Zucchini Bread

Servings: 1 Total Time: 1 hr 5 mins Difficulty: Easy
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Zucchini bread is my favorite way to turn one quiet green vegetable into a loaf that disappears slice by slice. This version is moist from oil, applesauce, and shredded zucchini, warmly spiced with cinnamon and nutmeg, and sturdy enough to toast the next day.

I do not peel the zucchini. The green flecks are part of the charm, and the peel softens completely in the oven. I also do not wring it dry like laundry. A light blot is enough if it is dripping; the moisture is exactly why the bread stays tender.

The loaf bakes for 55-70 minutes, which is a wide range because zucchini varies so much. I start checking at 55 minutes and trust the toothpick more than the timer. If the top is dark but the center needs time, I cover it loosely with foil and let it finish.

Why I keep coming back to this

  • It uses 1 1/2 cups shredded zucchini in one simple loaf.
  • Oil keeps the crumb soft for several days.
  • Brown sugar, vanilla, cinnamon, and nutmeg make the flavor cozy without hiding the zucchini completely.
  • Applesauce adds moisture without making the loaf greasy.
  • The batter comes together with bowls and a whisk; no mixer needed.
  • It works plain, with chocolate chips, or with chopped nuts.

What you need (and what each one is doing)

  • All-purpose flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt.These make the structure. I spoon and level the flour instead of packing the cup.
  • Cinnamon and nutmeg.Cinnamon leads; nutmeg sits quietly in the background.
  • Oil, brown sugar, and granulated sugar.Oil keeps the loaf soft, while the two sugars give moisture and sweetness.
  • Eggs, applesauce, and vanilla.Eggs bind, applesauce softens, and vanilla makes the loaf smell like a bakery counter.
  • Shredded zucchini, 1 1/2 cups.I grate it on the large holes of a box grater and lightly blot if it looks watery.
  • Optional chips or nuts.Chocolate chips make it dessert-like; walnuts or pecans make it more breakfast-friendly.

How I make it

Step 1 — Prepare the pan

I grease a 9×5-inch loaf pan and preheat the oven to 350°F (177°C). A well-greased pan matters because this bread is moist.

Step 2 — Mix dry and wet separately

I whisk the dry ingredients in one bowl and the oil, sugars, eggs, applesauce, vanilla, and zucchini in another. Separate mixing keeps the batter from needing too many stirs later.

Step 3 — Combine gently

I pour wet into dry and fold only until the flour disappears. If I am adding chocolate chips or nuts, I fold them in at the very end.

Step 4 — Bake until the center is done

I spread the batter into the pan and bake for 55-70 minutes. If the top browns quickly, I tent with foil. The center should test mostly clean with no raw batter.

Step 5 — Cool before slicing

I cool the loaf in the pan for 1 hour, then move it to a rack. For neat slices, I wait until it is completely cool, even though the smell makes that difficult.

Tips from my kitchen

  • Measure zucchini after shredding.A whole zucchini can vary wildly in size.
  • Use room-temperature eggs.They blend more smoothly into the oil mixture.
  • Check the center crack.Raw batter often hides there.
  • Let the loaf sit overnight.The flavor gets deeper by the next morning.

Variations I have actually tried

  • Chocolate chip:fold in the optional cup of semi-sweet chocolate chips.
  • Walnut:use chopped walnuts and add a pinch more cinnamon.
  • Orange:add orange zest to the wet ingredients.
  • Mini loaves:divide into smaller pans and start checking much earlier.
  • Muffins:portion into a lined muffin pan and bake until the centers spring back.

How I store and reheat it

I keep zucchini bread tightly covered at room temperature for 3-4 days. If the kitchen is warm, I refrigerate it for up to 1 week.

Slices freeze well for up to 3 months. I wrap individual slices so I can thaw one at a time for breakfast.

Make-ahead rhythm

When I make this on a busier day, I separate the parts that can wait from the parts that need to happen close to serving. Chopped vegetables, measured dry ingredients, mixed sauces, and chilled doughs are all friendly to a head start. Crisp toppings, hot pans, final garnishes, and anything poured over ice are the pieces I save for last.

That small bit of planning keeps the recipe from feeling rushed. I would rather have a bowl covered in the refrigerator or a pan already lined than discover, at the noisy part of dinner, that I still need to chop, measure, and hunt for parchment. The food tastes better when I am not racing it or myself.

  • Early prep:I measure dry ingredients, chop sturdy vegetables, or mix sauces when the kitchen is quiet.
  • Last-minute work:I save frying, grilling, icing, crisp toppings, and ice-filled drinks for the moment closest to serving.
  • Clean reset:I clear the cutting board before cooking so the final steps feel calm instead of crowded.

What I serve it with

I serve slices plain, buttered, or lightly toasted. Cream cheese is good if the loaf is plain; salted butter is my choice when chocolate chips are involved.

For breakfast, I add fruit and yogurt. For dessert, I warm a slice and call it cake without apologizing.

Where I pay attention

I do not need restaurant equipment for zucchini bread, but I do need to watch the small cues. I check texture, temperature, and timing before I move on, because those details decide whether the finished recipe tastes intentional or merely assembled. That is especially true with simple recipes, where there is not a long ingredient list to hide behind.

I also taste at the point where tasting makes sense. Sauces get adjusted after chilling, soups after simmering, baked goods after cooling, and grilled or fried foods after they have rested long enough not to burn my mouth. That habit has saved more dinners for me than any fancy tool in the drawer.

  • Texture first:I look for smooth, crisp, tender, thick, or set before I trust the clock completely.
  • Heat control:I would rather cook a minute longer at steady heat than scorch the outside and hope the inside catches up.
  • Final seasoning:I make the last salt, pepper, lemon, or sweetener adjustment near the end, when the recipe tastes closest to how it will be served.

When I write the timing down, I still leave room for common sense. Pans, ovens, blenders, grills, and even the size of chopped vegetables change the last few minutes, so I watch the food instead of walking away.

Frequently asked questions

Do I peel zucchini for zucchini bread?

No. I leave the peel on because it softens and adds pretty green flecks.

Should I squeeze the zucchini dry?

I do not squeeze it dry. I only blot if it is extremely wet, because the moisture keeps the loaf tender.

Why is my loaf raw in the center?

It likely needed more time or the pan was too small. Tent with foil and keep baking until a toothpick shows no raw batter.

Can I use frozen shredded zucchini?

Yes, but I thaw it and blot away extra liquid before measuring.

Can I reduce the sugar?

You can reduce it a little, but cutting too much changes both moisture and browning.

If you bake it, tell me whether you kept it plain or added chocolate chips.

Zucchini Bread

Prep Time 10 mins Cook Time 55 mins Total Time 1 hr 5 mins Difficulty: Easy Servings: 1 Calories: 2272 kcal Dietary:
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Description

This zucchini bread is a moist cinnamon-spiced loaf with oil, brown sugar, applesauce, vanilla, and plenty of shredded zucchini. I cool it well before slicing so the crumb sets cleanly.

Ingredients You’ll Need

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 350°F (177°C). Grease a 9x5-inch loaf pan.
  2. Whisk the flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt, cinnamon, and nutmeg together in a large bowl.
  3. In a medium bowl, whisk the oil, brown sugar, granulated sugar, eggs, applesauce, and vanilla until combined. Whisk in the shredded zucchini.
  4. Pour the wet ingredients into the dry ingredients and gently stir just until combined. Fold in optional chocolate chips or nuts if using.
  5. Spread the batter in the prepared loaf pan. Bake for 55-70 minutes, loosely covering with foil halfway through if the top is browning quickly.
  6. Cool in the pan for 1 hour, then remove to a wire rack. Slice warm if you do not mind softer pieces, or cool completely for neater slices.
  7. Cover leftovers and store at room temperature for 3-4 days or in the refrigerator for up to 1 week.

Nutrition Facts

Servings 1


Amount Per Serving
Calories 2272kcal
% Daily Value *
Total Fat 112g173%
Saturated Fat 18g90%
Trans Fat 0.4g
Sodium 2175mg91%
Potassium 817mg24%
Total Carbohydrate 292g98%
Dietary Fiber 13g52%
Sugars 115g
Protein 25g50%

Calcium 434 mg
Iron 12.1 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

Do not squeeze dry. I lightly blot very wet zucchini, but I keep most of its moisture for the loaf.

Stop mixing early. A few flour streaks are safer than overworked batter.

Foil helps. I loosely tent the pan halfway through if the top is browning before the center is done.

Cool for clean slices. Warm zucchini bread tastes great but slices softer.

Keywords: zucchini bread, homemade zucchini bread, cinnamon zucchini loaf, quick bread, shredded zucchini, summer baking, loaf cake

Frequently Asked Questions

Expand All:
Do I peel zucchini for zucchini bread?

No. I leave the peel on because it softens and adds pretty green flecks.

Should I squeeze the zucchini dry?

I do not squeeze it dry. I only blot if it is extremely wet, because the moisture keeps the loaf tender.

Why is my loaf raw in the center?

It likely needed more time or the pan was too small. Tent with foil and keep baking until a toothpick shows no raw batter.

Can I use frozen shredded zucchini?

Yes, but I thaw it and blot away extra liquid before measuring.

Can I reduce the sugar?

You can reduce it a little, but cutting too much changes both moisture and browning.

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