Yesterday, Phoebe came home from school with her aspiring-baker friend Abby (different Abby) and declared โWe want to make bread.โ
โHow long is this playdate exactly?โ I asked.
โAbbyโs mom is picking her up at 5:30.โ
โHmmm.โ I was a little concerned about their plan.
โAw cโmonโฆWe can make that easy bread you always make?โ She was, of course, referring to Jim Laheyโs world-famous No-Knead bread, the only bread Iโve ever dared bake. (And to be honest, it works so well, I donโt really know why Iโd try any other.)
โWell youโre right, that one is easy,โ I said. โBut it still takes time.โ I thought for a second.
โHow about banana bread? Thatโs quick and we have a bunch of bananas that are not looking so hot.โ Of course, itโs a total farce that something made with that much sugar and butter is called โbreadโ and not โcake,โ but it was Friday, and why shouldnโt there be a little banana cake lying around over the weekend? Plus, I had the worldโs most surefire recipe, which I knew two 12-year-olds could handle without parental supervision.
It was decided. I opened my old recipe binderโฆ.an actual honest-to-god BINDER with tabs that look like this:
And recipes that look like this:
The whole binder system seems so quaint now, in spite of the fact that I only started it about a decade ago. But I still reach for it all the time ย โ even though most of my tried-and-true recipes are digitized on this blog or immortalized in my cookbook.ย I think thatโs because a lot of the recipes in the binder are handwrittenโฆand we all rememberย the ruleย about handwritten recipes, right?ย How theyโreย the least likely of all recipes to let you down?? ย
The other thing about handwritten recipes? They areย way off the Google gridโฆand how often can you say that in this day and age?
I sifted through recipes from my motherโs mother who I never met, recipes from old co-workers, Aunt Patty-anotated New York Times recipes from 1982 until I found what I was looking for: Elizabeth Mayhewโs banana bread recipe you see above. About ten years agoย Elizabeth, then an editor at Real Simple with me, now aย Today Show andย Washington Post contributor,ย came in to my office to talk about recipes for a story loosely called โOne-Bowl Breads.โ ย This was not an unusual scene โ no matter what I was working on, food stories or otherwise, my first conversation was always Elizabeth, an idea-machine who came up with some of the more memorable tips the magazine is so famous for. Thanks to Elizabeth I never feel bad about serving dinner guests meatloaf on china platters which โelevate the everydayโ; and I can always easily find my bed sheet sets (they are tucked into their matching pillow case like a little kit); and, as you have gathered by now, thanks to Elizabeth I have a killer one-bowl banana bread, the recipe for which she scrawled out in my office from memory. (โItโs my motherโs and Iโve made it too many times to count.โ)
Elizabeth could be ruthless, too, which I loved. Once, in my office, she asked me why I had an ugly dried-out bouquet of flowers on my desk. I told her Andy bought them to congratulate me for anย Times Op-Ed I had just written. โIt reminds me of my potential,โ I told her, somewhat pathetically.ย In one swift movement, she plucked out a tiny dried rose from the bouquet, placed it in a tiny box she found on my desk, shut the top, and handed the whole thing back to me. โHereโs your potential,โ she said. โNow throw out those depressing flowers.โ (Kids are not the only ones who appreciate a bit of authority.)
I still have that little box. And I still have her banana bread recipe, which is what I handed Phoebe and her friend for their baking date, and which the whole family moaned and groaned over all weekend. (Not surprisingly, they opted for the โoptionalโ chocolate chips.)
Iโm not going to rekey the recipe for you like I usually do. Instead,ย here is a link where you can download a PDF. (Or just drag the above photo to your desktop and print.) Baking time (in a loaf pan) is 50 minutes to an hour, or whenever a knife in the center comes out clean. Letโs see how long we can keep it from Mr. Google.
I love your recipe binder, looks like a well used, tried and true binder. I have some bananas that have gone very brown and are in need of being baked. I think I found the recipe their going into.
Delicious and fail-proof. I used creme fraiche in place of the sour cream, and chopped dark chocolate in place of chips, not because Iโm fancy, rather because going to the grocery store with 3 under 3 is avoided at all costs. Thanks for the recipe!
i love it.. looks deliciousโฆI will defiantly try it soon
you may also check here for health benefits of banana..
http://www.doctor-advice.com/p/banana-health-benefits-you-dont-know.html
oh my gosh, I love Elizabeth.