There is something really comforting about a good banana bread. I have baked many through the years and have my favourites. Family Favourite Banana Bread and Rich Banana Bread are two of my absolute favourites.
The family favourite recipe is one I baked for my family for many years. It is moist and delicious. The rich banana bread recipe is the banana bread I used to bake for the Mr when I worked at the manor down south. He had to have a loaf of it baked for him every week! It is also moist and delicious.
Big Banana breads just are not practical in this house these days. I know I could freeze them but for me something is lost in the flavour when something is frozen. Maybe it is just in my head, I don't know for sure.
This recipe for Banana Chocolate Chip Bread for Two solves that problem. It makes one small Banana Bread, 5 1/2 by 3 inches in size. It is perfectly sized for the smaller family.
This loaf may be small in stature, but it is big on flavour. It lacks nothing in the least of its much larger counterpart!
It is rich, moist, and delicious. There is only a tiny bit of fat in the form of 1 TBS of unsalted butter, melted. This is great because you end up with a bread that is not oily or greasy in the least. Too many banana breads can end up this way. Blech!
It uses one small banana, about 1/4 cup of mashed banana. This means that there is plenty of banana flavour in this loaf.
The abundance of natural sugars in bananas are the secret to a moist and delicious Banana Bread. Make sure your bananas are nice and ripe before you use them in a banana bread.
Ideally they should be starting to soften. The skin should be well spotted with brown flecks of colour. The more brown flecks the better!
I have used bananas to make banana bread that most people would throw away. I am talking just about black in colour skin-wise. They make the best banana breads.
They mash beautifully and are the sweetest! Seriously! I am a person who hates chunks of banana in my banana bread.
I want a smooth texture without lumps of banana. I do like toasted nuts in it, but no banana lumps! I am funny that way.
If you use yellow not-so-ripe bananas they just won't work right. They just don't have the sweetness and flavour of their over-ripe counterparts!
They can even remain quite starchy after baking! This is a big No No! There are a lot of theories out there about how to ripen bananas.
One of the best ways it to place them into a paper bag and shut it up, leaving them in there for a few days. This is the most effective method.
It does the job best. The bag traps the ethyene gas produced by ripening fruit. This in turn helps to speed up the process from the normal time of just leaving them on the counter-top. You will find you only need a day or two!
I like toasted walnuts in my banana bread. Banana and walnuts just are perfect partners. You could also use pecans. The Mr down south liked toasted pecans over walnuts.
I like both, but prefer the walnuts. I get that from my dad. He is nuts about walnuts as well! And of course as I tell you frequently, toasting your nuts just makes them nuttier!
I guess that means I will have to cut back on my peanut butter and toast supper. Most nights that is what I have for my supper. A slice of toast spread with peanut butter.
Not a good thing in the long run I guess. Bad news for me who always has said that if I was marooned on a desert island I would want a jar of peanut butter and potatoes with me. Ho hum . . .
Banana Chocolate Chip Bread for Two
Ingredients
- 1/2 cup (70g) all purpose/plain flour
- 1/4 cup (30g) toasted and chopped walnuts
- 2 TBS good quality dark milk chocolate, grated or cut into chunks (I use Green & Black's)
- 1/4 cup (50g) sugar
- 1/2 tsp bicarbonate of soda
- 1/8 tsp salt
- 1 small ripe banana, peeled and mashed really well (about 1/4 cup)
- 1 large free range egg, at room temperature
- 1 TBS unsalted butter, melted and cooled
- 1 TBS plain yogurt
- 1/2 tsp vanilla extract
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 180*C.350*F/ gas mark 4. Butter a 5 1/2 by 3 inch loaf tin and line with baking paper.
- Whisk the flour, chocolate, walnuts, sugar, soda and salt together in a medium bowl.
- In a separate bowl, whisk together the melted and cooled butter, bananas, egg, yogurt and vanilla.
- Gently fold the wet ingredients into the dry just to combine. Do not overmix. Spoon into the prepared pan, smoothing the top.
- Bake in the preheated oven for 30 to 40 minutes until the loaf is golden brown and a toothpick inserted in the centre comes out clean.
- Let cool in the pan on a wire rack for 5 minutes before lifting out from the pan to cool completely. Leave to cool for one hour before slicing to serve.
I really hope that you will want to bake this Banana bread if you are in a small family, and if you are not, maybe you will enjoy one of the larger loaves that I have linked up to here. Also, if I was to small size another kind of quick bread, what would be your choice of smaller sized recipes you might like to see? I aim to please!
This content (written and photography) is the sole property of The English Kitchen. Any reposting or misuse is not permitted. If you are reading this elsewhere, please know that it is stolen content and you may report it to me at: mariealicejoan at aol dot com Thanks so much for visiting. Do come again!
I love to eat banana bread, but I really dislike the smell of ripening bananas (I eat mine quite green) so I can't get bananas of the correct "over-ripeness" to make any. As soon as I smell banana and they start to turn even slightly yellow I have to use them up. I just can't get over my aversion, as much as I've tried over the years.
ReplyDeleteIt's funny how things like that go. I also have issues with figs. Fig jam is one of my absolute favourites, but I cannot bear to even look at fresh figs. I know none of this makes any sense, but it's how I am. Which is sad, as I'd love to try this one with walnuts. Maybe I can substitute carrot or zucchini for the dreaded over-ripe banana :)
I am a funny duck Marie. I cannot sit and eat a banana, but pop it into a cake or bread and I am very happy to eat it! Lol xoxo
DeleteSo true..you need over ripe:) Nothing worse than unripe bananas in bread:)Take care..Thank you for all the great recipes.
ReplyDeleteYou are so welcome Monique! This is the perfect size. I think I will be cooking more smaller household recipes in the future. xoxo
DeleteI have the same digestive issues as well Marie, in fact I have been trying gluten free to see if that helps. It means adjusting all my recipes. I just made banana bread for hubby, who loves it, and will try this half recipe for him. I've been making the full recipe and freezing half, which actually works out just fine. Take care.
ReplyDeleteI have not tried gluten free yet. I may yet! Xoxo
DeleteAlways open to a new quick bread recipe...I love them so...and love bananas. But I differ from you....in my world there is a magic window of time when bananas are "just right" for bread/cakes/bars, etc. Yes, they must be soft...and browning...but once they turn too black, I find they have a strong to bitter taste in baked goods??? Maybe THAT is just in my head LOL. (PS....I think the parenthetical about you using Green & Black's in the recipe proper should be after the chocolate...not the banana????) ~Robin~
ReplyDeleteOh, I would not use them black, black, but I do like them pretty well spotted! haha you are quite right about the Green & Blacks. DUH! Thank you! Fixing it now! xoxo
DeleteAlways over ripe! Thank you!
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely! You are welcome. Thank YOU! xoxo
DeleteThis looks tasty, especially since I always tend to have one more banana that is too ripe to enjoy eating! Thanks for this one!
ReplyDeleteYou are very welcome Jeanie! xoxo
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