Last year, with my bounty crop, I thought I'd perfect zucchini bread. A dozen or so loaves later, this recipe comes pretty close. I've been through internet recipes, my great-aunt's recipes, and even a granola zucchini cookbook written by Oregon mountaineer commune-ists. Based on the famous Sunset magazine zucchini bread recipe of '76, then tortured a bit and doctored for less sugar and oil and the removal of such blasphemies as canned pineapple, le voilĂ . This makes a moist, non-oily, hearty bread.
Take My Zucchini, Please Bread
A.
4 eggs
2 c. sugar (add up to 1/2 cup more if you want it sweeter -- the texture will change a bit)
2/3 c. veg. oil
2 t. vanilla
B.
3 c. (packed) shredded zucchini with peel. If you have a monster zucchini, core it to remove the seeds.
1/3 c. milk
2 t. lemon zest
C.
1 1/2 c. white flour
1 c. whole wheat flour
1 c. steel cut oats
2 t. baking soda
1/2 t. baking powder
1 t. salt
1 t. nutmeg
2 t. cinnamon
1/2 t. ground ginger
1/2 t. ground allspice
D.
1 c. chopped walnuts
OPTIONAL: 3/4 c. raisins and/or 1 grated carrot
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Beat ingredients in A together until well-combined. Mix in B. In a separate bowl, combine ingredients in C. Just before pouring batter into greased, floured** loaf pans (2 large or 3 medium -- batter should fill pan a bit over half full), add D. To be fancy, add some oats, crystal/turbinado sugar, or a few nuts on top. Bake for 50-60 minutes, or until wooden stick comes out clean. You will also see loaf slightly separating from the pan around edges. Invert pan and cool on rack. Good hot, cold, or in between. Good with butter. Freezes well.
*For a large garden zucchini, you will be able to make six or more loaves, so plan accordingly. You *can* refrigerate shredded zucchini overnight and even freeze it, but I found the texture of the bread really suffered with frozen, thawed zucchini shreds. It's much better to bake the bread, then freeze the loaf.
**I sometimes use the Pam oil/flour spray. It really doesn't work well; the bread rises unevenly and not so high as with the traditional method. But when you're baking a dozen loaves in the heat of the summer, reach for the Pam. I forgive you.
3 comments:
Well, this post is pure torture for me. I can't grow zuke in my yard because of squash vine borers. I adore zukes. There is a joke about people taking their extra zukes to the local mall and leaving them in the back seats of unlocked cars to get rid of them......I keep hoping it will happen to me. Alas, earlier this week I went and BOUGHT some zukes to make bread...two measly loaves :-(
We haven't had any zukes either!!! I am so bummed because when I went to the store to buy some they were 1.49 a piece!
I hope to have better luck next summer, but I am dying for some z. bread!
Hi reluctant remoderler,
I just stumbled upon your blog tonight after searching for mid-century, danish modern furniture. How, I don't exactly know.
I enjoyed reading your rants, raves, and ramblings on all things. Looking forward to your future posts.
S
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