Recipe Redux: Banana Cake with Vanilla Bean Frosting (2024)

Recipe Redux: Banana Cake with Vanilla Bean Frosting (1)

Ugh, I have been the worst blogger this month. I'm at 6 (now 7) posts for the month. I feel like I'm still on vacation. I usually post 3 times a week, but I've been averaging about 2 this month. I'm trying not to get too worked up over this, it is what it is. I've been spending a lot of time outside since I returned from my break, getting the garden ready and planting flowers. We added another raised bed to our garden this year. Year by year, the garden gets a little bigger than the year before. Obviously, the bigger the garden gets, the more time it needs. I'm feeling that this year.

And truth be told, I'm just enjoying how lackadaisical I've been this month with the blog. It feels good to remove some of the pressure. I'm such a weird person with pressure. The more pressure I put on myself, the more I rebel. Yeah, enjoy that going on in your head. I don't know, sometimes it just feels better to go outside, feed the birds, water the garden than it does to pound nonsense out on the keyboard.

So really, sorry for the lack of posting this month. I will try to do better next month :-)

Recipe Redux: Banana Cake with Vanilla Bean Frosting (2)

Let's talk about this uber healthy and delicious cake!

I first tried this cake when we had just moved into the house. April of 2013. Crazy that I'm redoing it in April, 3 years later. I've got a thing for timing! Here's the before:

Recipe Redux: Banana Cake with Vanilla Bean Frosting (3)

Update sorely needed!

Recipe Redux: Banana Cake with Vanilla Bean Frosting (4)

I love banana cake. It doesn't taste like any other cake. It has its own wonderful texture, and the dreamy vanilla bean frosting is the perfect counterpart to this light dessert.


Recipe Redux: Banana Cake with Vanilla Bean Frosting (5)

You could almost have this cake for breakfast with a cup of coffee. Almost.

Recipe Redux: Banana Cake with Vanilla Bean Frosting (6)

It's a fairly easy cake to make, too. You'll need a couple of ripe bananas. You want them to be a little mushy.


Recipe Redux: Banana Cake with Vanilla Bean Frosting (7)

Since the cake is fairly light on butter and sugar, I decided to mix the cake by hand instead of in my stand mixer. The stand mixer is not the best when there's not a larger amount of ingredients in the bowl. Hand contraption to the rescue!


Recipe Redux: Banana Cake with Vanilla Bean Frosting (8)

The cake bakes fast, about 20-25 minutes in the oven.


Recipe Redux: Banana Cake with Vanilla Bean Frosting (9)

While the cake was baking, I got to work on the frosting. First, I had to infuse the milk with vanilla bean. After discarding the vanilla bean, I got straight to work with the flour part of the frosting. Yep, this is one of those frostings you add flour to in order to thicken the milk. You then add the thickened milk to fluffy butter and sugar-


Recipe Redux: Banana Cake with Vanilla Bean Frosting (10)

And you have magic! Flour frosting is definitely my favorite frosting, and one of the only frostings I'll eat.


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It is so good on the cake.


Recipe Redux: Banana Cake with Vanilla Bean Frosting (12)


Recipe Redux: Banana Cake with Vanilla Bean Frosting (13)

I added some sliced bananas to garnish my cake, but keep in mind that the banana gradually starts to turn brown. My advice would be to slice some bananas on the side, and just garnish each slice as you serve it. That way everyone is happy :-)


Recipe Redux: Banana Cake with Vanilla Bean Frosting (14)

That's it for me today! I've been at Lowe's the last 3 days in a row, and I'm going for a 4th! Ha ha. The hubby and I are focusing on landscaping this year, so I've been bringing home lots of plants and flowers. I am sooooooo excited we are focusing on our outdoor areas this year. I can't tell you how happy it makes me to be surrounded by flowers. The colors, the smells, all the bees running around our yard... it's been amazing. The hubby and I often talk about how few honey bees there are around these days, especially compared to when we were kids. Both of us can remember walking out into lawns absolutely saturated with honey bees foraging on dandelions and clover. These days, we were lucky to spot 3 or 4 honey bees in the yard. That was, of course, before we got the bees. Now it's magical to see all the bees in the yard. I want to bring them all kinds of different flowers to eat!

Don't worry, I'll take lots of pictures for my April round-up :-)

Have a great day everyone!


Recipe Redux: Banana Cake with Vanilla Bean Frosting (15)

Recipe adapted from: ButterYum

Ingredients:

Cake-
2 tbsp unsalted butter, softened
2/3 cup sugar
1 large egg, room temp
1/2 cup plain Greek yogurt
1 tsp vanilla extract
2 very ripe bananas
1 cup all-purpose flour
1/2 tsp baking soda
1/4 tsp salt

Frosting-
1/2 cup milk
1 vanilla bean
2 1/2 tbsp all-purpose flour
1/2 tsp vanilla extract
1 cup butter, softened
1/2 cup sugar

garnish- sliced bananas (optional)


Directions

:

1. Preheat oven to 350º. Grease a 8 x 8 pan.
2. For the cake: In a large bowl, cream butter and sugar, until pale and creamy. Beat in egg. Beat in Greek yogurt. Beat in vanilla. Beat in soft bananas. In a separate bowl, whisk together the flour, baking soda, and salt. Add flour mixture to banana mixture, mix until well combined. Pour batter evenly into greased pan. Bake in pre-heated oven 20-25 minutes, or until toothpick comes out clean. Remove from oven, and let cool completely before frosting.
3. For the frosting: Add milk to a small saucepan. Cut vanilla bean in half lengthwise, and scrape seeds into the milk. Add vanilla bean to milk. Heat over medium heat, until small bubbles appear around the edges of the milk. Remove from heat, and let milk sit for 15 minutes. Discard vanilla bean. Add flour to the milk, and heat over medium-high heat, stirring constantly until mixture becomes thick. Stir in the vanilla extract. Remove from heat, and let completely cool. In a stand mixer, cream butter and sugar untilverypale and creamy (take your time on this, because you don't want your frosting to be grainy from unincorporated sugar). Add flour mixture to the butter mixture, and beat until frosting takes on texture of whip cream (about 5-7 minutes). Chill in fridge for 15 minutes before frosting.
4. Remove cake from the pan. Spread frosting on top the cake. Slice, garnish with banana (if using), and serve immediately. Store leftover cake in the fridge.

Printable Recipe

Recipe Redux: Banana Cake with Vanilla Bean Frosting (16)

If you liked this recipe, you may enjoy these-

Recipe Redux: Banana Cake with Vanilla Bean Frosting (17)

Banana Cupcakes with Milk Chocolate Frosting


Recipe Redux: Banana Cake with Vanilla Bean Frosting (18)

Simple Banana Bread


Recipe Redux: Banana Cake with Vanilla Bean Frosting (19)

Banana Split Truffles

Linked to: Weekend Potluck

Recipe Redux: Banana Cake with Vanilla Bean Frosting (2024)

FAQs

Why is my banana cake not fluffy? ›

It's important to make sure your bananas are well mashed. If they aren't broken down well enough less moisture is released from the fruit, effecting the texture of your cake. That being said you don't want to blitz it to a banana puree either! A few chunks here and there adds some variety and texture.

How do you make banana cake Jamie Oliver? ›

Peel and mash the bananas in a separate bowl with the back of a fork, then whisk in the melted butter, sugar, eggs, yoghurt and vanilla extract. Add the flour mixture to the banana mixture and whisk until just combined. Spoon into the cake tin and bake for 40 to 50 minutes, or until an inserted skewer comes out clean.

What is the secret to a very fluffy cake? ›

Most cakes begin with creaming butter and sugar together. Butter is capable of holding air and the creaming process is when butter traps that air. While baking, that trapped air expands and produces a fluffy cake. No properly creamed butter = no air = no fluffiness.

What is the secret to light fluffy cakes? ›

The most crucial tip? Instead of buying an entire box of cake flour, simply incorporate two tablespoons of cornstarch into 3 1/2 cups of all-purpose flour. This blocks the formation of gluten in the flour, which produces a lighter, fluffier cake.

What is the purpose of vinegar in a banana cake? ›

Long ago, bakers learned that the addition of vinegar to baked goods helped them rise and kept the baked goods fluffy and moist. Apparently, the vinegar reacts with the baking soda in a recipe to produce carbon dioxide, a gas that enhances the rise.

When not to use bananas for baking? ›

While it's okay if the banana peel is dark brown or even black, if the inside is too, then the fruit is beyond ripe and now on its way to rotten. Another sign that bananas have gone bad is if they start leaking any fluids. When in doubt, just toss the bananas out.

Why is my banana cake so heavy? ›

Using too much butter makes for a heavier cake with less banana flavor. Using double the amount of butter that the recipe called for left me with a loaf that was dry on the outside and moist on the inside. The coloring was almost identical to that of the loaf made with too little butter.

Why is my banana bread dense and not fluffy? ›

You Over-Mix the Batter

For soft and tender banana bread, gently stir the wet ingredients into the dry — don't overmix! The more you stir, the more gluten will develop. The result will be a tough, rubbery banana bread. Simply stir until moist, and then do no more.

Why does my banana cake go flat? ›

This is because too much batter in one cake tin may result in the weight of the batter being too much for the cake to support, causing the cake to collapse and sink in the middle as it bakes. This is especially true for cake recipes which have a more softer, delicate structure to them, which many of my cake recipes do.

Why is my cake dense and not light and fluffy? ›

8. My cake is very dense. This could be because a/ the cake mixture hasn't had enough air beaten into it, b/ the eggs were added too quickly and curdled or c/ there's not enough raising agent.

Why is my cake not moist and fluffy? ›

A dry cake is usually the result of one of the following pitfalls: using the wrong ingredients, making mistakes while measuring or mixing the batter, or baking the cake too long or at too high a temperature. Once you understand which common cake-baking blunders to avoid, you'll know how to bake a moist cake every time.

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