Friday Faves – Confections of a Foodie Bride makes Banana Zucchini Bread

This week I’m featuring Shawnda from Confections of a Foodie Bride for my Friday Favs. I’ve been following Shawnda’s blog for quite some time now. It was thanks to her blog, that I made the Chocolate Overdose Cake last year – wow that cake was awesome. I need to find an excuse to make it again. Shawnda posts recipes that are interesting and along the lines of how Hubby and I eat, so her blog is always a source of inspiration. And with her amazing photography skills, she provides a decent amount of eye candy to look at while being inspired!

Banana Zucchini Bread

Howdy, y’all! I’m Shawnda, one half of the carb-loving Texas team behind Confections of a Foodie Bride. The Foodie Groom and I make a great team. We cook together, bake, make wine, and chase our 13 month sous chef around with a camera. (But she’s a tad harder to photograph than, say, banana bread!) I stand alone, however, when it comes to cookbook obsession.

The Foodie Groom has a 5×8″-ish gadget that stores all of his books. Nearly every book he could ever want is at his fingertips. Me? I have 3 moving boxes and a bench that’s serving as a bookshelf to my more heavily-used cookbooks:

Cookbooks

When I buy a new cookbook, I flip through it once quickly looking at pictures. And then I go back and flip through it again, more slowly, looking at head notes and skimming interesting recipes for ingredients (we gotta eat dinner tomorrow!). And then I go back and read it cover-to-cover, like a “real book,” and mark recipes with sticky notes. Some books will sit on my nightstand for weeks at a time just in case I have time for some late night reading before bed, which has been a total of 0 minutes since becoming a mom.

The first recipe I marked in my newest
score
cookbook, Deliciously Organic, was this Banana Zucchini Bread. Partly because The Foodie Baby had gone on an impromptu banana strike, leaving me with a bunch of black bananas. And partly because I don’t have a banana bread recipe and the picture of Banana Bread Bruschetta in her book made my mouth water.

Banana Zucchini Bread

I loved the idea of “sneaking” zucchini to my kiddo – I haven’t been able to prepare zucchini stand-alone in a way that she’ll actually eat it. But she’ll eat it in Banana Zucchini bread! We had toasted slices for breakfast every morning until the loaf was no more. Between the obliterated banana and shredded zucchini, there’s no lack of moisture. Moist and banana-y. Exactly the way banana bread should be!

Print Save

Banana Zucchini Bread

Yield: 8-10

Ingredients:

3 Tbsp unsalted butter, melted (plus more for pan)
3 Tbsp coconut oil*
2 1/2 cups whole wheat pastry flour
1 cup whole cane sugar
1/2 tsp sea salt
1 tsp baking soda
3 very ripe bananas, mashed
1/2 cup grated zucchini
1/4 cup buttermilk
2 large eggs, at room temp
1 tsp vanilla extract

*Coconut oil is suggested as a replacement for vegetable oil in cooking/baking. It's actually a solid, despite the name "oil." If you cannot locate it or do not wish to use it, consider using olive oil or vegetable oil.

Directions:

Preheat oven to 350 with rack in the middle position. Butter a 9x5 (mine is slightly smaller) loaf pan.

Add mashed bananas (I obliterated the bananas in the food processor until I had "banana paste"), zucchini, buttermilk, eggs, melted oils and vanilla to the mixer bowl and mix until well blended. Add flour, sugar, salt and baking soda and mix until just blended.

Pour batter into the loaf pan and bake for 50 to 60 minutes or until golden brown and a knife inserted into the center comes out with a moist crumbs attached. Cool for 10 minutes in pan. Use a knife to loosen the edges of the bread from the pan, if necessary, and remove from pan. Let cool on a rack before cutting into slices.

Recipe slightly adapted from Deliciously Organic by Carrie Vitt


Be sure to check out all of my favorite bloggers as they are featured on Friday Favs!

    Pin It

4 Responses to “Friday Faves – The Way the Cookie Crumbles does a Tapioca Pudding Comparison”

  1. #
    1
    Gail — January 31, 2015 at 4:59 pm

    I am of two minds on this post. On the one hand, my OCD really kicked in when I read that you had not followed Mark Bittman’s recipe but still decided to write about it. Seemed a bit sloppy for a nerd and an engineer. On the other hand, that is how Pasteur discovered Penicillin. Bittman is such a great cook, that I think he deserves better treatment; so I plan to do him the honor of making his recipe. I am not going to make the other two though!

  2. #
    2
    Gail — January 31, 2015 at 5:08 pm

    Oops! Senior moment that – it was the Scottish scientist and Nobel laureate Alexander Fleming in 1928. Apparently, the Pasteur Institut ignored the work of a French physician, Ernest Duchesne, who in 1897 discovered the curative properties of the Penicillium Glaucum, a different mold than the one Fleming discovered, but in the same genus. Gotta love Wikipedia.

  3. #
    3
    JD — February 14, 2015 at 1:24 pm

    There are two tapioca recipes on the Minute Tapioca box. I always use the one for Fluffy Pudding, which calls for 2 cups milk and whipping the egg whites separately from the cooked milk with tapioca and egg yolk. I think you will find the pudding much improved over the basic recipe.

    Also, the quality of the vanilla makes a huge difference in something like tapioca. Cooks Illustrated likes McCormick and I found this on amazon and at Sam’s Club in large bottles for very reasonable prices.

    One other note: I find that CI has a sweet tooth: their recipes are sometimes too sweet for my taste, though they are a go-to source otherwise.

  4. #
    4
    Sam — October 26, 2016 at 7:34 pm

    This is an interesting discussion. I tried the Kraft recipe today. I threw everything (except the vanilla) in the blender before putting it on the stove. I also added 1/2 tsp. salt and a bit more vanilla. I actually thought it was sweet enough already, though. However, I agree with your overall conclusion that it’s a bit boring. Well, at least it was easy. Anyway, next time I may a recipe using large tapioca. 🙂

    Thanks for the comparison.

Leave a Comment