Showing posts with label banana bread. Show all posts
Showing posts with label banana bread. Show all posts

Friday, January 29, 2016

Banana Bread with Stevia



I bought Stevia last year in Tesco and it has sat in the press since, mocking me. With all this talk of evil sugar I decided to try and use it to make cake, instead of sugar. I found this page of recipes and adapted the b-bread slightly, while sticking to the American use of cups as measurements.

A loaf-tin sized cake yield 12 slices. So, for this, calories per slice are 114, sugars only 3g and a nice dollop of protein at 3g also.

The wet ingredients all together, before mixing
I have to say that this experiment does not make me trust Stevia. The Banana Bread is nice and banana-y but not sweet at all and really tastes more bread-like than cake-like, which is not what I wanted. I ended up putting jam on it to sweeten it up, which rather defeats the low-sugar purpose of it all. Sigh. Use more Stevia in the recipe or stick to sugar? The quest continues...




INGREDIENTS

1/4 cup vegetable oil
1 cup ripe banana, mashed (2 fun-sized bananas)
1 teaspoon vanilla essence
2 medium eggs
1/3 cup milk
1 1/2 cups whole wheat spelt flour
1 teaspoon bread soda
1 1/2 teaspoons stevia powder
1/2 teaspoon salt

METHOD
  • Preheat oven to 350°F (180°C) and grease and/or line a loaf tin.
  • In a large bowl, mix together the oil, bananas, vanilla, eggs, and milk.
  • Sieve the the dry ingredients through and mix until just combined.
  • Pour into the tin and bake for 55 minutes, or until a toothpick in the middle comes out clean.
  • Cool in the tin for a few minutes to set, then remove and cool completely on a rack.

Wednesday, April 15, 2015

GREAT IRISH BAKE FOR TEMPLE STREET - LO CAL BANANA BREAD

 It's Temple Street Bake time again!

Low calorie banana bread
I'm a sucker for banana bread. I'd love a soda bread type one (I think I will have to invent it) but, in the absence of that, I made a low calorie one today based on this recipe. How she got 24 pieces out of this is beyond me - maybe her guests were mice. My loaf yields about 10 slices.


Apple sauce is not a staple here in Ireland, so I made my own (ahem!) out of a peeled, finely diced apple. I cooked it on a medium heat with a little water until softened and then blended it, which didn't make it very sauce-like. But, in it went anyway.


This makes a moist, very sweet, low-sized loaf so the slices are more like bars. 106 kcals per bar. Yum!


Ingredients

2 mashed bananas
1 tablespoon unsweetened applesauce/or one apple made into poor applesauce
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1/2 cup brown sugar
1 dash salt
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 large egg
2 tablespoons nonfat milk (I used soya milk)
3/4 cup spelt flour

Method

  • Preheat oven to 180°/350°F and lightly grease a 2lb loaf tin
  • Place all ingredients but flour & baking powder in a large bowl and mix
  • Sieve in flour and baking powder to wet ingredients
  • Pour into loaf tin
  • Cook for about 35 minutes - or until golden brown.
  • Allow to cool before slicing

Friday, April 4, 2014

TEABRACK & BANANA LOAF - Great Irish Bake 3

Poster, balloons and money jar - Great Irish Bake
It's the official Great Irish Bake Day - our money jar is in place, the balloons are up and I have baked two cakes so far. My husband plans to bake bread later. We will serve these to my writing group tomorrow and hopefully they'll leave a donation in the jar :)

Teabrack mix
Banana bread in progress
Teabrack and banana bread
If you want to make either of these loaves the teabrack recipe is here and the banana loaf is here.

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

GREAT IRISH BAKE - DAY 2 - BANANA BREAD

Great Irish Bake Banana Bread
We made banana bread for the Great Irish Bake - two loaves, one for my friend Karen to build her up after the birth of her lovely new baby, Harley. And one for us!

Great Irish Bake Donations Jar
The Great Irish Bake collection jar is filling up nicely for the children in Temple Street. And so to the cake - makes a good, sweet, banana-y loaf.

INGREDIENTS

2 over-ripe bananas
100g light brown sugar
125g wholegrain spelt flour
125g self-raising flour
50ml soya or cow's milk
50ml rapeseed oil
1 tsp baking powder
2 beaten eggs
a handful of flaked almonds

METHOD

o Preheat the oven to 160˚C
o Grease a loaf tin
o Break the peeled bananas into a bowl and whizz with the sugar (I used a hand blender)
o Add the eggs, oil and soya milk and whizz again
o Fold in the dry ingredients and pour into the loaf tin
o Scatter the flaked almonds on top
o Bake for 55 to 60 minutes. Test with a skewer.
o Gorgeous hot or cold, on its own or yogurt

Monday, June 29, 2009

VEGAN BANANA BREAD



I’ve adapted this recipe (beyond recognition really) from a Nigella recipe in the wonderful How to be a Domestic Goddess. Nigella, of course, uses booze and extra sugar, but I wanted a more modest cake. Not that there’s anything wrong with rum or sugar but I am attempting to eat healthily, post baby. Therefore, homemade cake. Ahem. Even with less sugar the cake is gorgeously sweet and moist thanks to the bananas and dates.

175gr of plain flour
2 tsps baking powder
½ tsp bicarbonate of soda
½ tsp salt
2tsp NoEgg mixed with 2tblsps water (or 2 beaten eggs for non vegans)
100gr of light brown sugar
125g vegan margarine, melted
100g whole seedless, soft dates
3 or 4 smallish ripe bananas
1 tsp vanilla essence

o Preheat the oven to 170˚C
o Grease a 2lb loaf tin
o Mash the bananas
o Mix the flour, baking powder, salt and bicarbonate of soda in one bowl
o In another larger bowl mix the melted sugar with the marg and beat until blended together
o Beat in NoEgg mix (or the eggs, one at a time), then the mashed bananas
o Stir in the dates and vanilla essence
o Add the flour mixture, one third at a time, mixing each portion well in
o Pour into the loaf tin and shake the tin to settle the mixture
o Bake for an hour in the middle of the oven.
o Test with a cocktail stick or skewer to see if it is baked through
o Let it cool in the tin on a wire rack