You know the story. Bananas going ripe. Must make banana bread. Especially as the weather is getting cooler. I did have a day of "I'm totally going to freeze the remaining bananas for smoothies" but then I got over it. Next time, I promise. In the meantime, there's Nigella's Italian breakfast banana bread. Which can be consumed at any time of day, thankfully.
Ingredients:
150mL flavourless vegetable oil
3 medium bananas, very ripe (about 400g with skin on, 300g without)
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
pinch salt
2 eggs
150g caster sugar
175g plain flour
1/2 teaspoon bicarbonate of soda
4 teaspoons instant espresso powder
Method:
Place a baking sheet in the oven, and preheat to 170C. Line a loaf tin with baking paper or lightly oil it.
Mash the bananas with the vanilla and salt, then beat in the oil.
Beat in the eggs, one by one, followed by the sugar.
Mix the flour with the bicarb and espresso powder, and beat these dry ingredients into the runny batter.
Pour the batter into the prepared loaf tin, then pop it into the oven, on the baking sheet. Bake for 50-60 minutes, or until slightly coming away at the sides and bulgingly risen. A cake tester should come out clean, barring the odd crumb. Leave for at least half a day before slicing into it. Really.
I made this one evening, so my whole house smelt deliciously of baking the whole evening. It is really quick and easy to whip up, too. Mine didn't rise 'bulgingly' though, and after leaving it in the oven overnight (yes I turned it off) it had sunk a little, so it was wider rather than higher. No matter - it was still deliciously moist and banana-y. Nigella recommends chocolate spread (yum! - but not a good thing for me) or mascarpone sprinkled with cinnamon. I went with quark sprinkled with cinnamon. Yum. And I was really really good - I sliced the leftovers and put them in the freezer for later. Sorry for all the smug vibes permeating the blogosphere.
If You Always Do What You've Always Done...Then You'll Always Get What You Always Got
Showing posts with label banana bread. Show all posts
Showing posts with label banana bread. Show all posts
Monday, 8 April 2013
Friday, 29 June 2012
Banana and Chocolate Loaf, Anna-Style
Step 1: For a few days, look with concern at banana supply. Note how many there are, and how many will be eaten before they get to the very ripe stage. Realise that there will be a couple too ripe to eat, unless consumption increases to more than one a day. (Unlikely).
Step 2: Google kiwi fruit recipes (there being a bag of about 6 kiwi fruit in the fridge). There are only 11 recipes listed on taste.com.au. Type 'banana' into the search box. 24 pages come up. After a few recipe readings, decide that this one looks like a winner. Start playing a suitable album (in my case, The Resistance by Muse).
Step 3: Assemble ingredients on bench-top, left to right. Find that there's really not much self raising flour left, so bring out the plain flour and baking powder as well. Find that there's really not much brown sugar left either, so bring out the caster sugar as well. Of course, don't worry about lightly beating the eggs just yet.
Step 4: Actually read the method listed in the recipe. Read it again to work out which lot of ingredients really needs a large bowl, and which can get by with a regular mixing bowl. Preheat oven to 170C; grease and line a 10x20cm loaf tin.
Step 5: Set up sieve over large mixing bowl. Carefully measure out a cup of self raising flour, transfer to sieve. Really carefully, fill the 1/2 cup measure with self raising flour, transfer to sieve. Do a little happy dance because you have exactly the right amount of flour. Remember that you are a messy baker and don an apron. Sift flour into bowl. Measure 1/3 cup brown sugar, add to flour. Measure remainder of brown sugar (not really 1/3 cup, more like 1/6 cup) and top up with raw caster sugar, add to flour. Ponder the differences in squishability between the 2 sugar types. Add 1/4 teaspoon mixed spice and 1/2 teaspoon bicarb soda to flour. Mix it all together using the 1/2 teaspoon measure, knowing it's not the most efficient method but it's in your hand. Make a well in the centre.
Step 6: Crack eggs into medium mixing bowl and give them a little whisk with a fork. Pour in 1/2 cup milk and 1/3 cup olive oil, checking several times that you have the right measuring cup and the right amount according to the recipe. Give it a bit more of a whisk.
Step 7: Peel the first banana, break it into large chunks in the 1 cup measure. Note that it doesn't come to much. Peel the second banana, break it into large chunks in the 1 cup measure. Note that, together, they don't come to much, definitely not the 3/4 cup listed in the recipe, more like 1/2 cup if you're feeling generous. Mash with a fork but don't be too diligent. Add banana, what there is of it, to egg mix.
Step 8: Resist taste-testing any of the dark chocolate melts. Break them into smaller bits (my new favourite method - stack a few at a time the same way between fingers, press with thumbs). Reminisce on a lovely former student who brought you choc chip cookies, freshly baked from food tech, with these larger choc bits. Fill 1 cup with dark chocolate, add to egg mix. Go to pantry. Contemplate using some Lindt 85%. Reconsider. Spy the Cadbury baking white chocolate. Decide it's a better option than using the super good stuff. After opening the packet and breaking off a chunk, discover it's much harder to break into chunks than the dark melts. Find a board and a knife and start chopping. Don't resist taste-testing. Eat a few pieces to ensure no tainted bit is put into the mix. Once full rows have been chopped, find you have about 3/4 cup white chocolate, add it to egg mix (if you must, justify the extra chocolate with the reduced banana quantity, even though you know it's more a texture thing than a solid amount thing). Mix a bit with fork, trying belatedly to reduce the size of banana bits.
Step 9: Pour banana mix into flour mix, folding gently until just combined. Spoon into prepared loaf tin, mixing the last bit of flour at the bottom that you always miss when the method says 'until just combined'. Put tin into oven, bake for 45 minutes. Refer to loaf as Chocolate (with banana) Loaf. Test with a skewer and find chocolatey batter at point. Put tin back into oven, lick chocolatey batter from skewer, bake for another 5 minutes. Remove from oven, test successfully with skewer, turn off oven, leave loaf to cool in tin for about 5-10 minutes.
Step 10: Slice loaf, note the softness of the loaf and the amount of chocolate that appears on the knife. Hmm. Cut another slice. Take some photos, until the steam fogs up the camera lens. Place slices on plates, enjoy. Plan to maybe have a slice tomorrow, then slice the remainder and freeze so you don't pig out over the next couple of days. You know what you're like. After writing the above, download photos and find none really suitable. Slice a few more, take some more photos - fog-free! - and find one you like. Upload to blog.
Ponder what to do with the freshly cut slices. As it's fish and chips for dinner tonight, be good!
Today's daily photo:
Our first sunny day in ages. Having had a run this morning, I put on a load of washing. Back in pajamas, lounging on the sofa, I heard the washing machine finish. First-world problem: I wanted to put my washing on the line outside, but I didn't want to get out of my pajamas. Stuff the neighbours. I put the washing on the outside line while still in pajamas. As soon as I pulled up the line, my eyes were dazzled by an array of glistening drops. I have many photos with water features. One thing I like about droplet photos (and even, the droplets themselves when you look at them closely) - inverted worlds, in miniature.
Step 2: Google kiwi fruit recipes (there being a bag of about 6 kiwi fruit in the fridge). There are only 11 recipes listed on taste.com.au. Type 'banana' into the search box. 24 pages come up. After a few recipe readings, decide that this one looks like a winner. Start playing a suitable album (in my case, The Resistance by Muse).
Step 3: Assemble ingredients on bench-top, left to right. Find that there's really not much self raising flour left, so bring out the plain flour and baking powder as well. Find that there's really not much brown sugar left either, so bring out the caster sugar as well. Of course, don't worry about lightly beating the eggs just yet.
Step 4: Actually read the method listed in the recipe. Read it again to work out which lot of ingredients really needs a large bowl, and which can get by with a regular mixing bowl. Preheat oven to 170C; grease and line a 10x20cm loaf tin.
Step 5: Set up sieve over large mixing bowl. Carefully measure out a cup of self raising flour, transfer to sieve. Really carefully, fill the 1/2 cup measure with self raising flour, transfer to sieve. Do a little happy dance because you have exactly the right amount of flour. Remember that you are a messy baker and don an apron. Sift flour into bowl. Measure 1/3 cup brown sugar, add to flour. Measure remainder of brown sugar (not really 1/3 cup, more like 1/6 cup) and top up with raw caster sugar, add to flour. Ponder the differences in squishability between the 2 sugar types. Add 1/4 teaspoon mixed spice and 1/2 teaspoon bicarb soda to flour. Mix it all together using the 1/2 teaspoon measure, knowing it's not the most efficient method but it's in your hand. Make a well in the centre.
Step 6: Crack eggs into medium mixing bowl and give them a little whisk with a fork. Pour in 1/2 cup milk and 1/3 cup olive oil, checking several times that you have the right measuring cup and the right amount according to the recipe. Give it a bit more of a whisk.
Step 7: Peel the first banana, break it into large chunks in the 1 cup measure. Note that it doesn't come to much. Peel the second banana, break it into large chunks in the 1 cup measure. Note that, together, they don't come to much, definitely not the 3/4 cup listed in the recipe, more like 1/2 cup if you're feeling generous. Mash with a fork but don't be too diligent. Add banana, what there is of it, to egg mix.
Step 8: Resist taste-testing any of the dark chocolate melts. Break them into smaller bits (my new favourite method - stack a few at a time the same way between fingers, press with thumbs). Reminisce on a lovely former student who brought you choc chip cookies, freshly baked from food tech, with these larger choc bits. Fill 1 cup with dark chocolate, add to egg mix. Go to pantry. Contemplate using some Lindt 85%. Reconsider. Spy the Cadbury baking white chocolate. Decide it's a better option than using the super good stuff. After opening the packet and breaking off a chunk, discover it's much harder to break into chunks than the dark melts. Find a board and a knife and start chopping. Don't resist taste-testing. Eat a few pieces to ensure no tainted bit is put into the mix. Once full rows have been chopped, find you have about 3/4 cup white chocolate, add it to egg mix (if you must, justify the extra chocolate with the reduced banana quantity, even though you know it's more a texture thing than a solid amount thing). Mix a bit with fork, trying belatedly to reduce the size of banana bits.
Step 9: Pour banana mix into flour mix, folding gently until just combined. Spoon into prepared loaf tin, mixing the last bit of flour at the bottom that you always miss when the method says 'until just combined'. Put tin into oven, bake for 45 minutes. Refer to loaf as Chocolate (with banana) Loaf. Test with a skewer and find chocolatey batter at point. Put tin back into oven, lick chocolatey batter from skewer, bake for another 5 minutes. Remove from oven, test successfully with skewer, turn off oven, leave loaf to cool in tin for about 5-10 minutes.
Step 10: Slice loaf, note the softness of the loaf and the amount of chocolate that appears on the knife. Hmm. Cut another slice. Take some photos, until the steam fogs up the camera lens. Place slices on plates, enjoy. Plan to maybe have a slice tomorrow, then slice the remainder and freeze so you don't pig out over the next couple of days. You know what you're like. After writing the above, download photos and find none really suitable. Slice a few more, take some more photos - fog-free! - and find one you like. Upload to blog.
Ponder what to do with the freshly cut slices. As it's fish and chips for dinner tonight, be good!
Today's daily photo:
Our first sunny day in ages. Having had a run this morning, I put on a load of washing. Back in pajamas, lounging on the sofa, I heard the washing machine finish. First-world problem: I wanted to put my washing on the line outside, but I didn't want to get out of my pajamas. Stuff the neighbours. I put the washing on the outside line while still in pajamas. As soon as I pulled up the line, my eyes were dazzled by an array of glistening drops. I have many photos with water features. One thing I like about droplet photos (and even, the droplets themselves when you look at them closely) - inverted worlds, in miniature.
Saturday, 21 April 2012
Banana and Walnut Bread
I had 2 bananas that were overripe. One was so overripe that it felt apart on the banana stand. You know what that means...
The recipe can be found here. I only had a bit over 50g of walnuts, so I topped up the 100g with the pistachios I had leftover from Easter's dessert (chocolate, chilli and pistachio mousse). As it only requires flour, egg, milk, banana, bicarb, sugar, bananas and nuts - all ingredients I had in stock - it feels vaguely healthy. But that would be from the lack of butter and not needing too much sugar. It is so moist that it doesn't need butter though so maybe this could be a win. The only thing was it was really not even close to ready at the 45 minute mark, but another 5 minutes was all it needed.
Of course, now the other problem is I have banana bread... Thankfully it freezes well!
The recipe can be found here. I only had a bit over 50g of walnuts, so I topped up the 100g with the pistachios I had leftover from Easter's dessert (chocolate, chilli and pistachio mousse). As it only requires flour, egg, milk, banana, bicarb, sugar, bananas and nuts - all ingredients I had in stock - it feels vaguely healthy. But that would be from the lack of butter and not needing too much sugar. It is so moist that it doesn't need butter though so maybe this could be a win. The only thing was it was really not even close to ready at the 45 minute mark, but another 5 minutes was all it needed.
Of course, now the other problem is I have banana bread... Thankfully it freezes well!
Labels:
baking,
banana,
banana bread,
pistachios,
recipe,
walnuts
Friday, 20 April 2012
Brew
I realised when I got to Brew that I had actually already been there before... But not on my own before, and it's changed a bit since my last visit. So this counts, right?
Brew is one of those industrial sorts of coffee places - electrical cords for light fixtures, unfinished painted bits on the ceiling, astro-turf at the entry... It really feels like a garage that's been tizzed up a bit and had a coffee machine or 2 installed. There is even a car parked near the first counter.
I went inside to sit down for my coffee - not nearly so hipster. The inside is free of the astro-turf, thankfully, and has a range of seating options. There were enough people there (11am on a Friday) that I didn't feel I was out of place, but not so many I had to scrounge around for a seat. Following the fashion of quirky order numbers, Brew allocates playing cards. The 9 of diamonds is ok, I guess.
Coffee would normally be enough for me, but I caved and ordered banana bread as well. Unfortunately it came pre-buttered and sans knife. I had gone for a run in the morning and felt hungry all through the morning until well after lunch. If anyone can tell me why running in the evening has no effect whatsoever on my appetite (possibly even reduces it) but morning running increases my appetite, I'd love to know!

Anyway, service was good, food and coffee were relatively quick, and (best of all) the cappuccino had a good thick layer of chocolate on top. Happy. Brew is in Lower Burnett lane, technically off Albert St but just on the Adelaide St side of the Queen St Mall.
Brew is one of those industrial sorts of coffee places - electrical cords for light fixtures, unfinished painted bits on the ceiling, astro-turf at the entry... It really feels like a garage that's been tizzed up a bit and had a coffee machine or 2 installed. There is even a car parked near the first counter.
Coffee would normally be enough for me, but I caved and ordered banana bread as well. Unfortunately it came pre-buttered and sans knife. I had gone for a run in the morning and felt hungry all through the morning until well after lunch. If anyone can tell me why running in the evening has no effect whatsoever on my appetite (possibly even reduces it) but morning running increases my appetite, I'd love to know!
Anyway, service was good, food and coffee were relatively quick, and (best of all) the cappuccino had a good thick layer of chocolate on top. Happy. Brew is in Lower Burnett lane, technically off Albert St but just on the Adelaide St side of the Queen St Mall.
Thursday, 19 January 2012
Tuesday January 17 - Banana Bread
I don't recall ever making banana bread before - definitely not this recipe! Despite having to substitute dark brown sugar with raw caster sugar, and only having 3 small bananas instead of 3 large bananas, it was a success. Yummy!
Thankfully my brother lives down the street, and my dad's been staying for a few days, so I haven't felt obligated to eat the whole lot myself. Also thankfully, this morning I had a PT session so I won't feel guilty about having a slice today.
I used to make banana cake a fair bit (at least that's what my memory tells me), but with the high price of bananas after cyclones Larry and Yasi, they've been too much of a treat. Yay for lower prices!
Thankfully my brother lives down the street, and my dad's been staying for a few days, so I haven't felt obligated to eat the whole lot myself. Also thankfully, this morning I had a PT session so I won't feel guilty about having a slice today.
I used to make banana cake a fair bit (at least that's what my memory tells me), but with the high price of bananas after cyclones Larry and Yasi, they've been too much of a treat. Yay for lower prices!
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