A few years ago I
made the most delicious triple layer banana cake for my birthday. I don’t remember now why I decided that a
banana cake (with cream cheese frosting) was what I wanted—I usually make my
Marbled Chocolate Sweet Potato Cake on my birthday. Whatever the reason, I didn’t actually have a
banana cake recipe in my repertoire that I particularly liked. So I went looking for one.
Most of the time a
spur of the moment search like this will result in an acceptable—maybe even excellent—recipe. But this time, I happened upon the best banana cake I have ever had in my life.
There must have been something about her description (light and fluffy?)
that attracted me. Most banana cakes don’t
seem very cake-like. Often what passes
for banana cake could be mistaken for banana bread that has just been baked in
a layer cake instead of a loaf pan. This
style of cake tends to be kind of dense and dark…and not very sweet. And I actually don’t object to this…as long as
it is what you are prepared to have on your plate. But since this was for my birthday, I wanted
a true layer cake: Something light,
tender, finely grained…and sweet. And
that’s exactly what this recipe produced. It is
now my go to banana layer cake.
Unfortunately, I
don’t make layer cakes that often. I
just don’t have that great of a need for them.
But I do make streusel-topped cakes (for my breakfast) on a regular
basis (true story). I’m not sure why it
took me two years to turn this cake into a breakfast cake.
Besides baking the
cake in a 13- by 9-inch cake pan…and topping the cake with a streusel…I only
made one minor change to the recipe itself:
I omitted a quarter cup of brown sugar.
I really didn’t want to change such a lovely cake too much, but the
original cake really is quite sweet…and with a streusel more sugar would be
piled on top. I didn’t think this small
percentage reduction in the sugar would have too much of an effect on the
structure and tenderness of the cake…and it didn’t. The cake is still sweet (and light and
tender)—but not overly so (for a breakfast/snack cake).
I toyed with the
idea of making only 2/3 of the batter for the same size pan and the same amount
of streusel. If you are a person who
always wishes there was more streusel and less cake, then that might be the route to go (you will find this to be an
easy calculation). But I really love the
cake….and feel like it (rather than the streusel) should be the main
event. The result is a lofty
cake…crowned with just the right amount of sweet crunch on top. Perfect.
Now I have not only a “go-to” banana layer cake, I have a fantastic
addition to my breakfast cake repertoire….which is just great since you can
never have too many streusel cakes in your recipe file.
Banana Cake with
White Chocolate & Pecan Streusel
Streusel:
1 c. (120 g.) all-purpose flour
1/2 c. (100 g.) golden brown sugar
3/8 t. salt
6 T. (85 g.) melted butter
3/4 c. (85 g.) pecans, lightly toasted and
chopped
3/4 c. (128 g.) white chocolate chips (see
notes)
Place the first 3 ingredients in a small
bowl. Add the melted butter and mix until
the mixture is homogenous and clumpy.
Stir in the pecans and chips. Set
aside.
Cake:
3 medium very ripe bananas (340 g. net
weight)
2 t. lemon juice
3 c. (360 g.) all-purpose flour
1 1/2 t. baking soda
3/4 t. salt
1 1/2 sticks (170 g.) unsalted butter,
room temperature
2 c. (400 g.) sugar
3 eggs, room temperature
2 t. vanilla extract
1 1/2 c. whole milk plain yogurt
Butter a 13- by 9- by 2-inch cake
pan. Line the bottom of the pan with
parchment and butter the parchment.
Flour the pan, tapping out the excess.
Set aside
Pass the bananas through a food mill, or
purée in the food processor. Stir in the
lemon juice. Set aside. Combine the flour, soda and salt and set
aside.
Cream the butter and sugar until very light and
fluffy.
Beat in the eggs one at a time, scraping down the sides after each addition. Beat in the vanilla. Fold in the flour mixture in three additions, alternating with the yogurt in two additions. Fold in the bananas.
Spread the batter in the prepared pan. Scatter the streusel evenly over all.
Bake in a 325° oven until golden and a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean—about an hour. Serves 15 to 18.
Beat in the eggs one at a time, scraping down the sides after each addition. Beat in the vanilla. Fold in the flour mixture in three additions, alternating with the yogurt in two additions. Fold in the bananas.
Spread the batter in the prepared pan. Scatter the streusel evenly over all.
Bake in a 325° oven until golden and a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean—about an hour. Serves 15 to 18.
Note: Try to get real white
chocolate chips for the streusel and not the inferior “white morsels” or “white
baking chips.” I’m partial to Baker’s
White Chocolate Chips—which are reasonably priced and widely available.
Printable Version
I have a go to banana cake recipe that I have used for decades, but I am interested in trying this one. I like the idea of the streusel topping instead of cream cheese icing. Almost reminds me of a coffee cake. I have some organic bananas that need to be used up. I don't have any lemons or white chocolate chips so those are on my shopping list. I will take this to work and see how the guys like it.
ReplyDeleteI hope you enjoy it! I would love to hear back about what you (and your co-workers!) think.
ReplyDeleteThe cake went over great! I actually made cupcakes instead of a 9 x 13 cake. It took about 25 minutes to bake them. It's easier to have cupcakes than dealing with plates, forks, and a knife at work. The cake was moist yet had a nice density to it. The topping was very tasty too and a nice change from frosting.
ReplyDeleteThank you for taking the time to let me know! I'm pleased everyone liked it...and appreciate knowing your experience with it as a cupcake! (a great idea, BTW)
ReplyDelete