It is from this cookbook, C'est si bon! published by the Young Women's Christian Organization of Baton Rouge, first printed in 1969.
You should get yourself one, if you are interested in southern cooking.I would take a picture of the page, but as I said, I have been using it since 1969, and this is my favorite recipe in the book.. so it has a bit of batter damage. 😳
| Banana Bread | ||
|---|---|---|
| 1 1/4 cups sugar | 3 mashed bananas | |
| 1/2 cup butter | 2 cups sifted flour | |
| 2 well beaten eggs | 1 teaspoon baking soda | |
| 1/2 cup nuts |
Cream sugar and butter. Add eggs and bananas. Sift flour and soda and add. Beat well.
Fold in the nuts, pour into well greased loaf pan or small ring. Bake for 45 minutes at 375*
These instructions assumes the reader had a Home Economics Class. I did not. Luckily, I had a Granny, who liked to bake and sometimes taught me a thing or two, then there was just trial and error. So here are my improvements with a little instruction.
| Banana Bread | ||
|---|---|---|
| 1/2 cup softened butter | 1 1/2 teaspoon vanilla | |
| 3/4 cup brown sugar | 2 cups sifted flour | |
| 3/4 cup white sugar | 1 teaspoon baking soda | |
| 2 well beaten eggs | 1 teaspoon cinnamon | |
| 3 mashed bananas | a pinch of salt |
Preheat oven to 375* prepare a well greased loaf pan by coating the sides well with butter, (or spray it)
Place butter in a large bowl, if it is not room temperature you can place it in your warming oven for a moment, but don't melt it. Baking is chemistry and these things matter. Add the sugars, and cream the butter and sugar.
Here is a point of instruction, to "cream" butter and sugar together means they become one, and close to the texture of the butter, rather than wet sugar. Think of it as emulsified rather than mixed. Use a medium high setting to cream the butter and sugar together, until it becomes the texture of rather heavy butter.
The picture on the left is mixed sugar and butter, and the picture on the right is creamed.
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STOP don't mix the egg in yet!
Beat the egg until it is lighter in color, has bubbles, and has no white blobs left. See picture on right.
Add the vanilla. You will be glad you did, it's that something that's missing when it isn't there. I have a friend who adds a tablespoon of Banana Liqueur. If you have try it.





I like your changes. They make a lot of sense. I might try these changes with my gluten free muffins. We had a lot of great cooks to learn from.
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