Saturday, February 23, 2019

The History of King Cake for Mardi Gras

Mardi Gras king cake

The intersection between the secular and the religious is a fair starting block for any exploration of beloved holiday traditions, and the Mardi Gras king cake tradition is no exception. However, though the Christmas tree, Easter Bunny, and Halloween costumes are pagan icons that became attached over time to religious or spiritual celebrations, the king cake is an example of a Christian relic that became intertwined with the festival of Mardi Gras, itself a Christian/Catholic tradition, though one whose practice has taken a decidedly left turn, especially in the Big Easy. (A left turn down Bourbon St., one might add.)

To begin, what is a king cake? The recognized version in New Orleans is more of an iced bread than a cake, or what might be considered a coffee cake. “A traditional king cake tastes like a cross between a coffee cake and a cinnamon roll. It should be moist, but not dense and include cinnamon throughout,” say Maggie Robert and Alessandra Madrid of the New Orleans lifestyle blog Babes & Beignets. A king cake is made from a yeasted dough, scented or rolled with cinnamon and shaped into a ring, then coated with a simple sugar icing and decorated with sprinkles in the official colors of Mardi Gras: purple, green, and gold. (For “justice, faith, and power.”) A plastic baby figurine is hidden within the cake, and the person whose slice contains it receives both privileges and responsibilities. A brightly colored bread-cake with a hidden figurine? Naturally, there’s lots to unpack here.

Mardi Gras king cake recipe

Chowhound

In the midst of the colorful parades, beads, cocktails, and general debauchery, it’s easy to forget that New Orleans’ Mardi Gras itself is, at its core, a celebration related to Lent. “Fat Tuesday” occurs as a permissive day of indulgence before the start of Lent, a period of fasting and reflection before Easter. (Mostly as a kid I spent most of my time reflecting on how much I missed the chocolate I had been forced to give up.) In the modern American celebration of Mardi Gras in New Orleans, the permissive element has certainly been magnified (apparently the day got mixed up along the way with a previous Roman celebration of fertility, ahem), but it stands as no surprise that a French pastry with a religious origin should have a role in it.

What is surprising, perhaps, is that the pastry itself has root in a different holiday: that is, Christmas. This perhaps explains both the name, and the baby. According to Manny Randazzo Original King Cakes, one of the foremost bakeries of the form in New Orleans: “The Mardi Gras or Carnival season officially begins on January 6th or the ‘Twelfth Night,’ also known to Christians as the ‘Epiphany.’ Epiphany comes from a Greek word that means ‘to show.’ Jesus first showed himself to the three wise men (i.e. Kings) and to the world on this day. As a symbol of this Holy Day, a tiny plastic baby is placed inside each King Cake.”

Mini Plastic Babies, 60 for $7.39 on Amazon

Many more than you'll need, but you never know when the extras will come in handy...
Buy

The cake itself was developed in France several centuries ago as a symbolic “lure” for the three kings; a yearly celebration of their arrival. It is thought to have been introduced to New Orleans, along with other elements of French culture, in the late 1800s, though Roberts and Madrid point out that “the New Orleans and Louisiana cakes have evolved into what they are today and are not very similar in taste or appearance to those you will still find in regions of Europe.” For a taste of the original, see the Babes & Beignets French King Cake recipe. That there is a king as well of Mardi Gras, honored in the largest parade sponsored by the Krewe of Rex, made it especially co-optable for the circumstance. It is this king that knighted the Nola king cake with its tri-colored cloak of sprinkles.

Gambino's Filled King Cake, $59 on Goldbelly

This cake comes fully baked with the golden baby inside, and the icing and colored sugar separately packaged so you can put on the finishing touches just before you serve it.
Try It

King cakes continue to be a huge part of the baking industry in New Orleans for the first couple of months of the year. As described on the Babes & Beignets blog, “In Nola, there is no break between the holiday diet and king cake season.” Additionally, say Roberts and Madrid, “King Cakes can be enjoyed all day, every day. People usually bring them to their offices and schools to share with their coworkers or classmates and whoever gets the king cake baby has to bring the next king cake! We also enjoy them at gatherings that take place during Mardi Gras: from meetups to make Mardi Gras costumes and throws, to get togethers-hosted solely for the purpose of tasting the various types of king cakes, to on the actual parade routes!”

Famous New Orleans purveyors of the treat include the aforementioned Manny Randazzo, as well as Joe Gambino’s, Paul’s, Haydel’s, and Poupart’s. Roberts and Madrid also put Dong Phuong Bakeshop and Sucré on their list of favorites.

Sucré King Cake, $49 on Goldbelly

This one has a whipped cream cheese filling and a signature sparkly glaze.
Try It

Many of these have mail-order options for your Mardi Gras celebrations, whether you err on the side of sacred or sacrilegious. Or if you’re up to the task of full immersion, try our Mardi Gras King Cake recipe.

Related Video: Eat Like You’re In New Orleans with These Ingredients

All featured products are curated independently by our editors. When you buy something through our retail links, we may receive a commission. For more great hand-picked products, check out the Chowhound Shop.



from Food News – Chowhound https://ift.tt/2BRbxvd
via IFTTT

What Is the Difference Between Banana Bread and Banana Cake?

banana bread vs banana cake: what is the difference?

Banana breads and banana cakes are easy, moist, sweet solutions for making use of those three or four bananas on your kitchen counter that are getting mushier by the minute, sprouting brown spots with ripe old age. Yet the difference between the two treats is as fuzzy as the distinction between a muffin and a cupcake. If it’s baked in a sheet pan, then that’s a pretty clear indication that it’s a cake (ditto if it’s a multi-tiered affair), but there’s still confusion about loaf-shaped banana bread. Slap some icing on it and you might as well call it a cake, but is a naked loaf automatically banana bread? (Pound cake is baked in the same sort of pan and is called cake regardless of its glazed or unglazed status…)

Wilton Recipe Right Loaf Pan, $9.23 at Walmart

The classic loaf pan implies a bread, but doesn't mean it really is one.
Try It

Banana bread is a quick bread already, so like cake (and unlike regular breads), it doesn’t need time to rise. It’s the baking soda and/or baking powder that makes it rise so quickly while baking in the oven. It is always sort of a hybrid, then?

Even David Lebowitz doesn’t know the difference between banana bread and banana cake. And he’s an award-winning pastry chef, formerly at Chez Panisse, and author of eight books (both cookbooks and memoirs with recipes), starting with “Room for Dessert” up through “My Paris Kitchen” and “L’Appart.”

In the introduction to his banana bread recipe, he admits that he’s tried “to come up with an explanation but just can’t think of one. Could just be the shape? But we don’t call Carrot Cake baked in a loaf pan Carrot Bread…do we? But no matter. Everyone loves Banana Bread – or whatever you call it.”

If you really want to mince words here, banana bread can be denser, heavier, and less sweet than its more confectionary brethren, the banana cake. First, the obvious: Bread usually doesn’t have icing or frosting like cake often does. Then, the less obvious: Banana bread can incorporate heavier flours, like all-purpose flour and whole wheat flour, while banana cake sometimes calls for pastry flour or cake flour, which is lighter.

banana layer cake recipe

Life Love and Sugar’s Caramel Banana Layer Cake recipe

A layer cake is one thing, but when it comes to a loaf, the difference is so subjective, it can come down to: When you’re eating it, regardless of the time of day, do you feel like you’re consuming a nutritious breakfast or an indulgent dessert? Professional, semi-professional, and home bakers alike ponder this question.

Prolific home cook, award-winning blogger, and “Smitten Kitchen” cookbook author Deb Perelman wooed her audience with her jacked-up banana bread in 2006. Six years later however, she wrote  “… it’s full of white flour and refined sugar and melted butter and it’s absolutely, unquestionably wonderful but when it comes to breakfast, I like to pretend that that I’m not feeding us cake but something wholesome and that recipe makes it hard to pull off.”

So in 2012, Perelman came up with a crackly banana bread recipe that uses millet, whole wheat flour, coconut oil, 1/3 cup of maple syrup, and 1/3 cup (max) of brown sugar. That version of banana bread felt and tasted more like breakfast to Perelman. Most cakes contain at least 1 1/2 cups of sugar, either white, brown or a mixture, and sometimes even as much as 2 1/2 cups of the sweet stuff.

You can find scores of banana bread recipes online these days, of course, running the gamut from super-healthy (even keto-compliant) to more decadent than your average layer cake. Most of them go by “banana bread”…even when they probably shouldn’t.

So don’t worry so much about what you call it. Just make it, and savor the ‘nanner deliciousness. Try these recipes:

Roasted Banana Nutella Quick Bread

roasted banana bread recipe with nutella

Chowhound

Anything with Nutella flies right to the top of our list. With half a cup of chocolate-hazelnut spread, this banana bread has some extra sweet in it that can feel as indulgent as cake. Get our Roasted Banana Nutella Quick Bread recipe.

Peanut Butter-Honey Banana Bread

easy peanut butter honey banana bread recipe

Chowhound

Chunky, all-natural peanut butter and honey add more depth to this banana bread, resulting in a flavor trio that we already know will work. Get our Peanut Butter-Honey Banana Bread recipe.

Chocolate Chip Banana Bread

Easy Chocolate Chip Banana Bread recipe

Chowhound

Toss in some chocolate chips and it’s getting closer to banana cake, in our estimation. Anything that adds more sweetness leans toward dessert. Plus, there’s that equation of chocolate + almost anything = good. Get our Chocolate Chip Banana Bread recipe.

Healthy Banana Muffins

Healthy Banana Muffin recipe

Chowhound

With oats, whole wheat flour, and no sugar save for the turbinado you sprinkle on top, these muffins fall safely in the bread category. Don’t worry about lack of sweetness though: There’s honey and maple syrup to sweeten the deal. Get our Healthy Banana Muffins recipe.

Sour Cream Banana Bread

easy sour cream banana bread recipe

Chowhound

The sour cream adds a slight tang to the almost cake-y texture of this version. Get our Sour Cream Banana Bread recipe.

The Best Banana Cake

best banana cake recipe

Sally’s Baking Addiction

There’s no mistaking that this one’s a cake—moist, buttery, tender, and crowned with tangy-sweet cream cheese frosting. It’s also baked in a big 9-by-13-inch pan, to make the distinction even clearer. Get The Best Banana Cake recipe.

Banana Cupcakes

Best Banana Cupcake recipe with buttercream frosting and caramelized bananas

Chowhound

And finally, our nod to an official (cup-size) cake that stars this lovely creamy, tropical fruit. There aren’t as many recipes for banana cakes as there are for banana breads, but add some cake flour instead of all-purpose flour, and whip up some icing, and any banana bread will transform into a cake. This recipe doesn’t even call for more sugar than any of our other banana bread recipes (except for those healthy muffins). Less, in some cases. But we fix that with the frosting, and the caramelized bananas on top. Get our Banana Cupcakes recipe.

Related Video: How to Make Easy Banana Bread

All featured products are curated independently by our editors. When you buy something through our retail links, we may receive a commission. For more great hand-picked products, check out the Chowhound Shop.

This post was originally published by Amy Sowder on April 28, 2016 and was updated with additional images, links, and text on February 23, 2019.



from Food News – Chowhound https://ift.tt/2BLNJcc
via IFTTT

How to Make the Best Banana Bread, No Matter What

moist sour cream banana bread

Unripe bananas, food allergies, special diets, a lack of eggs—there are lots of things that can get between you and banana bread, but no obstacle need stop you. There’s almost always a way to make a beautiful loaf of banana bread whenever you want it, whatever your circumstances, as long as you have at least one semi-ripe banana.

In its classic form, banana bread is quite simple, and depends mostly on three things: (1) fruit that’s reached the ideal degree of super-sweet softness, (2) not overmixing the batter, which makes it gummy, and (3) baking for just the right amount of time (underbaking is another way to bring about a gummy texture, but overbaking dries things out, and moist banana bread is the only kind worth eating). That said, there’s actually a lot of wiggle room when it comes to making delicious banana bread, even when it seems like you’ve been stymied—and banana bread’s inherent flexibility is no surprise when you know it became popular during the Great Depression, and endured through World War II-era rationing.

Wilton Recipe Right Loaf Pan, $9.23 at Walmart

The classic loaf pan has remained a constant, and still turns out a great banana bread.
Try It

Here are some of the common banana bread hurdles we face today, and tips on how to soar right over them:

If your bananas aren’t ripe enough yet…

Roast ’em! There are some tricks to ripen bananas more quickly, but if you want to use them right now, just place your unpeeled bananas on a baking sheet lined with foil or parchment for easy clean-up and pop it into a 300-degree oven for anywhere between 30 minutes and an hour (obvious but easy to overlook: remove any stickers from the skins first!). The bananas are done when they’ve turned soft and black, and you can use them as soon as they’re cool enough to peel. If, say, you’re going out of town and have bananas that will go bad in your absence, you can bake them like this and then store them in the freezer for future use—but if you’re staying put and in no hurry to make bread, your best bet is always letting them ripen naturally. One caveat: your bananas should be at least slightly ripe before you bake them; green bananas just won’t have converted enough sugar yet, and even though they will turn soft and black in the oven, they’ll still taste like sadness.

Roasted Banana Nutella Quick Bread

roasted banana bread recipe with nutella

Chowhound

We call for roasting five bananas and then mashing them into a batter with some brown sugar, but the other revelation here is the Nutella stuffing in the center. Get our Roasted Banana Nutella Quick Bread recipe.

If you’re one (or two) bananas short of a bunch…

If you bake banana bread even just occasionally, you’re probably already in the habit of stashing any on-the-verge-of-totally-blackening bananas in the freezer so you can turn them into baked gold later (if not, start doing that!), but if you want banana bread now and you’re still short one or two perfectly overripe specimens, simply make banana bread with just one banana—or (if you suspect that won’t taste fruity enough for you), make a mini loaf with your lone banana.

Mini Banana Bread

mini banana bread loaf

Dessert for Two

If you don’t have a mini loaf pan, you can portion the batter among muffin tins, but that’s just not the same, you know? Get the Mini Banana Bread recipe.

If you’re set on a specific recipe that calls for the standard two or three mashed bananas, you can replace one or two of them with applesauce (½ cup equals 1 banana). If you don’t have applesauce either, or just aren’t a fan, you could also try substituting Greek yogurt (plain for sure, but flavors like vanilla or banana make sense too), sour cream, mashed avocado, whisked silken tofu, or pumpkin puree; they all add roughly the same sort of body and moisture as bananas, but when using substitutions that are sugar-free and/or tangy, you’ll probably want to add a little extra sweetener to the batter than the recipe calls for. Conversely, if you choose to swap in pureed prunes for some of the banana, you may want to scale back on the sweetener, since the prunes have a lot of natural sugar.

Sesame Chia Banana Bread with Honey and Tahini

Sesame Chia Banana Bread with Honey and Tahini

Closet Cooking

This recipe calls for a standard 3 bananas, but it also includes tahini to help moisten the batter, which is another great trick to try. (It’s also sweetened with honey instead of granulated sugar, and includes oats, sesame seeds, and chia seeds.) Get the Sesame Chia Banana Bread with Honey and Tahini recipe.

If you’re out of eggs…

Many sources tell you (correctly) that you can replace eggs in baking with, among other things, mashed bananas—so does that mean you can just leave the egg out of your banana bread recipe entirely? Well, maybe. Since most banana bread recipes have a lot of fat and moisture overall, leaving out the egg most likely won’t hurt too much, but to be safe, you can add some additional pantry items to compensate: combine 2 tablespoons of water, 1 teaspoon of neutral oil like vegetable or canola oil, and 2 teaspoons of baking powder in a small bowl and whisk until completely combined, then mix them into your wet ingredients in place of the egg.

There are lots of other egg substitutes suitable for baking, but this one is nice since you’re liable to always have the necessary components on hand. Of course, if you’re not committed to a particular recipe yet, you can also search for intentionally egg-free versions like this one:

Vegan Chocolate Peanut Butter Banana Bread

vegan chocolate peanut butter banana bread

Elephantastic Vegan

Bananas (of course), non-dairy milk, coconut oil, and maple syrup help keep this vegan banana bread moist. Get the Vegan Chocolate Peanut Butter Banana Bread recipe.

If you have dietary restrictions or allergies…

The Internet is your oyster! (Although if you keep kosher or have a shellfish allergy, just call it your best friend instead.) There are literally thousands of vegan, paleo, gluten-free, nut-free, egg-free, dairy-free, etc. banana bread recipes out there, and many of them are truly scrumptious. Here are just a handful of options:

Easy 1-Bowl Gluten-Free Banana Bread

Easy 1-Bowl Gluten-Free Banana Bread

Minimalist Baker

This gluten-free banana bread recipe adds almond meal and oats to gluten-free flour and works equally well with chicken, chia, or flax eggs. Plus, you can mix in whatever additions you like, from chopped nuts to butterscotch chips. Get the Easy 1-Bowl Gluten-Free Banana Bread recipe.

Vegan Gluten-Free Double-Chocolate Banana Bread

Easy Vegan Gluten-Free Double-Chocolate Banana Bread recipe

Two Peas and Their Pod

This double-chocolate banana bread is still healthier than most standard banana bread loaves, so you can eat twice as much, right? (If you don’t want something quite so decadent, try this marbled marvel of a vegan gluten-free chocolate-swirled banana bread.) In any case, bananas are so moist and rich on their own, even dairy lovers won’t notice when milk, yogurt, sour cream, and butter have been replaced in a banana bread recipe with soy- or plant-based milk, coconut oil, and other alternative ingredients. Get the Vegan Gluten-Free Double-Chocolate Banana Bread recipe.

Paleo Banana Bread with Brown Butter and Chocolate Chips

paleo chocolate chip banana bread with brown butter

Lexi’s Clean Kitchen

This paleo-approved banana bread uses almond flour and coconut flour, plus brown butter, walnuts, and dark chocolate. Get the Paleo Banana Bread recipe.

Low-Carb Keto Banana Bread

Low-Carb Keto Banana Bread recipe

Wholesome Yum

Bananas are quite high in carbs, which means they’re not really keto-friendly. However, you can still make a keto banana bread by employing some clever tricks—namely, banana extract to lend that familiar flavor, plus almond and coconut flours to get the texture right, and erythritol, a natural sweetener, instead of sugar. Get the Low-Carb Keto Banana Bread recipe.

If you don’t think banana bread tastes enough like bananas

The easiest and most obvious way to boost that yellow fatty bean flavor in your bread (whether you just really like the taste or you were short on actual fruit and had to make some substitutions as mentioned above), is to add a little extract. Although “extract” automatically makes many of us think “artificial flavoring” (and you will definitely find imitation banana flavor on your grocery store shelves), this pure banana extract is made from real fruit, and is a good choice for keeping in your pantry if you’re you-know-what about bananas. You can also try mixing in some freeze-dried banana powder.

Olivenation Pure Banana Extract, $7.45 on Amazon

Add banana flavor to your bread (or anything else you fancy).
Try It

100 Percent Pure Banana Powder, $14.95 on Amazon

Another way to bump up the banana flavor...
Try It

If you’re not worried about artificial anything, you could also use one of the many sworn-to-be-moist banana bread recipes that call for vanilla pudding, but swap in banana pudding instead.

Banana Pudding Banana Bread

Super Moist Banana Pudding Banana Bread recipe

Life Love and Sugar

Chrissy Teigen warns against this trick (she says the banana pudding tastes too artificial), but many people stand by it, so why not try it and decide for yourself? Get the Banana Pudding Banana Bread recipe.

If you’ve got plenty of bananas and just want to cram even more of them into your bread, stir chunks of fresh ripe banana or dried banana chips into your batter, and cover the top of the loaf in banana pieces too, whether that’s round slices or full banana halves cut lengthwise and arranged artistically.

Brown Butter Banana Bread

brown butter banana bread recipe

Michelle Sun/Tasting Table

This banana bread not only has less butter and sugar than normal, but the butter is browned for a nutty taste, and the top is decorated with halved bananas for flair and extra flavor. Get the Brown Butter Banana Bread recipe.

Caramel Banana Upside Down Bread

Caramel Banana Upside Down Bread

The Daring Gourmet

A more over-the-top option that takes inspiration from the classic pineapple upside down cake (and tarte tatin), this luscious caramel-topped (caramel-bottomed?) banana bread is a stunner. Get the Caramel Banana Upside Down Bread recipe.

You can also search for recipes that use an uncommonly high number of bananas, like this one with five ‘naners in one platonic loaf. Chrissy Teigen is a fan of this technique (and also makes her banana bread in a Bundt pan, which may not make it taste better, but is definitely more fun).

Nordic Ware Bavarian Bundt Pan, $23.94 on Amazon

Bake banana bread in a Bundt pan for a change of pace.
Get It

Five Banana Banana Bread

Five Banana Banana Bread recipe

Crafty Cooking Mama

A whole bunch of bananas gives this tons of flavor and also keeps it moist and dense (in a good way). Get the Five Banana Banana Bread recipe.

And if you’re willing to play the waiting game, let your bananas ripen naturally until they’re really, really dark and mushy; the flavor (and aroma) will reach peak banana-ness that way, but since they’ll be fairly cloying at that point, you’ll probably want to use significantly less added sugar than your recipe suggests.

If you don’t feel like measuring and mixing a bunch of ingredients…

Make shortcut banana bread with boxed cake mix—they can be the foundation for seriously impressive desserts! And yeah, it does make the banana bread taste more like cake (obviously), but that’s not necessarily a bad thing.

Cake Mix Banana Bread

boxed cake mix banana bread

CDKitchen

Yellow cake mix makes banana bread a little faster and is an especially good trick to try if you’re cooking on vacation. Get the Cake Mix Banana Bread recipe.

If you like the idea of banana bread but always find it kind of blah (or too banana-y)…

Bring on the mix-ins! Chocolate chips or chopped chocolate bars of course, and naturally, nuts (from the classic walnuts and pecans to hazelnuts and macadamias), but also candied ginger, dried or candied fruit (from raisins and craisins to candied citrus peel), fresh berries, crushed pineapple, toasted coconut, Nutella—stir in whatever appeals to you. But beware: the more add-ins, the more likely your bread interior will stay underbaked, so use a light hand when sprinkling in other ingredients. If you resent skimping on the stir-ins, you can always press extra on top of the loaf partway through baking (partway through so they don’t sink straight to the bottom, but then cover the pan with foil if the top starts to burn before the bread is finished).

Dark Chocolate Chip Raspberry Banana Bread

Dark Chocolate Chip Raspberry Banana Bread

Sally’s Baking Addiction

Raspberries and chocolate chips make banana bread even more appealing. Get the Dark Chocolate Chip Raspberry Banana Bread recipe.

If texture isn’t your thing, or if you want even more oomph, you can also up the spices in your b-bread. Don’t stop at the common dash of cinnamon, but add ginger, nutmeg, allspice, and cloves (as in the ginger spiced banana bread with crystallized ginger on top below), or ditch the more expected shakers for five spice powder (see: this Chinese five spice banana bread with orange and raisins) or ground black pepper, like in this banana bread with black pepper and cardamom.

Ginger Spice Banana Bread

Ginger Spice Banana Bread

Daily Waffle

Not only is there ground ginger in this bread (along with cinnamon, cloves, and nutmeg), but there’s crystallized ginger on top and an optional addition of fresh ginger for even more zing. Get the Ginger Spice Banana Bread recipe.

Another option is to add booze, as in this brilliant bourbon banana bread with bourbon glaze, this brown butter banana bread with rum and coconut, or Kahlua banana bread. If you’re a beer drinker, there’s Guinness banana bread, dunkelweizen banana bread with chocolate chips and dunkel glaze, or banana bread beer banana bread (so meta).

Foster’s Caramelized Bananas Foster Bread

caramelized bananas foster banana bread with bourbon

The Charlotte Observer

Bananas Foster banana bread is pure genius. Choose bourbon or rum, as you please. Get the Foster’s Caramelized Bananas Foster Bread.

If you prefer more streamlined, traditional flavors and not a lot of little bits (or booze) in your bread, there’s always the option to frost your banana loaf, which makes it much harder to buy as a breakfast food, but certainly tastes fantastic. A glaze is slightly more acceptable in the morning, so consider maple glazed banana bread, espresso glazed banana bread, citrus glazed coconut banana bread, and peanut butter banana bread without shame. This butterscotch glazed cinnamon swirl banana bread might be a touch less justifiable, but hey, you’re an adult and can do whatever you want.

Healthy Chai Banana Bread with Salted Cashew Butter Vanilla Glaze

Healthy Chai Banana Bread with Salted Cashew Butter Vanilla Glaze

Ambitious Kitchen

The whole wheat flour and lack of dairy makes the rich glaze seem slightly more acceptable, right? Get the Healthy Chai Banana Bread with Salted Cashew Butter Vanilla Glaze recipe.

Or stuff your banana bread before you stuff your face with it.

Cream Cheese-Filled Banana Bread

Cream Cheese-Filled Banana Bread

Averie Cooks

The best sort of surprise. Get the Cream Cheese-Filled Banana Bread recipe.

Or add a more restrained streusel topping.

Banana Nut Bread with Streusel Nut Topping

Banana Nut Bread with Streusel Nut Topping

Worth Whisking

More subtle than a glaze, but still delicious. (Even more so if you also sneak some into the center, as in this paleo cinnamon streusel banana bread.) Get the Banana Nut Bread with Streusel Nut Topping recipe.

And so you see, whenever you’re craving banana bread (or something more like banana cake), whether you’re sitting on the real-life equivalent of Donkey Kong’s Banana Hoard and it’s nearly too far gone, or you have only one measly, barely-speckled piece of fruit—and whether you want to switch things up or stick as closely as possible to a classic recipe—there’s always a way to work it out. So cue up some Gwen Stefani and get baking!

Related Video: How to Make Easy Banana Bread

All featured products are curated independently by our editors. When you buy something through our retail links, we may receive a commission. For more great hand-picked products, check out the Chowhound Shop.



from Food News – Chowhound https://ift.tt/2GZNzkM
via IFTTT

12 Banana Bread Mix-Ins You Already Have on Hand

butterscotch banana bread

Fact: banana bread is the ultimate, go-to baked good. Easy to make and even memorize, difficult to screw up, capable of behaving as a simple breakfast or afternoon snack unto itself, or dressing up as an ostentatious brunch plate or bombastic dessert. It’s portable, giftable, and craveable. The basic ingredients are regularly on hand, and it is the utmost transformative baking experience in that it actually prefers the ugliest, over-ripe fruits for the sweetest, most delicious outcome. What other baked good has the humility, the veracity, the very Fairy Godmother ability to take what’s nearly discarded and make it new again? You think apple pie wants to dance with the bruised fruits? Not a chance.

Banana bread belongs to a category of pastry known as quick breads. More of a cake or muffin than a bread, yeast plays no part in the structure, and the rise comes instead from the simple addition of baking soda and/or baking powder into the batter. Bread without waiting for yeast to do its business, hence, quick bread.

Perhaps you’re already sold on the ease and simplicity of banana bread. Perhaps your banana bread game is strong but in need of some excitement. In any case, I offer one final remark as to the perfection that is banana bread confection: you can also basically put any other thing in it. It will pair with anything. How many of these do you already have lurking in your pantry or fridge?

Wilton Recipe Right Loaf Pan, $9.23 at Walmart

A classic loaf pan for a classic banana bread.
Try It

Nuts

hazelnut banana bread

Hazelnut Banana Bread, Cookin’ Cowgirl

Nuts and bananas are about as natural a food marriage as they come; just ask Elvis. Walnuts make an especially classic banana bread companion. Pecans bring out a hint of sweetness and southern flair. Almonds achieve that heady, marzipan aroma. Try grinding hazelnuts into the flour for a rich, pleasantly bitter note, but chopping and mixing them in is great too. Get the Hazelnut Banana Bread recipe.

Sour Cream

Banana bread is one of those forgiving recipes where the naturally built-in moisture easily allows for variation in the level of fat content without compromising on the integrity of the texture. Sour cream, or thick Greek yogurt, adds both a desirable tartness to the equation, as well as a decadence that pushes the bread into cake territory. Get our Sour Cream Banana Bread recipe.

Peanut Butter

Peanut butter, or other nut butters (or even seed butters), accomplish both the flavor element of adding nuts to the batter, as well as the additional fat for density and texture. Here, crunchy peanut butter retains the occasional bite of chopped nuts without the labor, and we love the addition of honey as a complementary sweet flavor. Get our Peanut Butter Honey Banana Bread recipe.

Chips

Butterscotch Banana Bread

Butterscotch Banana Bread, Six Sisters Stuff

No, not potato chips, though I daresay you could make the argument. (Okay, here’s one.) But all manner of sweet baking chips enhance the potential dessert aspect of banana bread, from mainstay chocolate chips, to white chocolate chips, or my personal favorite, butterscotch. Get the Butterscotch Banana Bread recipe.

Dried Fruits

Banana Date Bread

Banana Date Bread, Genius Kitchen

We all have some half-used package of dried fruit in the nether regions of our cabinets. Fortunately, their very preserved nature allows them to survive the wait. Next time you’re ripe with over-ripe bananas, feel free to toss in raisins, dried cranberries, apricots, figs; whatever you’ve got. This wonderful recipe featuring dates adds even more moisture and natural sweetness. Get the Banana Date Bread recipe.

Maple Syrup

Adding maple syrup to the batter is like hinting at the ostentatious brunch potential of banana bread without fully needing to go there. The addition of maple extract is a nice touch to make sure you really get the point across. Get the Maple Walnut Banana Bread recipe.

Chocolate Spread

You know the one I’m talking about: the one and only, Nutella. If you’ve ever felt inclined to spread it on a banana, or on a slice of banana bread, then you will understand the apparent appeal of swirling it into the mix from the very start. A pre-roast on ripe bananas adds extra deepness of flavor. Get our Roasted Banana Nutella Quick Bread recipe.

Coffee

The irony of baking with coffee is that the richest coffee flavor is often best accomplished with instant espresso grounds. So if you’ve ever attempted a mocha-flavored anything, from mousse to cookies, you probably still have some on hand and are definitely not using if for morning joe. Enter banana bread, the ultimate depository for the kitchen island of misfit ingredients. Get the Espresso Banana Bread recipe.

Caramel

Whether you make the caramel yourself or rely on something from a jar, this is another application where banana bread proves its natural dessert ability. Kudos for the design element here as well where sliced bananas are baked into the top—a perfect landing pad for a drizzle of MORE CARAMEL. Get the Salted Caramel Banana Bread recipe.

Fresh Fruits

Strawberry Banana Bread

Strawberry Banana Bread, The Recipe Critic

As we move into the abundance of spring and summer produce, berries are making their way back into our lives, and any of them are most welcome to come hang with banana bread. Take this recipe with strawberries and combine it with a recipe featuring yogurt and you’ve basically got a smoothie you can chew. Get the Strawberry Banana Bread recipe.

Coconut

Healthy Coconut Banana Bread

Healthy Coconut Banana Bread, Ambitious Kitchen

While coconut may technically qualify under the dried fruits heading above, it adds such a unique and specific flavor and texture that it deserves its own category. If you want to get really tropical about it, pineapple can also come to play here, but we love this lighter style banana bread with a fresh hint of orange juice and a generous sprinkle of toasted coconut on top. Get the Healthy Coconut Banana Bread recipe.

Trail Mix

Banana Trail Mix Bread

Banana Trail Mix Bread, Cookie and Kate

In summary, banana bread can accommodate just about everything, and if you want to be really extra about it, everything all at once. Get the Trail Mix Banana Bread recipe.

Related Video: How to Make Easy Banana Bread

All featured products are curated independently by our editors. When you buy something through our retail links, we may receive a commission. For more great hand-picked products, check out the Chowhound Shop.



from Food News – Chowhound https://ift.tt/2FUNZty
via IFTTT