablespoons sesame seeds, plus extra for sprinkling (optional)*

  • 2 tablespoons butter, diced

  • 1 egg

  • 1 ¼  cups buttermilk or soured milk (add 2 tsp vinegar or lemon juice to 1 ¼ cup cow’s milk or soy or rice milk and leave to stand for 10–15 minutes)

  • 1 tablespoon black treacle (or dark molasses)

  • Sea salt and coarse sugar for sprinkling on top

*I didn’t have any sesame seeds but added a ½ teaspoon of cardamom, because I love it.

Method

  • Preheat the oven to 425°F. Dust a baking sheet with flour.

  • Put the wholemeal, all-purpose flour and salt into a large bowl. Sift in the baking soda.

  • Using your fingertips, rub in the butter until the mixture resembles coarse breadcrumbs.

  • In a separate bowl, whisk the egg with the buttermilk or soured milk, then stir in the treacle (or molasses) and pour most of the liquid into the dry ingredients. Using one hand with your fingers held out like a claw, mix in full circles to bring the flour and liquid together, adding more liquid if necessary. The dough should be quite soft, but not too sticky.

  • Turn the dough out onto a lightly floured work surface and gently bring it together into a ball, but without kneading it, then flatten it slightly to about an inch high. Cut the dough into 10–12 square or round scones. Brush the tops of the scones with any leftover liquid and sprinkle with some sea salt or coarse sugar (I used a combination of the two)

  • Put the scones onto the prepared baking sheet and pop in the oven to bake for 15–20 minutes (depending on the size of the scones). Have a look at them after 10 minutes: if they’re already a deep golden brown, then turn the heat  to 400°F, for the remainder of the cooking time. When cooked they should sound hollow when tapped on the base.

  • Transfer to a wire rack to cool.