Tuesday, June 14, 2011

My favorite banana bread


Banana Bread by Lucy Mercer/A Cook and Her Books

Banana bread is a humble but reliable creation, and because it uses dead-ripe bananas, it's the frugal baker's best friend. There are hundreds of variations of this basic quick bread, probably the first baking project most young cooks will try at home. I'm not the most accomplished baker, but after 30 years in the kitchen, I still make banana bread. Primarily due to the fact that we always buy bananas at the store, and frequently they get too ripe for our tender palates. I have a drawer in the bottom of my freezer where I stash the overripe fruit. Every now and then, especially when I have buttermilk on hand, I will make this easy banana bread and enjoy it warm from the oven, crumbly and tender, with a cup of tea. And maybe a shmear of softened cream cheese.


This recipe is from a cookbook from Pleasant Hill, the Shaker community in Kentucky. Appropriately, it's a simple bread, not gussied up with spices or nuts or chocolate, although it could be a blank canvas for experimentation. I usually double it, to use up more bananas and buttermilk. The instruction for adding the leavening is unusual - first add one cup of flour, then stir baking soda and salt into the remaining flour before adding to the batter.

Best Ever Banana Bread

1/2 cup (1 stick) unsalted butter

1 cup granulated sugar

2 eggs

2 bananas, mashed, to equal 1 cup

2 cups all purpose flour

1/3 cup buttermilk

1/2 tsp salt

1 tsp baking soda

Cream butter and sugar in bowl with electric mixer. Beat in eggs and bananas. Add one cup of the flour and half of the buttermilk alternately. Add salt and soda to remaining flour. Stir in second flour mixture and end with remaining buttermilk. Turn into well-greased 9 X 5 loaf pan. Bake at 325 for one hour (per cookbook, mine take up to 1 hour and 15 minutes to bake).

3 comments:

Julie Quinn said...

mmmm - mmmm - mmmm Banana bread is one of my favorites and a way for me to get my very picky eaters to eat some fruit.

Anonymous said...

I never have buttermilk on hand but i have all the others-what if i used regular milk?

thanks-google wont let me leave comments-ugh
tess

Lucy Mercer said...

Hi Tess! Thanks for reading & sorry about the comments - something more for the "to do" list. Substitute for the 1/3 cup buttermilk is 1/3 milk + 1 teaspoon white vinegar or lemon juice. Stir the acid into the milk and let stand for about 5 minutes before adding to the recipe. I haven't tested out these possibilities, but I feel confident they would work: 1/3 cup sour cream or 1/3 cup plain yogurt.