Tuesday 12 April 2016

One-Skillet Dark and Stormy Banana Bread

I’m getting to know my new kitchen space.  New oven (it’s a KitchenAid… it’s amazing), new light, new muscle memory from cracked eggshell to sink, new drawers for the whisks and spatulas to live and which dang drawer is it!?  You know the drill.  Change and newness.  When I’m getting to know a new kitchen I like to make a supremely familiar recipe.  Something that I barely need a recipe to pull together.  Something that I know backwards and forwards from batter consistency to oven smell.
It’s banana bread.  It’s always banana bread.  A house isn’t a home without it. 
A few years ago I made Brown Butter Banana Bread when I first moved to the French Quarter.  The bread in various renditions has become a tradition that I’ll make long into my days in this new kitchen space.  
One-Skillet Dark and Stormy Banana Bread
We start with neglected (and respected) bananas, a heavy skillet, and butter to brown.  
Two things you should know.  1.  This is a one-skillet recipe.  We’re going to melt and brown the butter in the skillet and whisk the rest of the ingredients in layers, all in this one dang skillet.  Stovetop to oven.  2.  A few months ago I thought someone was trying to break into my house (they weren’t), so I stood behind my front door with this skillet in my head ready to bonk an intruder in the head.  That was unnecessary, but still…. how’s that for versatility?  
One-Skillet Dark and Stormy Banana Bread
I used Muscovado Sugar for this bread.  It’s extra dark, moist, and molasses-y.  It brings a lot of depth to the bread.  If you don’t happen to have Muscovado, dark brown sugar will also be great.  
Since we’re using a super dark brown sugar, and since I have a hunk of fresh ginger sitting in my fruit bowl staring me in the face, I thought it might be fun to play with a Dark and Stormy concept.  Excuse to unpack the dark rum?  Obviously.  
One-Skillet Dark and Stormy Banana Bread
Browned butter meets very dark brown sugar.  
One-Skillet Dark and Stormy Banana Bread
After the butter and sugar are whisked together, the mixture will still be greasy.  The butter won’t be completely absorbed into the sugar.  They’ll act like they don’t know how to get along until the eggs are whisked into the mixture.  Eggs will make a glossy, smooth, refined butter mixture.  
One-Skillet Dark and Stormy Banana Bread
Since we’re going dark with the Muscovado sugar, we’ll add a little stormy with fresh ginger.  Splash of vanilla extra and a glug of dark rum.  
One-Skillet Dark and Stormy Banana Bread
One-Skillet Dark and Stormy Banana Bread
Mashed ripe bananas, fresh ginger, plus ground spices adding moisture and flavor and such good smells! 
One-Skillet Dark and Stormy Banana Bread
One-Skillet Dark and Stormy Banana Bread
At this point I’m really happy this is a one-skillet recipe and I don’t need to bother with a bowl for dry ingredients.  At this point I also whisk some of the flour out of the skillet and onto the counter.  I think that’s just part of the deal. 
One-Skillet Dark and Stormy Banana Bread
See?  
It’s ok.  We’re still in business. 
One-Skillet Dark and Stormy Banana Bread
Scrape the edges of the bowl down and we’re ready for the oven.  
One-Skillet Dark and Stormy Banana Bread
It’s familiar and new!  Like a new house with all my old stuff in it.  The Muscovado and ginger gives this bread a depth of sweetness and hint of spice, bending it more towards a spice cake…. in a really good way.  Glaze it or sugar the top to add some presentation flair, or impatiently cut into it because your coffee is getting cold.  
courtesy by : joythebaker.com

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