The wait is finally over! After weeks of testing, tweaking and plenty of tasting, my banana bread recipe is finally ready to share. Crispy golden top, caramelised sides, and a soft crumb with big banana flavours that slices like a dream. Let’s go!

Nagi's Notes
JB’s Banana Bread has landed! I’ve published over 2,000 recipes and this is the one and only I haven’t tasted – because bananas and I are not friends. 🙈 But I know this is the banana bread to end all banana breads – because it’s JB’s. The feedback has been off the charts, including a big tick from the toughest critic on our team, my brother Goh. If you love banana bread, this is the one that all others aspire to be. Enjoy!
Banana Bread
“Now we can post banana bread!” Those were Nagi’s words when we agreed that I was going to start publishing recipes under my name. So, my friends, now is the time! Those spotty, forgotten bananas on your bench are about to be put to good use.
I must admit, before starting working on this recipe, I didn’t have a go-to banana bread recipe. But I’ve eaten plenty of them, so I knew exactly what I was after. I had a clear idea of the flavour, the texture and the ingredients I wanted, after that, it was just a matter of testing, tweaking and baking again (and again!) until it was just right. The RecipeTin Eats way.

My first tests turned out well, and I was happy with the results. But then we decided that it should be a taller loaf. That’s when I ran into few difficulties finishing the recipe. The centre of the loaf was taking longer to cook, which meant the sides were starting to dry out. And the more you test, the more questions you create. Can we make it better? What happens if we change this? Suddenly the list of iterations grows. Different sugars, different spices, more eggs, less flour, no butter, more oil, baking powder instead of baking soda, shorter bake, longer bake, covered, uncovered. As we always say, the last 5% is always the hardest. That’s the part that makes it perfect. But 30 something banana breads later, here we are with a great recipe I am ready to share. 😊

Ingredients
Let’s talk about the bananas! They don’t have to be very overripe. Spotty or mostly brown bananas work the best because they are sweeter, but I’ve also tested this recipe with just-ripe ones, yellow, with no brown at all, and the result was just as good.
1. Bananas

Bananas – The main character here. Use the regular bananas you see at your store every day. As I said above, I’ve tested this recipe with bananas at every stage, just-ripe and yellow, lightly spotted, heavily dotted and fully overripe, even blacker than the one shown above. They all worked well. The riper the banana, the sweeter and stronger the flavour, but even firm yellow bananas will give you a soft loaf with great banana taste.
2. Dry ingredients

Flour – Plain flour / all-purpose flour – Gives the bread its structure.
Baking soda – Also known as bi-carbonate of soda, it makes the loaf rise and keeps it light. Baking powder doesn’t work as well. The banana bread wouldn’t rise as much and its texture would be different.
Cinnamon and allspice powder – My favourite spice mix for this recipe. Cinnamon brings warm sweetness, while allspice adds a gentle depth and a hint of clove and nutmeg flavour.
Salt – cooking salt / kosher salt. It brings out the flavours of the other ingredients.
3. Wet Ingredients

Brown sugar – I use only brown sugar for its light caramel flavour and extra moisture. It gives the bread a deeper taste and helps keep the crumb soft and tender. I did also test with a combination of white and brown sugar but found the texture and colour of the banana bread wasn’t as good.
- Eggs – 2 whole + 1 yolk, the whole eggs act as a binder and the yolk brings a little richness which was needed to give the crumb extra moisture without making it heavy. Use room temperature ones, large size (55g/2 ounces each).
Butter – Adds the rich, buttery flavour we all love.
Oil – Keeps the bread soft longer. It would be drier if we only use butter. Any neutral flavour oil can be used.
- Sour cream – As with the oil, the fat in sour cream helps create a soft crumb and prevent the bread from drying out. More importantly, its mild acidity is the key element needed for the baking soda to react and create the beautiful banana bread rise. Yoghurt is a great substitute. Avoid milk or buttermilk, they are thinner and can change the batter consistency, leading to a looser structure.
Vanilla – rounds out and enhances the flavour.


How To Make Banana Bread
The method here is simple and straightforward, no special equipment needed. Just mix the dry and wet ingredients separately and combine them together gently. The key is not to overmix the batter, so the loaf stays soft and tender. Once it’s in the oven, all that is left to do is let the smell of banana bread fill your kitchen and enjoy. Unless your name is Nagi The Banana Hater.
1. Lining the pan

Scrunch a 40 cm / 16″ long sheet of baking / parchment paper, it becomes softer and makes it easier to press and stay in the pan.
Fit the paper into a loaf pan (21.5 x 11.5 x 7 cm / 4.5 x 8.5 x 2.75″). There’s no need to grease the pan to make the paper stick, just fit it in, the batter will weight it down. Leave overhang on the sides for easy lifting.
2. Making the batter and bake

Dry – Whisk the dry ingredients in a bowl (flour, baking soda, salt, cinnamon and allspice).
Mash bananas – In a large mixing bowl, mash the bananas with a potato masher until mostly smooth.

Wet – Then add all the wet ingredients (brown sugar, eggs, melted butter, oil, sour cream, vanilla) and whisk until combined. Pour the dry ingredients into the wet ingredients.
Combine – Use a rubber spatula to mix until the flour is just incorporated. Having a few little flour lumps is ok, it’s better than overmixing which will make your banana bread firmer rather than soft.

Fill pan – Pour the batter into the prepared pan and smooth the surface.
Bake – Put the banana bread into the oven preheated to 180°C/350°F (160°C fan-forced). Then bake for 70 minutes, until a skewer inserted in the centre comes out clean (turning the pan around halfway through cooking). While cooking, a crack will naturally appear along the top of your banana bread. The centre continues to expand, it pushes through the firm crust, creating that classic split. It’s totally normal.

Cool for 10 minutes in the pan. The loaf should be nicely risen with a well-browned top and a crack along the centre.
- Lift out and place on a wire rack. Let it cool for at least an hour before slicing. If you plan storing it for later, you will need to let the banana bread cool completely, this can take up to 6 hours. If you don’t, the residual heat will make the crust soggy and create excess moisture that will affect texture and shorten the shelf life. That said, if you urgently need a slice while it’s still warm, I completely understand! Just expect it to be a little softer and more delicate. 😊


How To Serve Banana Bread
This banana bread is delicious slightly warmed or at room temperature. But the most common way and still the best way is lightly toasted with a little butter on top. It works perfectly for breakfast, afternoon tea, or a quick snack during the day. If you want to turn it into a dessert, serve it with a scoop of vanilla ice cream, a dollop of Chantilly cream and some chocolate sauce.
This recipe took a lot of testing, but I’m happy with the result, a soft, tender loaf with great banana flavour that works every time. Simple ingredients, simple method, and a banana bread you can rely on.
I hope you enjoy baking and eating this one as much as I did. If you make it, please let me know how it turns out. Happy baking and bon appétit! – JB

FAQ – Banana Bread
Yes. Make sure to thaw them completely first before mashing them.
Both works. Overripe bananas (with lots of brown spots or even brown all-over) will give a sweeter, stronger banana flavour. Just-ripe yellow bananas also work well, the flavour will be a little lighter, but the texture will still be as soft and tender.
I haven’t tested this recipe with chocolate chips or nuts yet, but I’ll give it a go soon and update the post with the results.
Yes. Let the loaf cool completely, then slice it first and wrap the slices individually. This way, you can take out only what you need. Freeze for up to 3 months. Thaw at room temperature or warm a slice gently in the microwave or oven before serving.
Watch How To Make It
Hungry for more? Subscribe to my newsletter and follow along on Facebook, Pinterest and Instagram for all of the latest updates.

JB’s Banana Bread
Ingredients
Dry Batter Ingredients:
- 2 1/4 cup plain flour / all-purpose flour
- 1 tsp baking soda , sifted (bi-carbonate soda) (Note 1)
- 1/2 tsp cooking salt / kosher salt (half for table salt, +50% for flakes)
- 1 1/4 tsp cinnamon powder
- 1/4 tsp allspice powder
Wet Batter Ingredients:
- 4 medium ripe banana (400g / 14oz peeled) (makes 1 3/4 cup once puréed) (Note 2)
- 1 tightly packed cup brown sugar
- 2 large egg + 1 egg yolk , at room temperature (~55g/2oz shell-on weight)
- 1/3 cup sour cream , full fat best (Note 3)
- 80g (5 tbsp) unsalted butter , melted
- 1/3 cup vegetable oil
- 2 1/2 tsp vanilla extract
Instructions
ABBREVIATED RECIPE
- Preheat oven and line loaf pan. Whisk dry ingredients together. In a seperate bowl, mash bananas, then mix in the rest of wet ingredients. Add dry to wet and mix gently until just combined. Pour into prepared pan. Bake at 180°C/350°F (160°C fan) 70 minutes.
FULL RECIPE
PREPARATION
- Preheat oven to 180°C/350°F (160°C fan-forced). Arrange the shelf so the loaf will sit in the middle of the oven.
- Prepare the pan – Scrunch a 40 cm / 16" sheet of baking / parchment paper and press it into a loaf pan (21.5 x 11.5 x 7 cm / 4.5 x 8.5 x 2.75"), leaving overhang on the sides for easy lifting.
MAKING THE BATTER AND BAKE
- Whisk dry – Mix dry ingredients in a bowl, whisk together the flour, baking soda, salt, cinnamon and allspice until well combined.
- Mash Bananas – In a large mixing bowl, mash the bananas with a potato masher until mostly smooth. Measure out 1 3/4 cups – save the excess for your morning smoothie. (Note 4)
- Add wet – Add the brown sugar, eggs, extra yolk, sour cream, melted butter, oil and vanilla. Whisk until combined.
- Add dry – Pour the dry ingredients into the wet. Fold gently with a spatula until the flour is just incorporated. Having a few little flour lumps is ok, it's better than overmixing which will make your banana bread firmer rather than soft.
- Fill pan – Pour the batter into the prepared pan and smooth the surface.
- Bake – Put the banana bread in the oven and bake for 70 minutes, until a skewer inserted in the centre comes out clean (turning the pan around halfway through cooking). While cooking, a crack will naturally appear along the top of your banana bread. The centre continues to expand, it pushes through the firm crust, creating that classic split. (Note 5)
- Cool in the pan for 10 minutes, then lift out, and place on a wire rack. Let it cool for an hour before slicing. (Note 6)
- Serving – Serve banana bread slices slightly warm or at room temperature. It’s great on its own, or spread with a little butter. Perfect for breakfast, afternoon tea, or a quick snack any time of the day.
Recipe Notes:
- Just ripe (yellow, no spots): light banana flavour, less sweetness.
- Ripe (yellow with a few brown spots): balanced flavour and sweetness.
- Overripe (lots of brown spots or mostly brown): deeper banana flavour and more natural sweetness.
Nutrition Information:
In Memory of Dozer
This photo was taken before I officially joined RecipeTin Eats. At the time, I was catering a team lunch for them. Just another job, or so I thought. It was one of the very first time I met Dozer. From the moment I stepped into the kitchen, he planted himself right next to me and stayed there almost the entire lunch, observing and supervising. I thought he was finding his bearings as the new sous-chef… but really, he was the head chef. 🦮 ♥️

I forgot to rate this recipe, apologies! 🙁
I Love your thorough, easy to follow recipe, with “tips” for the Best, Not overly sweet, tender textured, banana bread Without nuts!
Appreciate your extremely, hard work of experimenting All variations~ for us to bake & enjoy. This will be my go-to recipe from now on.
I’m also grateful for your easy to follow savory recipes.
Dozer’s lack of presence must be a constant reminder to you all while you cook and test recipes. It’s heartfelt to know that you all can remember him and smile.
Thank you for sharing! 🙂
Dozer 🐾 would defo approve
Je viens de cuire votre banana bread 🍌
Wowee, it’s nice and moist
I was tempted to add nuts or chocolate chips or nutmeg but I followed the recipe sauf que j’ai utilize yogourt au lieu de sour cream.
So yummy !!
Merci bien chef
Perfect for a gloomy cold day here in Vancouver 🇨🇦
Warrants the hype. Outstanding banana bread and I don’t even like bananas. Soft and moist with a superb crust that is just *chefs kiss* the entire family loved it.
Please convert the measurement into grams as I love baking and find my scales is my bestie
Thanks I love you reignited my cooking skills
Hi Maree, for the metric measurements just click on the “metric” button next to “cups” underneath the ingredients title in the recipe card. 🙂 Thank you for your comment!
My niece and nephew are banana bread connoisseurs, so I’ve tried countless banana bread recipes for them over the years. This one is, by far, their absolute favorite. They loved it so much they told me I could stop trying to find new banana bread recipes! Thanks for the excellent recipe!
Incredible! Tastes better than cafe banana bread super simple to make.
It even makes perfect banana bread muffins!
The muffins worked! That’s so cool! Thank you Rhiannon 🙂
Hey JB,
this banana bread is amazing..perfect perfect perfect.
I’m so impressed with myself for making it😆
I’ll be back 🤖
I have been waiting for this wonderful banana bread recipe from nagi tin blog a long long time, thinking, Finally, best thing happened, Banna bread wow, I made it wow, so so great no much sugar compare to other recipe, can even have it for a morning, crinkling the grease paper tip..Thank you JB and nagi.
Thank you Ai! ♥️♥️♥️
Been waiting for this day!
RIP my old favourite recipe
Sorry old recipe.. 🙂
Thankyou JB for this recipe. Made this yesterday and it is delicious . As always I learn so much from Recipetineats – crinkling the grease paper. Never thought of doing that before and what a difference it makes – no more bouncy springy paper. The effort you all put in to sharing a recipe is amazing and very much appreciated.
I really love all the Dozer anecdotes.
He was so special
Cheers
Isn’t it such a good trick! Thank you for your lovely message Fiona!
Oh My Banana Bread goodness. I wrapped my just ripe banana’s in paper for 1 1/2 days to ripen them more before I could stand the wait any longer. So worth it – amazing!
Thanks for the feedback Jackie! So happy you loved it 🙂
This is truely excellent banana bread. I have made the recipe twice and both times perfect – my family commented that it was better than any cafe banana bread!
The second time I substituted sour cream for Greek yoghurt as that was all I had. I was also slightly short on bananas so added apple puree to top up to the required amount. Made no difference to taste or texture!
Thank you for such a great recipe 🙌🏻
It is really a foolproof recipe! Happy it was a hit with the family! 🙂
Best banana bread l have ever made, and l have madea few over time. Best banana bread l have ever tasted too. Thanks for taking the time to perfect the recipe. Amazing.
Thank you for your kind message Julie! I’m glad you loved it!
Stunning banana bread recipe! The first thing I notice is the denser crumb that reminds me of a banana bread from a cafe. I really like tbe substitution of yoghurt as I dont often have sour cream and it works wonderfully. Thank you!
Thanks Audrey! Now you don’t need to go to a cafe anymore 🙂
My family have had a couple of extremely upsetting days. Behold JB’s banana loaf. Ten of them wouldn’t be enough to satiate my dudes.
Time to make more Caroline! I’m happy if this helped you in way 🙂
sour cream, and just for grins i added chocolate chips.. what a happy happy joy joy!!
So good right!! Thanks Stacey 🙂
Thank you JB for this great recipe! I also loved the abbreviated directions at the end to sum up the step by step! My husband agreed that it was absolutely delicious!!
You are so welcome Stefani! Thank you for leaving a comment ♥️
I like bananas for othe rreasons and I usually cant have them but dam
Thank you Elijah! I’m glad you tried it and enjoyed it!
Absolutely brilliant. This banna loaf is a winner. I made it with not so ripe bannas and still it tasted like a banna bread should taste like. Will not buy in store again. Wonder if this will work as a date loaf in place of the bannas? Will the ratio’s be the same? Thanks JB!!!
Thanks Marco! I’m not sure about the quantity of the date. If you puréed them, then the same should work but be careful, dates are extra sweet. 🙂
I made this using gf flour, and threw in some chopped walnuts and white chocolate chips. Absolutely delicious!
Can this get any better!!?? Thank you Simone!