Banana bread muffins

Bananas.  Cheap, convenient, tasty, and portable fruit.  Until they get overripe, ugh!  My mother would make us banana bread for our lunches when I was little.  I still enjoy this thrifty Canadian classic, but prefer to make muffins.  I find they cook more quickly and consistently than a full loaf.

Fresh bananas are best, but if you freeze them whole, you can just thaw slightly and peel. They are easy to mash from their semi-icy state, plus you can make the muffins at your convenience.

1/2 cup unsalted butter
7/8 cup white sugar
2 eggs
3 medium-small bananas.  If yours are large, use two.  You want about 1 cup mashed banana overall.

1 1/4 cup all-purpose flour
1/2 cup whole wheat flour
1 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp salt

Grease a non-stick muffin tin with butter or use muffin cups and set your oven to 350F.

Cream the butter and sugar together and beat in eggs.  Beat the mixture until smooth.  Mash the bananas separately.  A fork make the pieces a nice size – you want a slurry, not chunks as they won’t cook well.  Blend in bananas.

In a second bowl, mix dry ingredients.  Add to the banana mixture, stirring only enough to moisten.

Use 1/4 cup of batter for each muffin; if there is some leftover, top up the smaller muffins.

Bake on middle rack of oven for 15-20 minutes until golden on top.  Cool on wire racks.

Bananabread muffins ready to eat
Banana bread muffins ready to eat

Introducing: Recipe Roundup

Food.  You have to eat so it might as well be good.  I enjoy baking and cooking from scratch  – the pantry and freezer contain staples, not TV dinners.  From time to time, I experiment with a new dish, or add my own twist to a recipe I’ve found.  I thought I’d share some favourites with my readers.

Let’s get started with Gritless Cornbread!

Grit in food.  While perhaps not unexpected at the bottom of a bowl of fresh clam chowder, tiny hard bits in your dinner aren’t the nicest sensation.  Here’s how I make a smooth variation on traditional cornbread.  By using vegetable oil, it’s quick to mix by hand with no need to soften butter or get out the stand mixer to cream.

First set your oven to 375F.

cornbread
Cornbread fresh from the oven.

Next, get out two mixing bowls.

You need the following ingredients:

3/4 cup white sugar
1/2 cup mild vegetable oil e.g. canola
2 farm eggs (if not possible, try for free range or at least omega-enriched; the bright yolks will enhance the colour of your cornbread)

1 cup white (all-purpose) flour
1 1/2 cups corn flour (yellow corn flour, not masa)
3 teaspoons baking powder
1/4 teaspoon salt

1 cup milk

Add the sugar and oil to one bowl and stir.  Add the eggs and beat.  Beat some more.  You want them a little fluffy so your cornbread is light and airy.

Take a break from mixing and grease a 9×9 cake pan, or a round springform pan.  Alternatively, line the pan with parchment paper.

Mix the dry ingredients in the other bowl.  Check that you did so well by ensuring your mix is consistently light yellow, not striped white and gold.

Add 1/3 of the dry to your wet ingredients and mix.  Then add 1/3 of the milk, mix again.  Repeat until all is incorporated together.

Pour/scrape the batter into your baking pan.  Put it in the oven and set your timer for 25 minutes.

Check the cornbread – is it nice and golden on top?  Toothpick or bamboo skewer come out clean?  Sometimes, like The Jaunt, this cornbread takes “longer than you think.” If that’s the case, check again in three more minutes.

Serve warm slices with unsalted butter.