
A
few years back, there was suddenly a lot of talk about weighing out ingredients
when baking. A cup of flour can vary considerably in weight depending on how
densely the flour is packed in the cup. Too much extra flour and the recipe can
be altered significantly from what the recipe developer originally intended.
So,
a culinary school-trained chef and staunch rule-follower such as myself must
have immediately switched to weighing all of her ingredients when baking, no?
No. Days I turn to baking usually fall on a weekend when I am relaxed and much
more interested in enjoying my time in the kitchen than in flawless measuring in
pursuit of perfect results.
With that in mind, it should be no surprise that the event that got me to finally put my kitchen scale to use was spurred by
Since
I now had my banana pulp available in pounds and ounces, I went on the hunt for
a banana bread recipe that provided ingredient quantities in weights for ease
of scaling.
The
Culinary Institute of America’s banana bread recipe is one I have used before
and one that handily, comes with ingredients listed in weights. Am I a convert
to the kitchen scale after this recipe? Probably not, as I love the ease of
scooping flour into a measuring cup without pulling out the scale, but for
recipes that call for large quantities, it certainly makes sense. And nothing
really beats the confidence that comes with placing a baked good in the oven,
knowing it will come out as close as possible to what the recipe developer
intended.
Banana Nut Bread
Adapted (recipe cut in half) from the Culinary Institute of America
2 lb 2 oz overripe bananas
1/4 oz lemon juice
1 lb 6.5 oz ap flour
1 t baking powder
1/2 oz baking soda
1 t salt
1 lb 6.5 oz sugar
3 eggs
7 fl oz oil
4 oz chopped pecans
Butter or cooking spray to coat the loaf pans
Preheat oven to 350
Coat three loaf pans with butter or cooking spray. Mash the bananas with the lemon juice. Sift together the flour, baking powder, baking soda and salt.
Place the banana puree in a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment and add the sugar, eggs and oil. Mix on medium until well-combined.
Add the flour mixture to the banana puree in three additions, mixing just until combined after each addition. Stir in the pecans.
Divide the batter evenly between the loaf pans. Bake for 50 to 55 minutes until the bread springs back when touched. Cool in pans on wire racks for five minutes, remove the bread from the pans and cool completely on wire racks. Serve with your best preserves.

4 comments:
I've always baked with weights here in London, but now when I try American recipes I quite enjoy the ease of cup measures. This bread looks delicious, and somehow the nuts make it feel a little healthier than usual too!
Havent bought a kitchen weight yet...
This bread looks delicious.. Love the first photo!!! Did you shoot this indoors??
Hi Mr. & Mrs. P! I shot both of the pictures indoors, near a window, using natural light. Thanks for stopping by Apples and Butter!
This breads looks delightful, and somehow the almonds create it experience a little better than regular too! I discovered myself with a hill of past-their-prime apples and no wish to information everything into calculating cup after calculating cup to figure out how much overripe bananas pulp was in my ownership. Plop it all on your kitchen oven and contact it a day.
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