baking/breakfast/brunch/recipes/sweets

Avocado Bread: like banana bread, but with avocados

Posted September 20, 2015 by Stephanie
avocado bread recipe - www.iamafoodblog.com

avocado bread recipe - www.iamafoodblog.com

Oh so long ago, back when I was still in high school, my mom came home from work one day clutching a photocopied hand-written banana bread recipe. I wasn’t impressed, but she claimed it was the recipe for the best banana bread she had ever tasted in her life. It was a pretty bold statement, especially for my mom, who isn’t really prone to superlatives – she’s more the stoic type. Still, she stood by it. She even had a bunch of bananas, purchased with the sole purpose of ripening for the bread.

avocado bread recipe - www.iamafoodblog.com avocado bread recipe - www.iamafoodblog.com

I had my doubts. I was wary of the illegible hand writing, the oil content, and, well, everything. But, I stand corrected: it really was the best banana bread ever. It was the banana bread dreams are made of. Moist, not too sweet, not overly oily, and loaded with banana flavor. The crowning glory was its crunchy, crisp, domed top. We must’ve made that banana bread hundreds of times after the first. The recipe got wrinkly, banana-stained, and well loved, until one day, it decided enough.

avocado bread recipe - www.iamafoodblog.com

It was gone. We spent a good half a day searching. Its usual spot was stuck to the side of the microwave with a Care Bear magnet. The candy colored, Care Bear stare magnet was still there, its innocent smile belying its poor job performance. The magnet had one job – keep the recipe safe – and it failed.

Sadly, at this point my mom changed offices and the banana bread creator wasn’t available for consultation. We tried again and again to re-create the loaf from memory, but it was futile: some loaves came pretty close, but to be honest, they were never quite right.

avocado bread recipe - www.iamafoodblog.com

To this day, I’m still searching for that elusive bread. In some ways whenever I have banana bread I feel betrayed. I’m always hoping for a taste of the past, only to be disappointed by overly sweet, dry loaves.

In desperation, I turned to the avocado. I don’t have a cool story for why I decided on avocados, aside from the fact that I thought it would be hilarious to have avocado toast made with avocado bread (the yeasted kind). From there I started thinking about quick breads and why bananas, zucchinis, and carrots got all the love.

avocado bread recipe - www.iamafoodblog.com

Essentially, I substituted avocado in a slightly adapted version of my second favorite banana bread recipe. I ended up with a pleasantly green, slightly sweet, tender loaf. I topped a still warm slice with a scoop of ice cream and even Mike, who was a skeptic at first, thought it was a winner.

avocado bread recipe - www.iamafoodblog.com avocado bread recipe - www.iamafoodblog.com

Avocado Bread Recipe
makes 1 small loaf


  • 1 cup flour
  • 1/2 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1/4 teaspoon cinnamon
  • pinch of salt
  • 1/4 cup butter at room temp
  • 1/2 cup sugar
  • 1 large egg
  • 1/4 teaspoon vanilla
  • 1/2 cup mashed avocado*
  • 1 teaspoon lime juice

Notes: The lime juice keeps the loaf a green color, you can skip out on it if you don’t have any on hand, just know that your loaf won’t be as verdant.

If you have a food processor or blender, blend your avocado – it needs to be completely smooth for this.

Preheat the oven to 325°F and line a small loaf pan with parchment paper.

In a bowl, whisk together the flour, baking powder, baking soda, cinnamon, and salt. Set aside. In another bowl, cream together the butter and sugar until light and fluffy. Mix in the egg and vanilla throughly and then the mashed avocado and lime juice. Gently fold in the flour mix, being careful not to over mix.

Spoon the batter (it is very thick) into the prepared pan and bake for 35-45 minutes or until an inserted wooden skewer is clean with a few crumbs clinging. Cool completely, slice and enjoy.

 

avocado bread recipe - www.iamafoodblog.com
It’s Sunday! You know what that means: it’s time for Sunday Brunch. Why don’t you skip the line and make brunch at home this week? The coffee’s truly bottomless, the booze doesn’t have a crazy markup and you can chill out in your pajamas. Every Sunday I’ll post a brunch recipe. Soon you won’t be asking, where should we go for brunch – instead it’ll be, what should we make for brunch today?

109 Comments

  1. Two things:
    This looks and sounds amazing! Printing pronto so I can make it.
    Where is the little paddle spoon from? I’m in love

    1. Stephanie Le says:

      it’s from a dollar store in tokyo!

  2. Catie says:

    This looks so scrumptious and ingenious! I don’t have a small loaf pan, only a 9×5. If I doubled the recipe could I use a 9×5? Can’t wait to make this :)

    1. Stephanie Le says:

      definitely, but it would take quite a lot longer to bake, check on it at the one hour point and then every 5 minutes or so afterwards. and if the top starts to brown, cover with foil. let me know how it goes!

      1. Jane says:

        How about muffins?

        1. Stephanie says:

          hi jane,
          i haven’t tried baking the batter in muffin format so I can’t really over any helpful insight :(

  3. This looks so wonderful I actually squealed a little when I saw it. I am 100% making this tomorrow! xo

  4. Love your writing style. Makes the recipe very personal and readable. Might have to give this one a go! But banana bread rules.

  5. Jemiro says:

    Hi, I’ve heard AND sadly experienced myself that warm avocado (baked, cooked, heated…) turns BITTER. I’ve tried an avocado cake before and it tasted yuk/bitter.
    Has anyone had that too? Any tips or so? Would make my day!
    I use Hass Avocado’s which is what is at hand here in Germany.

    Love to ya’ll baking lovers :)

    1. Stephanie Le says:

      strange, i haven’t heard that and i’ve had other warm avocado things. maybe it has to do with the ripeness of the avocado? the avocados used for this were really ripe.

    2. K says:

      I baked this recipe just now. It turned out very moist, and yummy except that it’s bitter. The bitterness lingers in your mouth after a few minutes. Any tops on how to get rid of the bitterness? I would have really loved this recipe though.

  6. Vanessa says:

    I know this is a pain to answer but do you think you could sub a glutenfree flour, like almond flour/coconut flour for the regular wheat flour?

    1. Stephanie Le says:

      i haven’t tried, but i think almond flour might work. it would probably have a much denser consistency though.

  7. hayon says:

    So when I saw this recipe, I instantly wanted to do it. It looks SO SO SO GOOD!
    But I had a lot of trouble executing it. I wonder whether it’s because I didn’t use enough avocado, but my dough didn’t get mushy and as wet as yours and so I added a bit of soymilk and oil (that’s probably what ruined it…) and it also didn’t rise very well.

    Any suggestions?

    1. Stephanie Le says:

      it could be the avocado – it needs to be a completely smooth puree. it’s best if you use a blender or food processor to blend it up. how much avocado did you use? also, how old is your baking power and soda? if they’ve really old they won’t give you the lift that the fresh stuff does.

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