Tag: #banana-bread

  • The Banned Nutella Banana Bread the Girls Finally Got To Try!!

    The Banned Nutella Banana Bread the Girls Finally Got To Try!!

    There are some bakes that feel less like recipes and more like little love letters to your past self, and this banana, Nutella and triple‑chocolate loaf is absolutely one of them.

    It started, as these things so often do, with a bowl of sad, freckled bananas on the counter giving me the side‑eye. You know the ones: too far gone for toast, too soft for slicing, but absolutely perfect for baking. So into the bowl they went, all mashed up with melted butter, soft brown sugar and a bit of caster sugar until everything turned into that gorgeous, glossy, caramel‑smelling batter. I make banana bread every week for my dad as it’s his favourite but I thought I’d give him a bit of variation.
    And then I got a bit carried away.
    First came the Nutella. Now, Nutella is a bit of a… contraband item in this house. When the girls were younger, it was more or less banned – not because of the sugar, but because they had an absolutely terrible habit of leaving sticky Nutella spoons all over the kitchen. Honestly, I’d find them on the worktops, next to the sink, abandoned on plates – little chocolatey crime scenes everywhere. For my own sanity, the jar quietly disappeared for a few years.
    This time, I had to smuggle it back in like some sort of undercover snack dealer. Jar tucked discreetly into the shopping, no announcements made, straight into the cupboard before anyone could clock it and start reliving their spoon‑licking glory days.

    Once I’d recovered from my secret mission, it was time to turn those bananas into something special.

    Ingredients


    For one standard 2lb loaf tin:
    • 100 g soft light brown sugar
    • 50 g caster sugar
    • 115 g unsalted butter, melted and slightly cooled
    • 2 medium eggs
    • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
    • 350–375 g mashed very ripe bananas (about 4–5 medium bananas)
    • 250 g plain flour
    • 1 teaspoon fine salt
    • 1 teaspoon bicarbonate of soda
    • 120 g Nutella (or chocolate hazelnut spread), gently warmed so it’s pourable
    • 100 g white chocolate chunks

    . 100g of dark chocolate chunks

    Method

    Prep the tin and oven
    • Heat the oven to 180°C (160°C fan).
    • Grease and line a 2lb loaf tin with baking paper, letting the paper overhang slightly so you can lift the loaf out later.
    • Set aside while you get on with the wet ingredients.

    Make the banana mixture
    • In a large mixing bowl, whisk the bananas until they are soft

    then add the melted, slightly cooled butter with the soft brown sugar and caster sugar until well combined and a bit glossy.


    • Add the eggs and vanilla extract, whisking until the mixture looks smooth and a little lighter.

    Add the dry ingredients – plain flour, salt and bicarbonate of soda very ripe bananas and stir them into the bowl until everything is well combined.

    Fold in the dry ingredients until you can’t see any streaks of dry flour. Try not to overmix so you keep the loaf nice and soft.

    Add the chocolate chunks
    • Sprinkle in the white chocolate chunks and dark chocolate chunks.


    • Fold them through the batter so they’re evenly distributed, ready to melt into little pockets of joy as the loaf bakes
    • Pour the banana batter into your prepared loaf tin and smooth the top.
    • Warm the Nutella very gently (a few seconds in the microwave or sit the jar in a bowl of hot water) so it loosens and becomes pourable.


    • Dollop or drizzle the Nutella over the top of the batter, then use a knife or skewer to swirl it through, creating ribbons of hazelnut chocolate.

    No need for perfection here – messy swirls taste just as good.

    Bake
    • Pop the tin into the oven and bake for about 55–65 minutes, or until the loaf is risen, golden, and a skewer inserted into the centre comes out mostly clean, with just a few moist crumbs (avoid a big melted chocolate pocket when you test).
    • If the top is browning too quickly, loosely cover with foil for the last 10–15 minutes.

    1. Cool (as much as you can bear)
      • Leave the loaf to cool in the tin for about 15 minutes, then lift it out onto a wire rack.

    • You can let it cool completely… or do what we do and cut the first slices while it’s still just warm, when the chocolate is soft and the Nutella ripples are extra gooey.

    Every slice is a little bit of everything: soft, banana‑rich crumb, sweet white chocolate, deep dark chocolate and those cheeky streaks of Nutella that still feel ever so slightly naughty after its years-long ban.
    The funniest part is serving it now. No banned jars, no drama, no trail of sticky spoons (yet!) – just the girls eyeing up the tin and asking, “Is there Nutella in this?” with that look that tells me they know exactly what I’ve smuggled back into the house. Have you tried this recipe or any other suggestions for different types of banana bread ? Let me know in the comments.

  • Squishy Banana Bread with Melty Choc Chips and dates

    Squishy Banana Bread with Melty Choc Chips and dates

    You know those recipes that sneak into your life and suddenly become your thing? This banana bread is exactly that – simple, reliable, and just a little bit extra thanks to the mix of chocolates and optional dates.

    It’s the perfect bake for when your bananas have gone spotty and you fancy something cosy with a cuppa, without spending all afternoon in the kitchen. One bowl, minimal effort, maximum payoff.
    It’s a great “anytime” loaf: Sunday baking, after-school snacks, packed lunches, or a little treat with your morning coffee. The ripe bananas keep it soft and moist, the white and dark chocolate chips give you pockets of sweetness and richness, and the chopped dates (if you use them) add lovely chewy, caramel-like bites. It feels like a classic banana loaf that’s had a little glow up – still homely and comforting, but just special enough that people will ask you for the recipe.

    Ingredients
    • 100g softened butter
    • 175g caster sugar
    • 2 large eggs
    • 2 ripe bananas, mashed (the spottier the better)
    • 225g self-raising flour
    • 1 tsp baking powder
    • 2 tbsp milk
    • 100g white chocolate chips
    • 100g dark chocolate chips
    • 100g chopped dates (optional, but lovely for extra chew and sweetness)

    Method

    • Get your tin and oven ready
      Preheat your oven to 180C / 160C fan / Gas Mark 4.
      Lightly grease a 2lb loaf tin, then line the base and sides with baking parchment. This makes it much easier to lift the loaf out later without it sticking or breaking.
    • Mash the bananas
      Peel your ripe bananas and pop them into a small bowl. Mash with a fork until mostly smooth, with just a few little lumps. The riper the bananas, the sweeter and more flavourful your loaf will be.
    • Mix everything in one bowl
      In a large mixing bowl, add the softened butter and caster sugar. Beat them together until well combined and a bit lighter in texture.
      Add the eggs, mashed bananas, self-raising flour, baking powder and milk straight into the same bowl. Using an electric hand mixer or a wooden spoon, beat everything together for about 2 minutes, until you have a smooth, thick batter and everything is well blended.
    • Fill the tin
      Spoon the mixture into your prepared loaf tin. Use the back of a spoon or a spatula to level the surface so it bakes evenly and looks neat once it’s risen.

    • Bake your banana bread
      Place the tin in the preheated oven and bake for about 1 hour. Ovens do vary, so start checking from around 50 minutes.
    • The loaf is ready when it’s well risen, a lovely golden brown on top and a fine skewer inserted into the centre comes out clean. Don’t worry if you see a little melted chocolate on the skewer – you just don’t want any raw batter.
    • Cool it down (the hardest part!)
      Take the tin out of the oven and leave the banana bread to cool in the tin for a few minutes so it can firm up a little.
      Then carefully lift it out using the parchment, peel off the paper and transfer the loaf to a wire rack to cool completely – or at least until it’s just slightly warm.

    Serving ideas and little tips
    • The absolute best moment is slicing it while it’s still a touch warm, when the chocolate chips are soft and a bit melty and the crumb is tender and moist.
    • It’s delicious on its own, but a thin swipe of butter on a warm slice takes it into full comfort-food territory.
    • The loaf keeps well for a few days in an airtight container, and the flavour actually deepens by the next day.
    • Older slices are lovely lightly toasted under the grill and served with butter for a cosy breakfast or snack.


    • You can easily tweak it: swap the dates for chopped nuts (like walnuts or pecans), or stick to just white or just dark chocolate depending on what you have in the cupboard.
    This is one of those low-effort, high-reward bakes that makes your kitchen smell amazing, looks impressive sliced on a board, and tastes like a warm, homemade hug. Make it once and there’s a good chance you’ll become “the banana bread person” among your friends and family – and you won’t mind one bit.

    Shopping links .. i may get a small commission if you purchase

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