Our Favorite Irish Recipes for St. Patrick's Day (2024)

Everyone is a little Irish for St. Patrick’s Day, right? On this side of the Atlantic, we celebrate with a New England boiled dinner of corned beef and cabbage. Our updated version tweaks the classic with the addition of delicately poached golden beets, tangy juniper berries, and a healthy kick of horseradish. But change doesn’t mean we have to lose local flavor. In fact, Dublin-based chef Cúán Greene, who writes the Ómós Digest food newsletter, affirms that bia bán (white food) dishes are evolving.

Sure, Ireland still loves its raisin-studded báirín breac (speckled loaf) and creamy mashed colcannon, but the traditional dietary dependence on potatoes, grains, dairy, and salted meats is shifting to freshly inventive pairings and foraged ingredients. A brothy lima bean and sausage stew as comforting as cassoulet from a sixth generation farm in West Cork. Seaweed-crusted rack of lamb from the Dingle Cookery School. Glenbeigh mussels steamed in chile-spiked coconut milk, inspired by a journey to Thailand. (Southeast Asian and African dishes are growing more popular in multicultural cities like Dublin.)
We can’t wait to try other seasonal recipes featuring the regional abundance of seafood: salmon confit with watercress remoulade, scallops paired with fresh pea puree, crab bisque with a healthy slug of Irish whiskey. Save room for brown bread ice cream with butterscotch sauce or a tea cake drizzled with brightly tart rose hip syrup from forager Oonagh O’Dwyer of Wild Kitchen in The Burren. And we’re definitely topping off our celebration with an Irish coffee. Or two. Here are our favorite Irish recipes for all your St. Patrick’s Day festivities.

Cuan Greene's Brown Bread

A “bairín” was originally a rectangular piece of wood placed in front of a horse-drawn cart's wheels as a brake, and it's also the shape of the rectangular loaf tin in which this brown bread is baked. Get the recipe >

ADVERTIsem*nTAD

AD

Bean and Sausage Stew

At Gubbeen Farm, a 250-acre coastal plot of land in West Cork, an Irish twist on French cassoulet results in a flavorful, brothy stew of lima beans and thin Irish pork sausages. Get the recipe >

Poached Salmon and Watercress Remoulade

Once home port for a famous Irish pirate queen, Clare Island is now known for a variety of salmon that thrives in Clew Bay, off the Atlantic coast. At Dromoland Castle in County Clare, chef David McCann sources organic Clare Island salmon for his delicate, briny confit, which he pairs with a brightly tart watercress remoulade. Get the recipe >

Rose Hip Syrup

Forager Oonagh O’Dwyer of Wild Kitchen hunts for the tiny rose hips that grow in hedgerows blanketing The Burren in County Clare. Once O’Dwyer has enough fruit of the dog rose (Rosa canina), she simmers them in a syrup that can be poured over ice cream, drizzled onto tea cakes, or added to co*cktails. Get the recipe >

Seaweed-Crusted Rack of Lamb with Red Wine Sauce

ADVERTIsem*nTAD

AD

Mark Murphy, head of the Dingle Cookery School in Ireland, believes the lamb raised in Dingle to be some of the world’s best. “The meat has a slight salt flavor,” he says, “due to the Atlantic sea breezes that blow across the peninsula,” where the animals feed. Even if you can’t get lamb from the source, seaweed lends a soft salinity to the dish. Get the recipe >

Seared Bay Scallops with Pea Purée and Radishes

At Ireland’s Global Village, Martin Bealin and Nuala Cassidy pair local scallops with wild boar belly. In this simplified version, they use pan-seared slices of chorizo for crispy, spicy contrast to the sweet seafood and peas. Get the recipe >

ADVERTIsem*nTAD

AD

Crab and Irish Whiskey Bisque

Chef Martin Bealin uses every part of the crustacean at Global Village, including the shells, which flavor this rich, comforting bisque. A long simmering of the shells ensures that the crab flavor is pronounced in each spoonful, but if you’d like, you can also use cooked crab meat to garnish the soup. Get the Recipe >

Mussels with Coconut Sweet Chili Broth

ADVERTIsem*nTAD

AD

Sinéad Roche and Thomas Ashe of Ashe’s Bar and Restaurant have incorporated flavors from their culinary travels through Thailand into this dish, marrying Southeast Asian ingredients with local Glenbeigh mussels, foraged from the rocky coast along Dingle Bay. Get the recipe >

Irish Brown Bread Ice Cream with Butterscotch Sauce

Incorporating a Dingle staple—Irish brown bread—and a rich butterscotch topping, this ice cream has the comforting flavors of honey-drizzled toast in each bite. Get the recipe >

The Best Corned Beef and Cabbage

ADVERTIsem*nTAD

AD

The SAVEUR test kitchen’s version of the classic New England boiled dinner (and St. Patrick’s Day favorite) both honors the flavors of the original and elevates the dish at the same time. Get the recipe >

Colcannon

Leave it to the potato-loving Irish to dream up colcannon, spuds mashed with finely chopped cabbage and enriched with lots of cream. Get the recipe >

ADVERTIsem*nTAD

AD

Irish Coffee Riff co*cktail

Drew Hamm atHenry’sin Chicago makes a toasty spin on the traditional Irish coffee by adding Flor de Cana rum and a cinnamon syrup to the usual Irish whiskey base. Get the recipe >

Our Favorite Irish Recipes for St. Patrick's Day (2024)

FAQs

What is the typical Irish meal for St Patricks Day? ›

Patrick's Day party, including soda bread and a seriously tasty trifle to whip up for dessert.
  • Bacon and Cabbage. ...
  • Irish Soda Bread. ...
  • Irish Stew. ...
  • Irish Coffe. ...
  • Corned Beef and Cabbage. ...
  • Colcannon.

What is the traditional Irish dish? ›

Colcannon and champ

Colcannon is a classic, comforting mash of potatoes, cabbage (or kale) and butter (or cream), flavoured with spring onions. Champ is a similar, mashed potato favourite, flavoured with spring onions, milk and butter.

What is the national dish of Ireland? ›

The National Dishes of Ireland

Irish Stew is a thick, hearty dish of mutton, potatoes, and onions and undisputedly the national dish of Ireland.

What is the difference between Colcannon and Champ? ›

What is the difference between Colcannon and Champ? Both Irish dishes, Champ is mashed potatoes with chopped spring onions (scallions) and milk. Colcannon is Champ with the addition of cabbage and sometimes some herbs.

What is a leprechaun's favorite food? ›

Leprechauns are 100% carnivorous and will eat almost any meat that they can find. The leprechaun's highest craving of food is leprechaun eggs, with humans being their second favourite, as well as their most common source of food. Leprechauns are unique in the way their reproduction cycle works.

What is the name of the Irish stew? ›

Stobhach/ Stobhach Gaelach

What vegetables did the Irish eat? ›

For veggies, the Irish relied on cabbages, onions, garlic, and parsnips, with some wild herbs and greens spicing up the plate, and on the fruit front, everyone loved wild berries, like blackberries and rowanberries, but only apples were actually grown on purpose.

What do Irish eat for breakfast? ›

A traditional full Irish breakfast comprises bacon, sausage, eggs, potatoes, beans, soda bread or toast, tomatoes, mushrooms, and white or black pudding. For those wondering, black pudding coagulates the pig's blood into a sausage form. The white pudding is simply a pork sausage, usually flat.

What is the most eaten dish in Ireland? ›

What are the most popular Irish foods?
  • Irish stew. ...
  • Boxty. ...
  • Soda bread. ...
  • Colcannon. ...
  • Barmbrack. ...
  • Black pudding. ...
  • Coddle. ...
  • Irish coffee. Irish coffee is a beloved beverage in Irish cuisine, combining hot coffee, Irish whiskey, sugar, and cream.
Mar 13, 2024

What are 3 foods that are from Ireland? ›

Representative dishes include Irish stew, bacon and cabbage, boxty, brown bread (as it is referred to in the South) or soda bread (predominantly used in Ulster), coddle, and colcannon.

What is Ireland's national sauce? ›

YR sauce is Ireland's original spicy sauce since 1837 and has been in the heart of Irish families for generations.

What is an Irish potato called? ›

Solanum tuberosum (Irish Potato, Irish Potatoes, Pomme de Terre, Potato, Potatoes, White Potato, White Potatoes) | North Carolina Extension Gardener Plant Toolbox.

What is Boxty made of? ›

Boxty is a thick pancake of mashed and shredded potatoes, flour, baking soda, and buttermilk fried in butter or lard. These are traditionally formed into a circle and cut into quarters or triangles and are usually served as a side dish or appetizer. These are a great way to use up any leftover mashed potatoes.

Why do we eat corned beef and cabbage at St. Patty's Day? ›

What has become a tradition of eating corned beef and cabbage to celebrate St. Patrick's Day likely grew out of the fact that those foods were less expensive for immigrants who came to America. They substituted beef for pork and cabbage for potatoes.

Why is a reuben considered Irish? ›

The Reuben sandwich — that famous combination of corned beef, sauerkraut, Swiss cheese, rye bread and Thousand Island dressing — wasn't invented in Ireland, nor by an Irish cook, according to the most prevalent accounts (one credits a hotel in Omaha, Nebraska; another a deli in New York City).

What does Erin Go Bragh mean? ›

Patrick's Day, people turn to their dictionary to look up Erin go bragh, which means “Ireland forever.” The original Irish phrase was Erin go brách (or go bráth), which translates literally as “Ireland till doomsday.” It's an expression of loyalty and devotion that first appeared in English during the late 18th-century ...

What do the Irish do on St. Patty's Day? ›

Patrick, the patron saint of Ireland. The holiday has evolved into a celebration of Irish culture with parades, special foods, music, dancing, drinking and a whole lot of green.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Eusebia Nader

Last Updated:

Views: 6170

Rating: 5 / 5 (80 voted)

Reviews: 95% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Eusebia Nader

Birthday: 1994-11-11

Address: Apt. 721 977 Ebert Meadows, Jereville, GA 73618-6603

Phone: +2316203969400

Job: International Farming Consultant

Hobby: Reading, Photography, Shooting, Singing, Magic, Kayaking, Mushroom hunting

Introduction: My name is Eusebia Nader, I am a encouraging, brainy, lively, nice, famous, healthy, clever person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.