Miso Pecan Banana Bread
Updated Jan. 19, 2024

- Total Time
- 2 hours, plus cooling
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- ½teaspoon vegetable oil, plus more for pan
- 1cup/120 grams pecans
- 1teaspoon fine sea or table salt
- 2cups/256 grams all-purpose flour
- 1teaspoon ground cinnamon
- ½teaspoon ground nutmeg
- ½teaspoon baking soda
- ½teaspoon baking powder
- ½cup/113 grams unsalted butter, at room temperature
- 1cup/220 grams packed brown sugar
- 2large eggs, lightly beaten
- 3tablespoons milk
- 2tablespoons white miso
- 1tablespoon honey
- 1teaspoon vanilla extract
- 4very ripe bananas, mashed (1¾ cups/358 grams)
Preparation
- Step 1
Heat oven to 350 degrees. Lightly oil a 9- or 10-inch loaf tin, then line the base with parchment paper.
- Step 2
Toss pecans on a parchment-lined baking sheet with salt and oil. Bake until fragrant, 7 to 10 minutes. When cool, chop to your desired consistency.
- Step 3
While the pecans cool, whisk together flour, cinnamon, nutmeg, baking soda and baking powder in a medium bowl.
- Step 4
In a large bowl, beat butter and sugar using an electric mixer until creamy, 3 to 4 minutes. Beat in eggs, milk, miso, honey and vanilla extract until well-combined. Gradually beat in dry ingredients until just combined.
- Step 5
Using a spatula, stir bananas into the batter to combine evenly. Add half of the pecans (and any salt on the pan) to the batter and mix to combine evenly throughout. Add batter to the loaf pan, smoothing when complete. Sprinkle the remaining pecans evenly on top.
- Step 6
Bake until a wooden skewer inserted in several areas around the center comes out clean, 1 hour to 1 hour 20 minutes. Tent with foil if it starts to darken too much on top before the middle is baked through.
- Step 7
Let bread sit in tin for 10 minutes before removing and setting on a rack to cool for 60 minutes. Serve with coffee, ice cream or entirely by itself.
Private Notes
Comments
When you buy bananas, buy one or two more than you need. Put the last bananas, all brown and spotty, in the freezer, skin and all. On the morning that you bake, thaw out the bananas on a plate in the refigerator. When baking, cut off the stems. Squeeze the thawed bananas into the batter like a tube of toothpaste. Perfect! The point of this is that you can decide this morning to make banana bread tonight, and not have to start thinking about it on Monday for Friday. Thanks, Alton Brown.
Be careful with the salt here: miso is very salty. I used half the stated amount and still found it a bit too salty. This makes a beautiful, tasty loaf of bread/cake 😉
I assume a 9-inch loaf pan is a standard 9"x5" pan, but what are the other measurements of the 10-inch loaf pan? Perhaps pan sizes should be offered with volume measurements (in cups) to facilitate conversion to pan size on hand.
This is the best banana bread I've ever made! Perfect flavor that just has some unidentifiable amazingness in it. I decreased cinnamon by half and skipped nutmeg, preferring to have banana shine through. I did a scant cup of brown sugar (closer to 3/4 c) and then added some raw sugar on the top for crunch and a little sweet hit. Made with walnuts, as that is what I had around. Amazing recipe - this is replacing all my others.
We are big banana bread connoisseurs in my house, and this receipe is one of our favorites! I've made it a few times and love the salty-umami flavor the miso brings. A nice change from the standard (cinnamon/chocolate) in our house.
Amazing, salty and caramel-y! It is salty but it’s devine and addictive