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Easy Banana Bread (The Overripe Rescue)

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Easy Banana Bread Recipe

I was about to throw away three overripe bananas. The skins were brown-black, the fruit was soft, and they’d been sitting in the fruit bowl for two days past their prime. Into the compost, I figured.

Clara stopped me. “Mom. Don’t throw those away. We need those.”

She said it like she was correcting a math problem—factual, not rude. Clara doesn’t waste. She couldn’t bear to throw away good bananas when banana bread existed.

This is the recipe she learned to make when she was eight. She stood on a stool and measured flour. She mashed bananas with her hands. She poured batter into a buttered loaf pan and watched it bake through the oven window.

That was a couple of years ago. Now she knows that overripe bananas are the good kind. That you don’t need fancy ingredients or special equipment. That your hands are enough to make something that matters.

The banana bread comes out golden. The top cracks the way it’s supposed to. It’s not perfect—nothing homemade is—but it tastes like Clara figured something out, which she did.

How to Make Easy Banana Bread

Mash the bananas. The riper the better—those brown-black bananas everyone wants to throw away are exactly what you need. Mash them in a bowl with a fork until mostly smooth. A few lumps are fine and add nice pockets of banana flavor throughout the bread.

Mix the wet ingredients. Stir the melted butter into the mashed bananas, then add the sugar, egg, and vanilla. Mix until just combined. This is a one-bowl recipe—no need for a mixer, no need for separate bowls.

Add the dry ingredients. Sprinkle the flour, baking soda, and salt over the wet mixture. Fold gently until the flour just disappears. The number one key to tender banana bread is not overmixing—stop stirring the moment you don’t see dry flour. A few small lumps are better than tough bread.

Bake low and slow. Pour into a buttered loaf pan and bake at 350°F for 55–65 minutes. The bread is done when a toothpick comes out clean and the top is golden with that signature crack down the middle. Let it cool in the pan for about 10 minutes before turning out—if you can wait that long.

If baking banana bread makes your kitchen smell amazing, try my Easter Morning Cinnamon Rolls for the next level. My 3-Ingredient Peanut Butter Cookies are another easy bake the kids can help with, and my Nana Ruth’s Carrot Cake is what I make when I want something truly special.

Easy Banana Bread (The Overripe Rescue)

The easiest banana bread recipe — one bowl, overripe bananas, and 15 minutes of mixing. The uglier the bananas, the better the bread. Clara's 'banana rescue day' recipe that the whole family fights over.
Course Main Course
Cuisine American
Keyword banana bread recipe, easy banana bread, moist banana bread, overripe banana recipe
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 1 hour
Total Time 1 hour 15 minutes
Servings 10 slices
Author Maggie

Ingredients

  • 3 large overripe bananas the blacker the better
  • 1/3 cup butter, melted 5 tablespoons
  • 3/4 cup sugar or half brown sugar for deeper flavor
  • 1 large egg, beaten
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • pinch salt
  • 1.5 cups all-purpose flour
  • 1/2 cup chocolate chips optional — Mason's request

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 350°F (175°C). Grease a 9x5 loaf pan with butter or cooking spray. Line the bottom with parchment paper for easy removal.
  2. In a large bowl, mash the overripe bananas with a fork until mostly smooth. A few lumps are fine — they become little pockets of banana in the finished bread.
  3. Add melted butter to the mashed bananas and stir. Then add beaten egg, vanilla, sugar, and salt. Mix until combined.
  4. Sprinkle baking soda over the top and stir in. Add flour and stir gently — just until the flour disappears. Do not overmix (20 stirs maximum). A few streaks of flour are fine.
  5. Fold in chocolate chips if using. Pour batter into prepared loaf pan and smooth the top.
  6. Bake for 55-65 minutes. Start checking at 55 minutes — insert a toothpick into the center. If it comes out clean or with just a few moist crumbs, it's done. The top should be golden brown with a signature crack down the center.
  7. Cool in the pan for 10 minutes, then turn out onto a wire rack. Let cool 20 more minutes before slicing (if you can wait that long).

Recipe Notes

The riper the bananas, the sweeter and more flavorful the bread. Frozen bananas work great — peel before freezing, thaw in a bowl, use the liquid too. Don't overmix the batter — that's the #1 key to tender bread. Wrap tightly and it keeps 3-4 days on the counter or 3 months in the freezer.

Allergen Note: This recipe contains wheat (flour). Optional add-ins like walnuts, pecans, or peanut butter contain tree nuts and/or peanuts. Always check labels if cooking for someone with allergies.

Common Questions

How ripe do the bananas need to be?
The riper the better. Brown-black skins with very soft fruit make the sweetest, most flavorful bread. Frozen bananas work great too—peel them before freezing, thaw in a bowl, and use the liquid along with the fruit. If your bananas aren’t ripe enough yet, put them on a baking sheet in a 300°F oven for 15–20 minutes until the skins darken.
Can I add mix-ins like chocolate chips or nuts?
Absolutely. Fold in up to 1 cup of chocolate chips, walnuts, pecans, or blueberries at the very end of mixing. For a swirl of peanut butter or Nutella, dollop spoonfuls on top of the batter and use a knife to swirl before baking.
Why did my banana bread sink in the middle?
Usually too much moisture (extra banana or oil) or opening the oven door too early. Make sure you’re using exactly 3 medium bananas, and don’t open the oven for at least the first 40 minutes. Also check that your baking soda isn’t expired—it loses potency over time.
How do I store banana bread?
Wrap tightly in plastic wrap or store in an airtight container at room temperature for 3–4 days. For longer storage, wrap individual slices and freeze for up to 3 months. Thaw at room temperature or toast frozen slices directly.
Can I make this recipe dairy-free?
Yes. Replace the butter with an equal amount of coconut oil or a neutral oil like vegetable or canola. The texture will be slightly different but still delicious. The bananas provide so much moisture and flavor that the swap barely matters.

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What I Use for This Recipe

A couple things from my kitchen that make this one easier.

USA Pan Loaf Pan
USA Pan Loaf Pan(~$14)

Every banana bread, every zucchini bread. A good loaf pan makes all the difference.

French Rolling Pin (Tapered)
French Rolling Pin (Tapered)(~$12)

No handles, more feel. Nana Ruth used one just like this. You can feel the dough better.

Nordic Ware Half Sheet Pans (2-Pack)
Nordic Ware Half Sheet Pans (2-Pack)(~$22)

Good sheet pans that never warp in the oven. Years of cookies and sheet pan dinners.

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