
Zucchini bread is the quick bread I make when one lonely zucchini is sitting on the counter and nobody is excited about eating it with dinner. Once it is grated into batter with cinnamon, nutmeg, and a little clove, the same vegetable suddenly becomes a soft loaf that disappears slice by slice.
This version leans into the Barefoot Contessa style of baking: familiar ingredients, a tender crumb, and enough butter to make the kitchen smell good before the pan even goes into the oven. I like it with walnuts, but I keep them chopped small because big pieces tear the warm slices.
The ingredient list from the source had a few awkward scaled amounts, including one and a half eggs. I keep the number because the batch is small; I simply beat two eggs in a cup and use about three-quarters. It is not glamorous, but it works and it keeps the loaf from getting rubbery.
Why I keep coming back to this
- It uses one cup of shredded zucchini, which is exactly what I usually get from one small-to-medium zucchini.
- The spice mix is warm without tasting like a holiday candle, thanks to tiny amounts of nutmeg and cloves.
- Softened butter makes the crumb richer than the oil-based zucchini breads I grew up eating.
- The batter comes together with a bowl and a hand mixer; no stand mixer is required.
- It slices best after cooling, so I can bake it ahead and wrap it for the next morning.
- Walnuts make it feel like a snack instead of straight cake, though I will never complain about a toasted slice with butter.
What you need (and what each one is doing)
- 1/8 teaspoon ground cloves.Cloves are strong, so I keep the pinch small. They give the loaf that old-fashioned spice-cake smell without taking over.
- 1 cup shredded zucchini.This is the moisture in the loaf. I grate it on the large holes and leave it damp unless it is dripping wet.
- 1 cup sugar.The sugar sweetens the bread and helps the top brown. I do not cut it much because zucchini itself is mild.
- 1/8 teaspoon ground nutmeg.Nutmeg rounds out the cinnamon. A little goes a long way, especially in a small loaf.
- 1/2 tablespoon ground cinnamon.Cinnamon carries the warm bakery flavor. The amount looks generous, but it fits the zucchini well.
- 1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract.Vanilla softens the edges of the spice and makes the butter taste fuller.
- 1/4 cup chopped walnuts.Walnuts add crunch and a slightly bitter balance. I chop them small so the slices cut cleanly.
- 1/2 teaspoon baking soda.Baking soda helps the loaf rise and keeps the crumb from feeling heavy.
- 1/2 cup softened butter.Soft butter creams with the sugar and gives the loaf its tender, cake-like crumb.
- Eggs bind the batter and help it slice neatly.
- 1/8 teaspoon baking powder.A small amount of baking powder gives extra lift alongside the soda.
- 1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour.Flour gives the loaf structure. I spoon and level it so the bread does not turn dry.
- 1/4 teaspoon fine salt (reconstructed from the mixing instructions).Salt was listed in the method but missing from the ingredient table. I add a measured pinch because the loaf tastes flat without it.
How I make it
Step 1 — Preheat and set up the pan
Preheat the oven to 350°F (177°C). Grease a 9×5-inch loaf pan with butter or cooking spray, then line the long side with a strip of parchment if you want easy lifting. I put the pan on a sheet tray because a small loaf pan is easier to move that way.
Step 2 — Mix the dry ingredients
In a bowl, whisk the flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt, cinnamon, nutmeg, and cloves. I whisk longer than seems necessary because little pockets of baking soda are not charming in a finished slice.
Step 3 — Cream the butter and sugar
In a second bowl, beat the softened butter with the sugar until the mixture looks lighter and a little fluffy. Add the beaten egg amount in two additions, beating after each, then mix in the vanilla. If the mixture looks slightly curdled, do not panic; the flour brings it back together.
Step 4 — Bring the batter together
Add the dry ingredients and mix on low just until the last streaks of flour disappear. Fold in the shredded zucchini and chopped walnuts with a spatula. I stop as soon as the zucchini is evenly scattered because overmixing makes quick bread tough.
Step 5 — Bake and cool
Scrape the batter into the prepared pan and smooth the top. Bake for 55-60 minutes, checking the center with a toothpick. The listed cook time is 66 minutes, so I allow that full window if the center is still damp. Cool 10 minutes in the pan, then move the loaf to a wire rack.
Tips from my kitchen
- Do not wring the zucchini bone dry.A gentle squeeze is fine if it is watery, but the moisture is part of the recipe.
- Use room-temperature butter.Cold butter leaves little chunks and melted butter changes the crumb.
- Check the center, not the edge.The sides brown before the middle is done.
- Cool before slicing.Warm zucchini bread smells impossible to resist, but it crumbles if cut too soon.
Variations I have actually tried
- Orange zest:I add 1 teaspoon to the batter when I want a brighter loaf.
- Pecans instead of walnuts:Softer and sweeter, especially if toasted first.
- Chocolate chips:Fold in 1/3 cup and skip the cloves if you want a more dessert-like slice.
- Raisins:A small handful works, though I soak them in hot water first so they stay plump.
- Loaf-to-muffins:Portion into a lined muffin pan and start checking around 18 minutes.
Small details I pay attention to
I treat barefoot contessa-style zucchini bread as a recipe where the written numbers are a guide, not a reason to stop paying attention. I look for the practical cues: the way the dough feels, how the sauce coats a spoon, how the edges brown, or whether the center has actually set. Those little signs are what keep a familiar recipe from turning into a dry loaf, a pale crust, or a pan of fruit that never thickened.
I also set up my counter before I start. Ingredients measured, pan or skillet ready, towel nearby, and a clear place for cooling. That sounds fussy, but it keeps me from making rushed choices while butter is softening, dough is drying, or a hot pan is waiting. Most of my kitchen mistakes happen in the two minutes when I think I can multitask.
How I like to serve it
For the first serving of barefoot contessa-style zucchini bread, I keep things simple so I can taste what the recipe is doing. If it is baked, I let it cool long enough for the crumb, crust, or filling to settle. If it is cooked on the stove, I serve it while the texture is still lively. That first plate tells me whether I want extra salt, something creamy, something crisp, or just a cup of coffee beside it.
When I make it for other people, I add the extras at the table instead of hiding them in the recipe. A bowl of fruit, hot sauce, whipped cream, rice, butter, or chopped herbs lets everyone steer their own plate. I like recipes that can be shared without making the cook stand there explaining every bite.
Storing and serving
I cool the loaf completely, wrap it tightly, and keep it at room temperature for two days. After that, I move it to the refrigerator because zucchini bread is moist and can spoil faster than a plain pound cake.
For freezing, I slice the loaf first and put parchment between slices. A frozen slice warms in the toaster oven at 325°F (163°C) in about 8 minutes, and the edges get pleasantly crisp.
Frequently asked questions
Do I peel the zucchini?
No. I leave the peel on because it is tender and gives little green flecks. If the zucchini is very large with tough skin, I peel only the rough spots.
How do I measure one and a half eggs?
Beat two large eggs in a measuring cup, then use about three-quarters of the mixture.
Can I skip the walnuts?
Yes. The loaf bakes the same without them. If I skip nuts, I sometimes sprinkle coarse sugar on top for texture.
Why did my loaf sink?
It may have needed more time in the center, or the batter may have been overmixed. Quick breads need gentle mixing and a fully baked middle.
Can I make this dairy-free?
Use a dairy-free stick butter in place of softened butter. I would not use tub spread because it can make the loaf greasy.
If you bake this loaf, tell me whether you kept the walnuts or went straight for chocolate chips.

Barefoot Contessa-Style Zucchini Bread
Description
This zucchini bread is soft, warmly spiced, and built for using one stray zucchini from the counter. I keep the crumb tender with softened butter and fold in walnuts for a little crunch.
Ingredients You’ll Need
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 350°F (177°C). Grease a 9x5-inch loaf pan with butter or cooking spray.
- Whisk together the all-purpose flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt, cinnamon, nutmeg, and cloves.
- Beat the softened butter and sugar until lighter. Beat two eggs in a cup and use about three-quarters of the mixture, adding it in two additions, then mix in the vanilla.
- Mix in the dry ingredients on low just until combined. Fold in the shredded zucchini and chopped walnuts.
- Spread the batter in the pan and bake 55-60 minutes, or up to the listed 66 minutes if the center is still damp. Cool 10 minutes in the pan, then transfer to a rack.
Nutrition Facts
Servings 3
- Amount Per Serving
- Calories 888kcal
- % Daily Value *
- Total Fat 41g64%
- Saturated Fat 21g105%
- Trans Fat 1.2g
- Cholesterol 203mg68%
- Sodium 303mg13%
- Potassium 290mg9%
- Total Carbohydrate 120g40%
- Dietary Fiber 4g16%
- Sugars 69g
- Protein 13g26%
- Calcium 92 mg
- Iron 4.2 mg
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.
Note
Zucchini moisture. Leave the shreds damp unless they are puddling liquid; that moisture keeps the loaf soft.
Awkward egg amount. Beat 2 eggs and use about three-quarters for the 1 1/2 egg measure.
Doneness. A toothpick should come out clean or with a few moist crumbs, not wet batter.
Best slice. The loaf cuts most neatly after it has cooled for at least an hour.
Frequently Asked Questions
No. I leave the peel on because it is tender and gives little green flecks. If the zucchini is very large with tough skin, I peel only the rough spots.
Beat two large eggs in a measuring cup, then use about three-quarters of the mixture.
Yes. The loaf bakes the same without them. If I skip nuts, I sometimes sprinkle coarse sugar on top for texture.
It may have needed more time in the center, or the batter may have been overmixed. Quick breads need gentle mixing and a fully baked middle.
Use a dairy-free stick butter in place of softened butter. I would not use tub spread because it can make the loaf greasy.