Recipe

ultimate zucchini bread

I have a few complaints about zucchini bread and I bet you cannot wait to hear them. I bet you were thinking “I was hoping to hear more complaining today than I usually do.” Or, “Wow, Deb is really going hard on the zucchini content this summer, isn’t she?” It’s all fair — and true. But if you, like me, couldn’t help but notice that a lot of zucchini bread recipes could be better, well, pull up a chair, you’re among friends.


what you'll needanother way to grate ita whole lot of zucchihnipile in the eggs, oil, sugars, vanilla, saltwet batter, one-bowladd the flourfork-mixedready to bake

The first thing that I’ve never understood about 90% of zucchini bread recipes out there — including my own earlier one — is why they make two loaves, but two squat ones. Why do we settle for this when we’d rather have one great one? Can’t we decide for our own selves when the time is right to scale it up to two? I like loaf cakes that are filled out and domed; I like craggy, crunchy tops you have to constantly swat hands away from picking off in bark-like flecks, usually failing, but who can really blame anyone.

I’ve never understood why zucchini bread doesn’t have more zucchini in it. Is it because “cake with a few disparate flecks of zucchini in it” is less intimidating? Is it because “cake with a substantial amount of vegetables inside” doesn’t rally the base? My goal was never to replace my salad quota with zucchini bread, but the presence of zucchini actually makes for a better, more tender, cake. We should embrace it.

ultimate zucchini bread

Some recipes tell you to grate zucchini just to wring it out, which, to me, is a monstrous extra step. This style of cake is called a quickbread; I take the “quick” to heart, and I see no reason to dry out your zucchini when the moisture within it is what makes zucchini bread great. Also, every recipe that tells you to grate “one zucchini” should be cancelled. Zucchini can range from a few ounces to a couple pounds and I doubt any recipe could use both interchangeably.

I like one-bowl cakes. I don’t think anyone making zucchini bread is hoping to get all fancy with it. What if you could just mix it with an electric mixer, no wait, a whisk, no wait, a fork? I want want more fork-mixed cakes. It’s homey food; it should be hurdle-free.

ultimate zucchini bread

Finally, every single recipe, including my earlier one, lies to you when it fails to tell you that the best time to eat zucchini bread is one day after you make it. While this is true for many cakes, for zucchini bread, the difference is so significant, it should be nonnegotiable. I also think we need to talk about how to wrap it so it’s not compromised in any way when you eat it tomorrow. I hope you’re ready for this: we’re not going to. If you wrap it, you lose the crisp top — why achieve it just to give it up? I have not found the moisture of zucchini bread to be notably compromised by keeping it unwrapped on top, especially not with this recipe. But I do leave it in the pan; this is all the protection it needs.

The result, the one you see here, the one I’ve been tweaking now for two summers and am finally happy enough to share it with you, is my zucchini bread best-in-show, is my zucchini bread mic-drop. It’s clutter-free — you can schmear chocolate or sweetened cream cheese or salted butter on top, where it has the most impact. It’s tall, so crunchy you can rap on it like a loaf of bread, and epic, with two full cups of packed zucchini inside. I hope it’s the last zucchini bread recipe you ever need.

ultimate zucchini bread

Elsewhere: In the NYT this week, I talking about meal planning strategies for real life and they sent a photographer over to take pictures of my sous-chefs and me cooking dinner. I’m a little biased, but it was pretty cute.

Previously

One year ago: Marbled Raspberry Pound Cake
Two years ago: German Chocolate Cake + A Wedding Cake
Three years ago: Blueberry Bread and Butter Pudding
Four years ago: Takeout-Style Sesame Noodles with Cucumber
Five years ago: Three-Ingredient Summertime Salsa and Blueberry Crumb Cake
Six years ago: Banana Nutella and Salted Pistachio Popsicles
Seven years ago: Zucchini Bread Pancakes and Zucchini, Tomato and Rice Gratin
Eight years ago: Corn Buttermilk and Chive Popovers
Nine years ago: Nectarine Brown Butter Buckle and Sweet and Smoky Oven Spare Ribs
Ten years ago: Peach and Creme Fraiche Pie
Eleven years ago: Asparagus with Chorizo and Croutons and Sour Cherry Slab Pie
Twelve years ago: Herbed Summer Squash and Potato Torte and Garlic Mustard Glazed Skewers
Thirteen years ago: Pearl Couscous with Olives and Roasted Tomatoes

And for the other side of the world:
Six Months Ago: Salted Peanut Tart
1.5 Years Ago: Luxe Butterscotch Pudding
2.5 Years Ago: Pomegranate Grapefruit Paloma and Butterscotch Pie
3.5 Years Ago: Everyday Meatballs and Roasted Yams with Chickpeas and Yogurt
4.5 Years Ago:

Ultimate Zucchini Bread

  • Servings: 8 to 10
  • Source: Smitten Kitchen
  • Print

Note: You can watch an Instagram Story demo of this recipe over here.

  • 2 cups (13 ounces or 370 grams) grated, packed zucchini, not wrung out, grated on the large holes of a box grater
  • 2 large eggs
  • 2/3 cup (160 ml) of a neutral oil (I use safflower), olive oil, or melted unsalted butter
  • 1/2 cup (95 grams) packed dark brown sugar
  • 1/2 cup (100 grams) granulated sugar
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 1 teaspoon fine sea or table salt
  • 1 1/4 teaspoons ground cinnamon
  • 1/8 teaspoon ground or freshly grated nutmeg
  • 3/4 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1/2 teaspoon baking powder
  • 2 cups (260 grams) all-purpose flour
  • 2 tablespoons (25 grams) raw or turbinado sugar

Heat oven to 350 degrees F. Lightly coat a 6-cup or 9×5-inch loaf pan with nonstick spray. Place grated zucchini in a large bowl and add oil, eggs, sugars, vanilla, and salt. Use a fork to mix until combined. Sprinkle cinnamon, nutmeg, baking soda, and baking powder over surface of batter and mix until combined — and then, for extra security that the ingredients are well-dispersed, give it 10 extra stirs. Add flour and mix until just combined. Pour into prepared loaf pan and smooth the top. Sprinkle with the raw or turbinado sugar — don’t skimp. Bake for 55 to 60 minutes, until a toothpick or tester inserted into the middle cake but also into the top of the cake, closer to the dome, comes out batter-free.

Let cool completely in the pan. Leave in pan, unwrapped, overnight or 24 hours, until removing (carefully, so not to ruin flaky lid) and serving in slices. Zucchini bread keeps for 4 to 5 days at room temperature. I wrap only the cut end of the cake in foil, and return it to the baking pan, leaving the top exposed so that it stays crunchy.

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928 comments on ultimate zucchini bread

    1. Chelsea

      Well crap, I just made your other one this morning before I saw this! Guess I’ll have to make another batch with my next zucchini!

            1. Diane J

              Thanks for this no fuss, one bowl recipe. Every year I try a new zucchini bread recipe, in search of “THE ONE”. Well I just found it! Hands down best ever! Followed recipe exactly, although I had light brown sugar on hand not dark. Used refined coconut oil (melted) for the oil. This will be my go to zucchini bread recipe for now in🥰

          1. Julia

            I made these as muffins and they were amazing! My 3yo requested rainbo sprinkles on top which served as our raw/turbinado sugar – work with what you got, right?! :)

              1. Bernadette

                I made them as muffins last night! Filled them to all but a quarter inch from top and baked for 35 minutes. I’ve now made as a loaf and muffin. I think muffins come out fluffier where as as a loaf it’s silky and dense. Both delicious!

                  1. Kathy

                    This recipe just made me 18 muffins in a standard cupcake tin, I filled them maybe 2/3 to 3/4 of the way each. Can’t wait to dig into them tomorrow

                1. shannon richter

                  Actually, I take it back. Next day, barely anything stuck. Just needed to really cool off.
                  I made 2.5 times recipe, based on how much zucchini I had (long neck squash actually) and it made 24 muffins and a big loaf.

          2. Sue Sharp

            I have a courgette glut and this recipe came along just at the right time. Made it exactly as the recipe says, other than subbing mixed spice for nutmeg as, meh, not a nutmeg fan. It’s sublime and I will never have too many courgettes again.

        1. Sarah S

          This zucchini bread is so good, and I’ve tried a lot of zucchini bread recipes! I completely agree about adding more zucchini and was glad to see that’s what this recipe called for – it’s the best part! I wonder if you or anyone has tried it with less sugar? I may experiment with that next time to see if I can get away with it. (Only because of a Doctor-ordered low carb, low sugar diet right now while pregnant). Thanks

          1. Julie Bushnell

            Have you tried allulose? We use it a lot for baking and it’s great for blood sugar issues – typically I’ll do a one for one match and then add a tablespoon of brown sugar for flavor and because the allulose is less sweet than revolve sugar.

          2. Tonia

            Sarah S — I made a savory version with sundried tomatoes and cheese and used about 1/3 cup of sugar and it turned out fine. I also used half white whole wheat flour, which might help with your diet as the whole wheat flour doesn’t digest as quickly so shouldn’t spike sugar as fast. :-)

          3. Kate F

            I substituted Monk Fruit sweetener used a gluten free flour, and used maple sugar for the crunch on top it was fantastic.

        2. Helen

          I’ve been making all sorts of quick breads using fruits and vegetable because my grandson hates veggies. I’ve never been satisfied with my old zuchini bread recipe so I have been on the hunt for a new one. This was OK, but not great. Not enough flavor for me. Texture was a little heavy. I loved the sugar crust, but it crumbled off when the bread was sliced. Thanks for trying, but this just wasn’t ‘the one’.

            1. Paola Albergate

              Deb! You replied!!! Thank you! Now I love you even more! Hehe, and…you were so so right, leaving it IS worth it and it was better the second day. I made this with my 21 month son, and he was so exited about it that when it went into the oven, he lost it-huge fat tears because he wanted to keep mixing and didn’t know what was going on. When it came out, he was so happy! We all loved it! Thank you! xx

      1. Lynn Starr

        This is so good. I added fresh blueberries and baked it in my Pampered Chef (4) mini loaf pan. Everyone wanted their own little loaf! Thank you for sharing!

        1. Jen

          I grabbed one of those mini loaf pans at Goodwill but have yet to try it, this sounds perfect! Can you please share how how long it took for them to bake this way?

        2. Mary K

          I *needed* 6 zucchini muffins so cut the quantities in half. A small zucchini yielded 1 1/2 cups shredded so crossed my fingers and threw it all in. Had to use gf flour so also added 1/3 tsp xanathan gum. The batter exactly filled 6 standard cupcake holes and baking 28 minutes in a convection oven resulted in beautiful rounded and leavened tops. Could not wait. They have a slightly moist center, probably from the extra zucchini which might have been solved by 5 min more time. They have a cupcake texture and the taste is wonderful – as usual w Smitten Kitchen! Can’t wait until tomorrow!

          1. CarolB

            So excited to hear that it came out well with gf flour. Think I’ll try it in my airfryer convection oven as donuts with glaze on top, will post results!

      2. Emily Hummel

        I made this today, and went a little crazy by adding cocoa powder and chocolate chips (I was craving chocolate zucchini cake!)-it did not disappoint, so delicious!!

        1. Suzie

          We’re thinking chocolate zucchini bread here too. How much cocoa powder did you add? Did you have to adjust the recipe at all?

          Thanks!

          1. Cyd

            Just made this – phenomenal! I realized as I was grating that I didn’t have a zucchini – it was a zucchini-colored winter squash- more of the texture of butternut. Skin was thin so I kept going. I made 12 muffins (baked at 375 for 24 mins) and they lasted about an hour after cooling. Family devoured them. Sugar crust on top is a plus. Love that it’s one bowl too. Yes, this is ultimate!

        2. K

          Didn’t have raw sugar, so no crunchy top. Overall a nice recipe, but I’ll add less salt next time since I could still taste it, while the cake itself turned out not very moderately sweet.

  1. SallyT

    I can’t wait to make this!! I have an enormous zucchini from my garden that has been asking to be made into zucchini bread.

  2. Lindsay

    This looks delicious! My garden has an abundance of zucchini and I’m trying to find ways to preserve it. Do you think that this bread would be good if you froze it in slices and thawed in the oven at a later date?

      1. Bess

        Thanks! Since I always weigh my flour in a separate bowl, I think I’ll just combine the leaveners with the flour at that point

      2. Sandy

        I lived in New Hampshire Nd learned there to grate it and freeze it. Then slightly squeeze out excess liquids before using in bread.

    1. Jessica

      You can freeze the zucchini! My mom always grates it and then freezes it in smaller amount (whatever her recipe calls for) so then she can just take out a bag and defrost. We would have zucchini bread all winter long!

      1. This really never works for me…..does she use the juices from the bag when it thaws? Maybe that is what I’m doing wrong as I usually thaw it in a colander and it is SOOO dry!

            1. I LOVE freezing quick breads and muffins for later! I slice loaves and put pieces of wax paper or parchment between the slices so that they stay separate.

        1. the Viking Diva

          Thaw in the bag and toss it all in, don’t drain it! the moisture is important for the texture of the cake (“bread”).

      2. Karen

        I wrap my bread tightly with plastic wrap, then freeze it.I remove it from the freezer then wrap it tightly in foil, back in the freezer. Make sure you label with the date and contents. I have kept “quick” bread for 7 months this way. I have even done this with Costco pound cakes. Our Costco does not make them after October.

    2. Rhonda Rogers

      I have frozen whole loaves of sliced zucchini bread many times — it works beautifully! You can just set it out to thaw on the counter the night before. No need to thaw in the oven; that would likely dry it out!

      1. Karen

        Has anybody tried using the food processor rather than a grater for an even lazier approach or does that just produce too much liquid?

    3. susan

      I freeze Smitten’s other zucchini bread all the time. I slice it, wrap each piece in wax paper, and stick it in a freezer bag. Then take a piece out and toast it (my toaster has a defrost setting). Delicious.

    4. Skyetop

      Yes! I do it all the time, mainly to keep myself to a slice at a time. You know, unwrapping, defrosting, schmearing with cream cheese takes time and effort. Try thawing in the toaster but only if your slices are thick enough.

    5. Lindsey

      I froze leftover bread from thanksgiving and my son loves it for breakfast he asks for thanksgiving bread all the time. I defrost a little then warm on a pan with a little butter to toast slightly

    6. I regularly make quick breads with summer produce and then freeze them as a whole loaf in a plastic bag. I defrost them overnight in my kitchen and they are perfect for breakfast.

  3. Renee

    This recipe sounds and looks delicious. I will definitely try it with the zucchini I bought to try your fritters. Sorry, there’s no contest when choosing bread vs fritters! Any reason I s/chouldn’t add walnuts? We do like the crunch plus they’re good for you.

    1. Lori Strand

      I’m making it now. The dude asked for walnuts so I added. He’s a recent illness survivor. Doing it fir a favor for his brother. Batter is scrumptious. I’ll let u know!

  4. Trying this this weekend! One question: Does letting it cool in the pan compromise the height of the loaf at all? I made a lemon-zucchini bread last weekend and it looked beautiful coming out of the oven but totally flattened when I accidentally left it in the pan instead of cooling on a rack and ended up unpleasantly dense. Thanks!

    1. deb

      No. I find the opposite. That removing loaf cakes from the pan before they’re cool can let them collapse a little. They’re tall and the crumb isn’t really set yet.

        1. Laura P.

          Jeanette, I don’t know if Deb has one, but if not, I have found Alton Brown’s “Free Range Fruitcake” (recipe easily found by googling that) is amazing and delicious, and converts non-fruitcake lovers. I have been making it yearly for over ten years now!

        2. Tonia

          Jeanette Hamilton — King Arthur Flour has a recipe for Irish Tea Brack that is a great substitute for fruit cake — you soak several types of dried fruit in hot tea (I’ve added 1-2 Tablespoons brandy if you want the boozy flavor) until cooled then add rest of ingredients and bake. Delicious and stays moist for several days!

  5. Bess Simons

    It looks great and I want to try this recipe, but I am wondering why you don’t combine the baking powder and baking soda with the flour.

  6. Francesca

    Zucchini bread was already on my list to make this weekend – you made deciding on a recipe much easier!
    Do you think it would be ok to add chocolate chips to the batter?

      1. Francesca

        Yes, worked perfectly! Though I had to cook it for a little more than 60 minutes. Still very delicious – best zucchini bread that I have made. Thanks!

      2. Carin

        Excited to try this with the zucchini’s that arrived in our imperfect produce box. We only have light brown sugar – and this isn’t the time to run out to the store. Any suggestions? Don’t think we have molasses either. I can’t imagine lighter brown sugar is awful- but figured I’d check.

      1. Ginger

        If you make mini muffins, does that mean they only have to rest a quarter of a day? LOL

        But seriously, we make quick breads (banana, pumpkin, zucchini) double batch in bundt pans, regular loaf pans, texas muffin pans, regular muffin pans, mini loaf pans… the baking times are all a little different (just test with a toothpick), but all the recipes seem to work in all of the different sizes.

    1. Leslie

      I made them as muffins today and they turned out great! I reduced the cook time…I made 12 muffins pretty full to the brim and mine were done in 35mins. I also did not have any white sugar so I doubled the brown sugar…which is probably not what I was supposed to do but they turned out amazing! Thanks for the recipe!

  7. Jennifer

    Would this method of leaving the bread in the pan pan also work for your pumpkin bread? Love the crunchy top there too but get ruined if I store it in a dome.
    Optional solution: slicing off the top for me to eat. :).

    1. deb

      I … I think it does. I haven’t made it in a while but I use this a lot. I think only the banana bread risks cementing itself to the pan, but I use a nonstick and if I’m worried, I’ll put a rectangle of parchment in the bottom.

  8. Nancy

    YES! One-bowl recipes mixed with a fork is THE BEST way to go. I am an avid baker and my friends know that I am but are shocked when I throw the steps out the window to make a recipe one-bowl and when I mix with some random fork in the drawer (or dish-rack) rather than some fancy whisk or electric mixer. Glad to add another recipe to my list.

      1. Ingrid

        Hey MP! From my own experience I tend to do half all purpose and roughly half whole wheat–and I substitute 3/4 cup of whole wheat flour for every 1 cup all purpose flour. This method has worked pretty well for me when I’m making quick breads–hopefully it will help you too!

        1. Carrie

          I use 1/2 flour at a 1:1 ratio. I use whole wheat pastry flour (from Whole Foods but I expect other brands would work too) for quick bread substitutes and it keeps it all light and fluffy. This recipe is so delicious!

  9. How many pounds will I gain. Love your description of the cooking. I really want to break off that crispy top. Does it matter that I live in LA? I want it. I think I’ll make it for my husband who does not eat anything green. Won’t tell him what’s in it. I’ll just break off the top. YUM 😋

  10. Alexis

    Will this work in a glass loaf pan or is aluminum preferred? I read that for glass you generally lower the temperature by 25 degrees.

    1. Barbara

      I just made this at 350 in my Pyrex glass bread pan and it came out perfect!! The same pan I have used for years always at 350, never knew otherwise! Took 55 minutes!!

    1. Jen

      Those ingredients definitely do not swap 1 for 1 with wheat flour. If your concern is gluten, it would be simpler to try a gluten free baking mix that is labelled for 1:1 substitution. Switching for coconut or almond flour would require a fair amount of experimentation around other ingredient amounts.

  11. Jen

    Deb can you comment on zucchini size/a rough number of zucchini to yield the recipe amount? I find the larger ones just have more and more water, but maybe an excessively small zucchini wouldn’t hit the right amount of moisture for this recipe.

    1. deb

      I can’t — the sizes are all over the place. I’d buy just over 1 pound (maybe 17 ounces) to make sure that you have 13 ounces once trimmed.

  12. Nicole Muller

    I sorta feel like you just told me to give up my most favorite blanket in favor of something new. Not sure I can leave the original recipe of yours that has me squeeze the 1 1/2 lb. grated zuchinni. This posting made me panic to be sure I had your old one printed in case you delete it forever. Because I deeply love your other one. Not so sugar filled that I feel horrible eating piece after piece, and so full of veggies I very superior and healthy with my snack choice.

    Deb, you are simply the best. Been following for YEARS. Please, keep cooking.

  13. Emily

    This is in the oven now. But the chance that I let it sit in the pan overnight is hovering around 0%. Do I really have to??

      1. Jenny

        I’m in the same boat- and three young children hovering around the delicious smell coming from my oven will make it impossible. I have a hard enough time keeping them from burning their mouths off let alone cooling it, 24 hours forget about it. Sorry Deb, that last step stinks.

        1. I was in the same situation: I made a loaf and NO WAY could I let it sit. I had one shabby piece left over the next morning (I shared with a book group). Perhaps next time I’ll do a double batch, so I can have instant gratification AND a properly-aged loaf.

          1. Sara

            I increased the recipe by 1/3 so I could make one loaf to rest until tomorrow for breakfast with company, and a smaller version in a round cake pan to snack on in the meantime :)

            1. Jennifer

              We have impatient little ones too! We double the recipe, make muffins (bake about 35 minutes) and one loaf for tomorrow!

    1. deb

      I don’t find it here. I find when I try to take down the sugar or oil much, it just gets dry. The oil and sugar amounts might sound high, but this is a much bigger than usual loaf.

      1. lp

        Hi Deb! I’m seriously interested in using carrots, having successfully made this with zucchini several times. I appreciate your providing some info.

        I’m curious as to why less moisture from carrots would lead to a lower quantity included.

        Many of the carrot bread recipes I’ve looked at have similar ratio to your suggestion…I’m just trying to learn more about how you reached that quantity, to hone my baking and substitution skills.

        Thanks for any info you can provide!

        1. deb

          Again, I haven’t made the swap, haven’t tested it, so I cannot say for sure how it will work. My best guess is that the moisture might be an issue, but give it a spin and see how it goes.

      2. M

        This is the second time I’ve made it. I added ginger and pinch of allspice. The big change I made was to wisk all the dry ingredients together before adding to wet ingredients. A big improvement. No baking soda bursts of well, I guess unincorporated baking soda. A lovely recipe that I will make agsin.

        1. lp

          I made it with carrots and it was delish! I used 2 cups of carrots, honestly because I forgot that I planned to use less, and it worked out well.

          I did reduce the granulated sugar by half a cup – since the organic carrots tend to be so sweet. And it was perfect.

          I used un-peeled organic white, purple, and orange carrots from a local farmer, and grated them in the food processor.

          I’ll definitely be doing this again. It’s not better than the zucchini, just different.

  14. Caroline

    This looks amazing. You have probably considered this, but I wanted to mention it: I used to love a towering loaf of quick bread, but I often struggled with a mushy interior and an over cooked crust. So I started baking large quick breads (those with 2 c. + flour) in square baking dishes (like a deep 8×8 Pyrex dish), and I find this works out so much better, not just because the interior and exterior cook more evenly, but because you I get more of the crunchy crust on each piece.

    1. Bridgit

      Agreed! I have a note in my zucchini recipe that I added blueberries and walnuts and baked it in a 9 inch round pan to serve for brunch. It’s a very fancy. And there was lots of crunchy top.

      1. JP

        Also agreed! I pretty much always make Deb’s marbled banana bread in a square pan! It’s great that way. I have the zucchini loaf in the oven now – if only I’d thought of this before I put it in!

    2. ClippyZ

      This is really helpful and I might try this next time. I’ve made this at least 5 times now (garden of abundance!) and I’ve had really inconsistent results. The first time was nirvana and the next four… underbaked, even in for 1 hr 20 minutes!

      I’ve also found the weights and measure of the zucchini to vary widely. Sometimes 2 c = 370 g, sometimes 250! The water content in the zucchini obviously varied widely and I’m trying to figure out how to account for this.

  15. Maureen O’Reilly

    Zucchini thoughts: I have a nearly identical recipe I acquired from a professional family cook in the 80’s- it’s delightful, just as your looks. My alternate choice for a zucchini bread is from Food and Wine, called Yogurt-Zucchini Bread With Walnuts. It’s really wonderful, too, especially if you use those tiny diced walnuts some nut producers sell. It’s less sweet that your recipe, perfect for adults who want to drink sweet tea, a cola, or sweet iced coffee with it. Best of all, my smarter, older sister gave me a zucchini cake recipe using cocoa powder and ground cloves. It makes people frown, trying to figure out where the flavors come from, and then they smile while asking for a second, bigger slice.

    1. Smart. I’m gonna look for that ground cloves and cocoa recipe!

      I once tricked my friend (who notoriously hates veggies) into eating beets by shredding it (raw!) into a chocolate muffin recipe! He was stunned, and after that, actually started to eat his veggies! Now he voluntarily blends veggie shakes!

  16. lauriewendy

    Amen to your approach to meal-planning. It’s really similar to my own. I’m a SAHM to three under 5. I feel a lot better about our nutrition and finances when I cook our meals, but I know that I get burnt out if I try to cook ALL of them. I start by looking at my husband’s work schedule (retail, so inconsistent) and then plan things that will be good for the nights we all get to sit down together and for nights when he’ll be eating later. On his days off, we usually do family fun things or I plan for Dad to grill. Making the grocery list and summoning the energy to cook is SO much easier if I’ve planned.
    Also, can’t wait to make this bread. :)

  17. Catherine

    I just took this out of the oven, and the heavenly smell, combined with the knowledge that I have to wait until tomorrow to try it, is KILLING ME. Oh well, I trust you, Deb. I’ll try to wait.

      1. Laura Jane

        I use thawed, previously peeled bananas in banana bread all the time, and find it makes for an even better banana bread texture. So while I can’t say I’ve done it with zucchini, I can say for sure that if I had it on hand, I would try it!

  18. Becky

    It’s 110 degrees outside, but for a crunchy top I’m willing to turn on the oven. I even made a special trip to the grocery store for zucchini and raw sugar.

    The crunchy top will not make it until tomorrow. Of this I am certain.

  19. Gail White

    Wow, where to start! I could write you a book, but I won’t. I create recipes too, and I teach occasional cooking classes. I weigh just about everything in my recipes, which is how I I teach and how I prefer to cook. It drives me wild to see recipes that call for “1 zucchini” or “2 carrots” (particularly when baking), but without listing the weight of the item.
    Thanks so much for doing it right. I have zucchini producing in my backyard as I write, I will be giving your version a spin on our next cool Victoria, B.C. day.
    I will report in! Thanks again,
    Gail White

  20. Erin

    Made this today because I grew zucchini in my garden and have it coming out of my ears. Couldn’t wait 24 hours to eat it though. It’s so wonderfully delicious! Tried it with Nutella too…heaven! My loaf looked just like the loaf in your picture. Love how easy it was to make and that I only had one bowl to clean. I’m going to make a few more tomorrow to share with neighbors. Thank you!

    1. Hannah

      So excited to bake zucchini bread for the first time with some beauties from our CSA haul this week. Quick question: must it be all zucchini for this recipe to work or can there be some yellow summer squash in there as well?

      1. Jordana

        I made it with all yellow squash and it was tasty. I like it for a variation and would make it this way again. I did use half olive oil and half canola oil and wish I used part butter. My spices are fresh from Penzeys but I felt like something was a little lacking and maybe using butter would help.

  21. Laura

    I literally just made your previous zucchini bread yesterday. Good thing I have a couple more zucchini ready in the garden so I can try this recipe and compare!

    1. JP

      I agree wholeheartedly, such a waste of nutrients and effort to wring out zukes. Lots of recipes in Cook’s Illustrated insist, but so glad that this recipe does not and I will certainly be trying it because I haven’t found any recipe that really is particularly great for zucchini bread. Let’s hope this one really is the ultimate! Thanks, Deb!

  22. R

    Holy COW, is Jacob really almost as tall as you, Deb?! I saw that Anna was on a stool but Jacob seemed to tower on his own lol! In any case, thanks for sharing your article, it’s always a pleasure reading your work~!

    1. lauren

      I had the same “whaaaat?” reaction to seeing Jacob in that photo. Somehow when he is alone, or in a photo with Anna, that new “young man” thing doesn’t resonate as much. Can you make him sleep in some kind of vise contraption so he doesn’t keep growing like this? So mature looking. Egads! we are all getting older with him too, DANG!

  23. Beth Walsh

    I have never made zucchini bread. I don’t eat breakfast (I know, just saying) and I don’t bake because I’m lazy and I prefer savory (vs. sweet) as a rule. I mentioned the lazy part yes?

    I am going to Bed Bath Beyond tomorrow, buying a loaf pan, the ingredients, and making this.

        1. Joycelyn

          What’s important is enjoying Deb’s latest blog entry. What’s NOT important is commenters whining about Deb using I or Me correctly.

      1. Nancy

        Seriously, wouldn’t it have been more appropriate to send a private message advising Deb of her minor grammatical error? Discussion of this great recipe should be the focus, not a reader making editorial comments.

    1. suzanprincess

      I would try subbing about 1/3 cup cocoa for the same quantity of flour. Chocolate chips optional, but likely good too.

      1. Alonna

        Just tried replacing 1/3 of the total weight with cocoa powder and it turned out way too bitter. However I think 1/3c of cocoa powder (about half of what I used) would be the perfect amount! I’ll give it another shot this weekend.

      1. Joycelyn

        Mara
        Both dark and light have baked up the same for me. If I’m out of one, I use the other until shopping day. Only minor different is, as you mentioned, the intensity of the molasses flavour will be weaker in the light brown sugar.

      2. deb

        Probably the darker is slightly more moist. I used dark here because I find darker zucchini breads more appealing, although a whole lot of the color actually comes from cinnamon.

    1. Bridgit

      Depends on the size. Above Deb alludes to the fact that she starts out w about 16-17oz in order to get the requisite 13ish oz needed. I weighed a zucchini from my garden yesterday at 3.5 lbs. it’s not large, it’s jumbo. Using sizing on zukes is tough because there is SUCH a wide range.

  24. Sarahb1313

    This is why I have never made zucchini bread!! And my carrot cake always generously measures carrots!!
    My question, though, is by how much do you feel I could cut the sugar? For all my sweet tooth eating, “breads” and muffins are often more sweet than I care for.
    I am thinking down to only 2/3-3/4 cup? Would all brown sugar keep the moisture high enough?
    Thanks for thoughts!

  25. Amelia

    I’ve been wondering about doing a zucchini bread variant with eggplant instead of zucchini. Any suggestions? I was planning on just substituting 1:1 (zucchini: eggplant) with this recipe to start.

  26. Barb

    You are such a radical nervy woman, Deb! Our zucchini thank you. My also radical grandmother (born 1892) taught me to omit some of the brown sugar in a banana bread recipe and add it to about 1/4 of the batter that you smear on the top. Does the same crunchy thing and makes a quick bread even more exciting.

  27. elisabethwarcher

    I usually cut the sugar in my recipes by one third or one half. Is this bread very sweet? or have you already adjusted the sugar?

    1. Kelly Langston

      @Elisabethwarcher & @SaraB1313 — So….this is sitting on a cooling rack on my counter. I reduced the white sugar to 75 g and the brown sugar to 65 g. I know that’s not a lot, but I didn’t want to go half….yet. I also made other modifications (wheat flour added….flax meal…I just can’t leave a recipe alone! LOL!). I prob won’t wait until tomorrow to try it, hahaha! But I will wait for it to cool completely, and will let you all know about sweetness. It looks AMAZING. Just like the picture. My go-to banana-bread recipe is from the King Arthur site (Sorry, Deb!), and I literally reduce the sugar in that recipe by 1/2 or more. So….report coming in a few hours on sweetness!

    2. deb

      I have adjusted it. You could maybe go down a few tablespoons, but it’s truly not, to me, overly sweet. There’s a lot of zucchini and flour in there.

    3. Sarahb1313

      E- I made the bread and only dropped the sugar by 25grams. I did find it sweet. Can’t say if I had sweet zucchinis? They were farmers market fresh picked :-)
      But I will make it again, and given the sugar on top, and the excellent moisture from the zucchini, will cut by 50%. It is definitely like cake, and I think it’s delicious, but I also would like it less sweet. When decreasing sugar, I worry about the moisture but that is definitely not a problem with this moist bread. Full disclosure I tend to go over with the fruit additions so there was likely about an extra 1/2 cup (about 60grams) of zucchini which obviously will add to moisture as well.

  28. maggie

    When I read this recipe this morning, I knew I had to make it. I made my way to our local Farmer’s Market where freshly harvested zucchinis were waiting for me. It’s just out of the oven, it’s beautiful and smells delicious. I pray that God will give me the strength to wait till 4:30 pm tomorrow to devour a great big slice. Thanks again Deb for giving your all – all of the time.

  29. Laurine

    I just made this recipe, putting it into a dozen muffin tins and a 4×4” ramekin. They took 30 min to bake. The aroma coming out of the oven was intoxicating! The somewhat unintentional mods were: very grassy olive oil and about 1/2t of grated nutmeg, and sanding sugar for the tops. We sampled the bread from the ramekin after it cooled about an hour. Heavenly! I will wait til tomorrow to have a muffin. So delicious, Deb!

    1. Trisha

      I also made 12 muffins plus a ramekin. i liked the look of the ramekin, it might be fun to use a variety of small dishes. I baked them for a least half an hour.

  30. I like zucchini bread and will definitely try this recipe. I was just in Edinburgh to visit my sister and brother-in-law, who live there and love to cook. Your first cookbook was on their bookshelf so I leafed through. I am regular follower here and have bookmarked a dozen of your recipes. We talked about how much we all enjoy not just your recipes but your sense of humor and how to realistically cook tasty food. We appreciate your generous sharing of what works in the kitchen and what you’ve tried that doesn’t. Thank you. I’m going this week to my favorite bookstore to buy one of your cookbooks.

  31. Claire

    That was truly great Zucchini bread, thank you! I followed the directions EXACTLY, even that insanely painful part of WAITING A FULL DAY BEFORE EATING – Whoa! That crust is worth preserving!

  32. Alison eitel

    Made this yesterday and just dug in! -But for some reason My bread is rather crumbly and not as moist as it ought to be- any reason this could be? Followed the recipe exactly!

      1. Sara U

        Made with 1/3while wheat flour and 2/3 AP, and turned out great! My only concern is that there is SO much sugar in it, it’s definitely more like a cake. Also, I only had Demerara sugar and the top is crusty but not craggy. So there must be a big difference between turbinado and Demerara.

  33. Kaver

    My fridge has been freezing some of my fresh vegetables lately (ugh!), and this morning I had two sad, half frozen zucchinis that we’re just begging to be made into bread. I have to say, this is the best zucchini bread I have ever made! I didn’t have any turbinado sugar…so I ended up sprinkling some thinly sliced almonds on top. Served it up warm with a little butter and a drizzle of honey! YUM. I’m putting your cookbook on my Christmas list!!

  34. I made 3 of these. I loved the crunchy top, the bread is very tender for a quick bread. This recipe uses less oil than the recipe I had been using. Next time I will add a dash of cloves as I like a little more spice in my zucchini bread. It was delicious.

  35. Denise

    OK you are correct this IS the best zucchini bread/cake EVER!!!! Love the crunch and the texture/moistness! It is DIVINE………have to stop myself from eating the entire loaf……….with or without delicious salted butter! Thank you so much for the easy and delicious recipe!

  36. marcella

    Well, shoot. This did not work at all for me. I have no idea what I did wrong. I measured carefully, I weighted the zucchini even! It just rose to the level of the pan but flat – not the beautiful dome yours made. I know my leavenings work as I go through them quickly and the muffins I made for breakfast this morning since we weren’t getting zucchini bread looked perfect. It tested done at just over an hour. But when I sliced into it, the top half looked ok-ish but the bottom half was eraser. Just rubbery, gluey yuck.

    Glad so many are finding zucchini nirvana. Maybe another try another time.

    Oh, and my usual recipe from my sister is one of those two loaf recipes. However, they aren’t squat loaves because the two loaf recipe is for two 8×4 pans. I think that’s an issue with a lot of recipes. They just say loaf pan and that’s become 9 x 5 these days and the difference is significant.

    1. Scargosun

      I cooked mine in a ceramic loaf pan it it took a much longer time. Instead of a toothpick to test, I use a wooden kabob skewer so it gets all the way to the bottom of the pan when you have a high rising loaf. I’d give it another go.

  37. Vickie Koz

    Wish I could post a picture of the massive zucchini that came out of my garden yesterday…because it turned into 4 loaves of this bread! I cut back the cinnamon by about 1/4 (my Ukrainian husband and half-English/half-Ukrainian kids are not cinnamon fans!), and reduced the sugars by a (figurative not literal) smidge.

    Not sure it will wait until tomorrow to be eaten…we can’t wait!

  38. Anna

    I made this yesterday and couldn’t wait 24 hours to try it, but I promise I made it more than 12. Last weekend I had a mishap with my favorite zucchini baked good, Bernard Clayton’s zucchini basil muffins. I was glad to have no similar difficulties with this. The recipe worked perfectly for me. But I wish the flavor was more zucchini. I made the SK summer squash pizza this week, and it is so intensely zucchini. The Bernard Clayton muffins are similarly very zucchini-tasting. The zucchini I used for this recipe was pretty big–one supplied all 370g. Maybe smaller zucchinis would give more flavor. I’m totally willing to try again! Even without a super intense zucchini flavor, this is a very tasty quickbread and I love the simplicity of this recipe.

    1. Leah

      The larger the zucchini, the higher the water content; IME, bigger zucchinis actually taste *less* like zucchini than smaller ones. Maybe retry with a few small ones next time? It could also be that the basil acts a complement/enhancer to the zucchini flavor in the Clayton recipe, much the way that Ina Garten argues that a little bit of coffee in a chocolate recipe makes the chocolate taste more like, well…chocolate. Based on your comment, I’m going to toss in a handful of chopped basil when I make this – I’m a zucchini and basil fanatic and find it utterly unfair that most of the you have to wait until lunch to enjoy them together ;)

  39. Kelly Langston

    I made this. I didn’t wait until tomorrow to try it, but did wait until it was fully cooled. DELICIOUS! I made a few modifications, including using part whole wheat white flour and adding some flax meal. Used 1 stick of melted butter and then oil to make 2/3 C. I also used 75 g white sugar, 65 g brown sugar and it is plenty sweet with that. I didn’t miss the extra 50 g of sugar that I left out. I will definitely make this again! It’s very moist and just super yummy!

    1. Sarahb1313

      Oh I wish I had read this first! I really wanted to cut back the sugar but didn’t go below 175g total.
      In the oven now.
      No way i will wait till tomorrow though!! Just one little piece ;-)

    2. ilona

      me too! i cut the white sugar by half (only put 50 grams) and kept the brown sugar as is b/c I wanted to make sure the bread stays as moist as possible. It was plenty sweet, very moist and absolutely DELICIOUS! Making it again this weekend!

  40. Made this twice in 2 days. The first time I forgot to add the eggs, so added them at the end and then probably overmixed —but it didn’t seem to hurt anything. Very forgiving recipe! I also increased the amount of zucchini to 3 cups — also didn’t seem to hurt! Such an easy recipe — it didn’t last until day 2. Yum!

  41. Annie

    Excellent NYT article btw – with a 1 and 3 yr old at home I’m all about splitting meals into bowls for everyone to choose their own combinations.

  42. Courtney Witter

    I didn’t get the rise you did, so not pretty picture for you…but damn – it was (note the past tense) so good!
    I would like to make this in smaller pans or even muffins or mini muffins.
    How long would I bake them in a standard muffin tin?
    In a 5.75 x 3 in. pan?

    Thanks!

    1. deb

      I don’t have baking times until I try it but I bet people will pipe up with what they found. I’d check the muffins at 22 minutes but they might take as long as 30. It will depend on how much you fill them (I’d fill them 3/4).

        1. Brook M.

          My kids are literally dying to slice into these beauties!
          I told them they had to wait until tomorrow because Deb said so!!
          I also cant wait to eat it.
          One I baked with mini chocolate chips and it turned out beautiful like the regular ones!!
          Thanks Deb!

  43. tiff

    this was so fun! thank you! mine didn’t rise much (think I didn’t put enough baking soda? my fault) and the crust was too moist to become crunchy sadly (waited overnight 12 hours – should I have waited more? or is it possible the weather was too hot/humid in the kitchen?) – shared that batch w colleagues lol and excited to try again w less sugar and more zucc tonight!

  44. Mary Lou Sinzinger

    I am excited to try this. I have been having dry Z bread and it is driving me crazy since I have been using the same recipe for years. I will try today!!

  45. Amy Graham

    I’ve made your Jacked-up zucchini bread many, many times, and have no complaints! I wonder how this one compares in your eyes….?

    1. Amy Graham

      Actually, I just realized the jacked up recipe I’m talking about is banana bread! I have also used your previous zucchini bread recipe many times though, mostly as muffins. I am about to try this one now! Thanks, Deb! I love all your recipes.

  46. jmecannon

    Made this the day the recipe was posted. It’s super good! My only thought/comment: leaving a loaf of a baked good uncovered, in my house, means a cat will eat it (yes, really). I could never quite keep the sugar coating as the wonderful crisp layer it initially cooled to. I don’t know how best to store this to avoid that happening, but maybe there is a technique I don’t know? Stick it in a bag with another piece of bread?? Silica gel packets pilfered from my mailed goods and purses? Haha, kidding, well, unless it works… :)

    1. Lindsey

      In our 3 (mischievous) cat household, if we want to leave food out and kitten free, we store it in the microwave! If the item is still cooling, we leave the microwave door slightly ajar, otherwise we close it for extra security!

    2. Yes, any food is liable for “counter surfing” from the Golden thief. I can’t leave out bread, anything on the counter is fair game. Microwave AKA “food safe” is the solution.

    3. Lisa

      I’m using those mesh covers like you would use at a picnic to keep the bugs off. Allows for air circulation but keeps the food safe from critters.

  47. Amy Klinger

    I suppose, technically, half of the zucchini bread I made today will rest 24 hours… It’s hard for me to believe the flavor benefits of next-day zucchini bread outweigh those of still warm, freshly-baked zucchini bread, but I’d love to hear your perspective on it. But I will say, it’s definitely a recipe that knocks the others out of the running.

    1. deb

      The longer it settles, the better the crumb gets. The first day, it aways tastes more loose and dry to me. The second and third days, it’s perfect.

  48. Naomi

    Hi!
    This recipe looks awesome and I can’t wait to make it. Would it be helpful or detrimental to put some parchment in the pan before greasing with spray?
    Also, I just wanted to say that I read your NYT meal planning piece and it was EXACTLY what I needed to calm my nerves as I prepare to return to work after a wonderful 2-year maternity leave. I loved reading that it’s ok to serve frozen tortellini with broccoli! Also, your one pan farro is in my regular rotation. I serve it with spinach (either mixed in, or as a bed for the farro), and topped with a fried sunny egg. We all love it.

    1. deb

      First, thank you. And yes, you can totally do a parchment sling for ease, but no need to do it and spray. Either/or. Just spray the sides that are bare.

  49. Gina

    I don’t usually post comments here, but I feel like I have to come back and say how amazing this zucchini bread is! So quick and easy to throw together, and it tastes ridiculously delicious. So moist and so flavorful, while not overly sweet. And that crust on the top is just to die for. Definitely the last zucchini bread recipe I’ll ever use! Thanks, Deb!

  50. Frances

    very tasty. i substituted 1 cup of the white flour with 1 cup of farro flour with success- nice nutty flavor and not overly dense. thank you!

  51. Hannah

    I’ve been making your other zucchini bread for years and it is my go-to! I usually make it half whole wheat and sub out half the oil for apple sauce. And add chocolate chips on request. Thoughts on whether this recipe will lend itself to those tweeks?

  52. L

    I bought a bunch of zucchini last week (before realizing I don’t really like zucchini…) Turns out this is an amazing way to use them up! I followed the recipe almost exactly, opting for canola oil as the fat, and sprinkling brown sugar on the top. I had the crunchy end slice with some unsalted butter about 10 hours after it came out, and another slice this morning. Both yesterday’s and today’s maintained a nice crunchy exterior but perfectly moist insides. In a crazy turn of events, I may go back to the market for some more zukes, if only to make this bread again.

  53. Sheila Zompa

    My ultimate Zucchini Bread recipe is Jane Brody’s Grate Zucchini Bread. It has minimal sugar, less oil plus whole wheat flour. It is delicious! Perhaps you could modify your recipe to align with hers. It would be infinitely healthier.

    1. Christine

      Holy cow! If you already love the other one then just use that. Don’t ask Deb to change her own unique recipe just to be like someone else.

    2. cy

      I’m so shocked by comment I don’t know what to write. Unless you were trying to be funny? I’m making this tomorrow Deb. Your recipes never fail me!

    3. Rebecca F

      Sheila, that was a ridiculous comment. The JB recipe is for a much smaller bread- it has less flour, so of course uses less sugar, oil, etc. Deb’s recipe is for a LARGER BREAD, so has more of most ingredients it takes to make it. If you want to use WW flour, less oil, sugar, etc, then go for it! But telling Deb to use someone else’s recipe is insulting.

  54. Trista

    This was the BEST zucchini bread I’ve ever made. I subbed half the flour with some locally milled sonora wheat and it was still so moist. Thank you Deb for making it a one bowl recipe and truly a quick bread!

  55. susan

    I made it today and my husband and I enjoyed it greatly! We couldn’t wait the 24 hours to cut into it, and the results were just lovely – crackly lid, tender crumb, and fragrant with cinnamon and nutmeg. Such a wonderful summertime treat and one of the only reasons I’d turn my oven on at 12 PM on a 90+ degree day.

  56. CC PharmD

    It’s funny that you posted this recipe the day that I thought about venturing to make zucchini bread. I’ve been wanting to make a savory veggie-based bread for my almost-one year old who needs to eat more veggies. So I made this WITHOUT any sugar, and used one cup of whole wheat flour and one cup of oat flour. I primarily made it into a loaf but tested some of the batter into muffins. The muffins were done in about 30 minutes and the loaf, done in 55 minutes. Needless to say, the baby loved it! :)

  57. I made this in a small bundt pan, it fit perfectly. And since it is Summer, we don’t use the oven in our house, I used my new “Foodi” on bake. It worked perfectly. Great recipe, and this new kitchen gadget is great.

  58. lotte

    Takes longer for the oven to preheat than mixing the batter :D
    Swapped 60g of almonds for the same weight of flour – tasted great!

  59. Lisa Donahue

    Excellent! I made it with coconut oil and it is delicious. The hardest part was waiting until the next day to try it :)

  60. Erica B

    Made this last night and cut into today (~14 hrs post bake). Made as written. The spices are lovely and the sugar on top is tasty but not as crunchy as shown here and it did not rise as much (used veg oil + weighed all ingredients). Will try again with fresher baking powder & soda perhaps.

  61. I seriously think your previous Zucchini Bread recipe is the greatest….but OK…I’ll try this one. We have a front yard farm and OODLES of zukes. I just made EIGHT!!! loaves the other day and boy were the neighbors happy!

  62. Leah

    What I’m most excited about is how low the sugar is here. I love the natural sweetness of zucchini, and so many bread recipes just drown it out with so much excess sweetener (which, as you point out, isn’t even as necessary here for moisture, given the high water content of the veggies). Can’t wait to try this!

  63. Jennifer

    Deb, this is the truly the ultimate zucchini bread recipe! I had given up after my last attempt several years ago. So happy to use my garden zucchini here. Perfect blend of flavors, and the cinnamon and nutmeg really add a nice twist. I’m pretty sure a slice of bread equals a daily serving of veggies! 😂

  64. BUZIBU

    Turned out great with 1.75 cups of white whole wheat flour and 0.8 cups mixed sugars. Fat was coconut oil mixed with canola and some ground flaxseed. 12 muffins baked 30 min.

  65. I added 1 more cup of zucchini, flour and more egg. Not sure what happened but it turn into zucchini bread pudding. It was good but not what I expected. What should I have done?

    1. Rebecca

      Followed the recipe? I don’t understand people who post on a cooking blog saying they changed critical elements of the recipe and it didn’t work then question the author. Baking is not like cooking, the portions of each ingredient are important

    2. deb

      The recipe was written for 2 cups; 3 cups is too big of a change for it to handle. Probably needed every other ingredient scaled up by 1.5x to ensure it worked. It would then be too big for a single loaf, however.

  66. Deb

    Deb, I just told my brother that your recipes always come out exactly the way you say they will and this is no exception, right down to the crispy sugar cap–my loaf looks identical to yours and your clear precise recipe gets all the credit. Same with the Crispy Oven Puled Pork which I also made–so thanks for providing the most dependable, consistent recipes I have ever tried. Aloha!

  67. Rhea

    My two year old and I mixed this up. We then shared with her daycare providers and my husband brought two slices to the movies with his friend. Everyone we shared it with was so happy. Thank you for another great recipe. I love this blog.

  68. Babs

    Made this just like the recipe indicated (ok, I accidentally added a wee bit too much nutmeg because I wasn’t paying attention, didn’t make a difference) and it’s the best zucchini bread I’ve ever made. It’s actually somewhat annoying to look back at all the salting, draining and wringing of this vegetable I’ve done with previous recipes. I used a large yellow zucchini, worked just fine. Stayed moist for several days and the crispy top was fantastic.

  69. Michele

    Made this yesterday- literally only 10 minutes to throw together and only one bowl to throw in the dishwasher :). It is fabulous! Will definitely make again ( and again )

  70. Cheyenne Jones

    Hi Deb! So excited to make this today! Any reason I can’t use the grater attachment on my Cuisinart rather than the box grater? The holes are the same size…

      1. Cheyenne Jones

        Hi Abby, Yes! I did. It worked beautifully. I just weighed the zucchini out to 13 oz., as Deb suggested. This bread is DELICIOUS!

    1. deb

      You can but then weigh the shreds, make sure you have 13 ounces. My Cuisinart makes larger, thicker shreds (well, sometimes) so the cups might end up lighter otherwise. The only way to ensure everyones cup measurements work the same as mine did is by indicating the grater used (box) and size (large).

  71. Nicole H.

    This was exceptional. Perfectly balanced flavor, tender and not dry, crispy top made it extra special. Loved that it’s not overly sweet as well. Definitely a keeper!

  72. Linda Dewlaney

    Oh my — I totally understand how Jacob could possibly be nine years old, as I met him (and Alex!) in San Francisco when you were on the book tour for Every Day — but I am gobsmacked that Anna can already be four! What a lovely family you have, Deb!

    The NYTimes article is fabulous, those Braised Ginger Meatballs in Coconut Broth are on the menu for this weekend!! I am going to give the zucchini bread recipe a try, using a 1-to-1 gluten-free flour product, and I’ll let you know how it turns out!

  73. Rachel

    My boyfriend declared this the best baked good he’d ever eaten. I don’t think he’s wrong. If you’re thinking “meh, zucchini bread,” you’re wrong! Make this!! Thank you, Deb!

  74. Mary

    Don’t know why I did not double this recipe, but will do the next time I make this! This has got to be the best zucchini bread I’ve ever made, my family and I enjoyed it. I love the crunchy top and soft inside, definitely worth waiting 24 hours!

  75. Erica Goldsmith

    Gluten Free Option!! For those needing GF – I made this gluten free substituting the flour for 1/2 Trader Joe’s almond meal (by weight) and half Cup to Cup GF flour (by weight) and it turned out perfect. Added bonus, more protein!

    Thanks Deb as always for the awesomeness.

  76. Scargosun

    YAAASSS! I made this as soon as you posted it! Here are my notes for myself. First, Deb is 100% correct that it is best a day or even two days later and it is excelllent even further out. Second, when I do that 10 extra stirs, look for little clumps of baking powder and/or soda and smash them. They like to hide. Third, I literally left this on my counter in the loaf pan. I may or may not have been able to get out BUT it also was just fine and kept the nice crispy top for days.
    I looked forward to this in my lunch every day this week with my afternoon coffee. Will definitely be making again this weekend.

  77. Diana

    I made this today. It came together in a snap and is DELICIOUS! I used melted unrefined coconut oil, but it didn’t impart much flavor that I can tell. I threw in toasted chopped pecans, and both light and dark choco chips. It is so, so good. Next time I might experiment with cardamom and/or orange zest. I loved not wringing the zucchini!
    Diana (marian’s daughter :))

  78. Maureen Lombard

    Beautiful and delicious- words I’m surprised to use to describe zucchini bread. Thank you for this great simple recipe. Mine came out with the beautifully crusty top and it’s so delicious!

  79. What sorcery caused this to make my house smell so good?? How does a quick bread’s crust stay this crispy not one, not two, but four days after making it (and previously sliced!!)? How did this have flavor that wasn’t just, well.. sweet?

    This was easy, delicious, beguiling. The name is appropriate; if I ever make a different zucchini bread, it will be held to this standard.

    P.s. I did half whole wheat, half white flour, plus some flax. It needed 5 more minutes of baking time. The recipe took to those alterations with ease.

  80. Golda

    I made this last night, and because I dutifully followed Deb’s directions (as hard as it was!), I won’t get to taste the deliciousness until tonight. However, I did have to resort to using a whisk in place of a fork at the end; I needed something to break up the brown sugar lumps that the fork couldn’t manage, but a few pesky zucchini strands did get sacrificed to the whisk crevices. Perhaps the answer to this problem is to not have lumpy brown sugar, but I am an imperfect person :)

  81. Emilyrose

    Outstanding recipe! Thank you for making one bowl, so much easier. Also the tips on storage were great and helped keep the bread moist but the top crunchy.

  82. Abby

    I made these gluten free and they came out great! I used Jovial brand whole grain gluten free pastry flour (sorghum, teff, millet, brown rice, xantham gum, tara gum). I used slightly more flour than the recipe called for (it seemed a little wet so I sprinkled on some extra but didn’t measure). They didn’t rise too much but they had a good texture and were yummy.
    Other minor changes I made:
    – doubled the recipe but only put slightly more baking soda and baking powder
    – made half of it muffins and the other half in a loaf pan
    – reduced the sugar slightly and added chocolate chips

  83. I free-styled zucchini bread last summer- just about exactly this recipe- it’s fantastic. I made it a couple days ahead and shared with the group I was camping with. I quadrupled this recipe ( if I remember correctly), baked in several 9″ spring form cake pans lined with parchment, like a panettone.

    I added lemon zest, which I think helped bring a little somethin’ extra.

  84. Hannah

    This was the perfect solution for the giant overgrown garden zucchini! I’ve already made the OTHER SK zucchini bread recipe twice this summer, so enjoyed trying something new. It basically came out just like the pictures (yay!) And the crack bark was awesome. I did miss having two squatty loaves (one to keep, one to share) so I don’t think I’ll be abandoning the other entirely. But this was a little showier :-)

  85. Angela

    Don’t you post weekly? Weren’t you meant to post yesterday? I read a NYTimes article about how you do this all yourself… maybe you should get a bit better about delegating if you’re finding it hard to post ONE cake recipe a week on your blog *SMH*

    1. SallyT

      I really hope this is meant tongue in cheek. You know, this is FREE content – take it or leave it, but no one owes you anything.

    2. deb

      I’m flattered I was missed! I aim for a new recipe a week. Sometimes the recipe isn’t ready. Quality over quantity, always. (Or at least since 2006.)

  86. Eli

    Been eyeing this since it was posted and finally got around to making it, thanks to a good haul of zucchini from the market. Turned out really well! Excellent texture and now I’m just trying to properly ration the rest of it because it’s currently tempting me. Great recipe!

  87. Anne Oliver

    I made this bread yesterday afternoon. It was as easy as it looks, followed the recipe exactly (except for the addition of a few chopped walnuts) and it turned out PERFECTLY!

    I am now going to try to make a vegan version using flax eggs rather than regular eggs. I have so many vegan friends that would love this!

      1. Elizabeth

        I made it into muffins with flax eggs! Baked them about 27 minutes but they probably needed a little longer—the knife came out clean but some were still a little gummy on the bottom, maybe because of the flax goo. The texture of most of them was good though and they tasted great!

  88. Brigitte Goodman

    I made this zucchini bread today. This definitely is THE BEST zucchini bread recipe I have used. It is super easy and fast to make. The bread turned out nice and moist. I used a 9 x 5 pan and baked it for about 40 minutes and it was done. It is a keeper!

  89. jenniferchambers

    Hi Deb! I just had to tell you that a) I lovelovelove zucchini bread, especially this one; and most importantly (for me) I have been able to make this recipe gluten free. Long sentence there but I feel my enthusiasm is warranted. I’ve used both my own gf flour blend & Bobs all purpose 1-to1 baking flour, which is readily available where I live. I’ve also occasionally added cocoa powder (1/4-1-2c) to the delight of my children. Thanks so very much for this recipe!

  90. Kelli

    It’s been 12 hours since I took mine out of the oven; it is taking every ounce of willpower I have to wait to slice and try! The 24 hour waiting period might possibly be the only difficult part about this recipe…

  91. Dyan

    I like my bread zucchini-heavy anyway, just packing the wet veg into the cup with no problem, but this time my bread seemed quite oily. Also, I know you’re keeping it pure and simple, Deb, but I missed having my usual rubbly texture of chopped walnuts. I did love the crunchy sugar top though, and the recipe is simplicity itself.

  92. Dew

    Trying hard to reduce sugar while not using fake sugars, wondering whether I can add a mashed overripe banana in place of some of the sugar; anyone tried this with success (or crashing failure)?

  93. Allison Fraser

    Just wanted to report back that I made this gluten free by substituting King Arthur gluten free flour 1:1. I otherwise followed the recipe exactly (other than using regular sugar on top since I didn’t have turbinado), including letting it sit overnight. It was exceptional. I did have to bake about 7 minutes longer than your recipe but that might be my oven. So don’t hesitate to make this GF!

  94. Kate

    Commenting so everyone can benefit- made a spread of cream cheese mixed with lemon zest, lemon juice, ground ginger, and powdered sugar and it was divine on this!

  95. Elley

    This really is the Zucchini Bread That Was Promised. So simple and easy, I’ve already made it twice, even with two kids running around. Both times I got distracted (child mayhem) and dumped all the ingredients in at once instead of wet and then dry, and it still came out perfect. The clean up doesn’t make me cry. Thank you!

  96. Nicola

    Flavour is great and passed the 6 year old’s approval as a snack in lunch box. Mine turned out quite dense and did not reach the lofty heights that I was hoping for. I definitely did not overmix. Re-reading the recipe enlightened me in that I forgot the 1/2 c gran sugar. Would that change the crumb result? Also your wet mixture looks runnier than mine, which had more the thick batter consistent of your double chocolate banana bread. Love your recipes.

  97. Jessica Andrade

    Yum! Not too sweet, so tasty! I put a little maldon sea salt on the top with the sugar-just a couple of pinches. Made for a crunchy salty sweet top. No way I was waiting 24 hours to eat…

  98. Holly

    I just made this bread a few nights ago, and I had a couple of ripe bananas to get rid of and in the spirit of experimenting I threw those in as well. I kept everything else the same on the recipe. It is fantastic, and a great thing to get us through lunch time at our jobs! Another benefit, the smell of cinnamon/spice filled the house and made everyone ask me.. “are you BAKING something?” It’s a winner in our house and we will be making this often! Thank you for your creation, we love it!

  99. Heather E.

    Followed directions exactly and my loaf looks nearly identical to yours. I did need to cook for 75 minutes for a batter free tooth pick under the dome. For some reason, where the top lifted up, it took a long time to cook fully underneath. I’m going to make my family wait the full 24 hours.

    1. Heather E.

      I only waited 22 hours….This is really the Ultimate Zucchini Bread! It is not too sweet and the texture is amazing. Thanks Deb!

  100. Abigail

    I made this last night and it is absolutely delicious perfection. I adjusted the recipe for altitude (I live around 5300ft in Denver) so I thought I’d share what I changed for any other mountain bakers out there! Add one egg white, add an extra tbsp of oil, subtract 1 1/2 tsp of each sugar, reduce baking soda by 1/8 tsp, reduce baking powder by 1/8 tsp, add 2 tbsp of extra flour, increase baking temp by 25 degrees (to 375), and bake for around 45-50 minutes. :D

    1. Kristen

      Thank you! I live in Denver too and have struggled to get a perfect zucchini bread because of the altitude. Love SK recipes and want this to be the one!

  101. HeirloomTomato

    This recipe worked fine. I only used half a cup of sugar though because 1 cup of sugar is way too much. I don’t want cloying bread.

  102. Brittany W.

    Hi, this looks great. Did Anna get a special cake for her birthday this year? I always love seeing them, so I’m just curious. Thanks!

  103. Tricia

    Yes please! I really love when you post improved recipes, and all of the improved versions lately have been spectacular. We have puffy pancakes regularly now with the simpler recipe, not just once per year. I’m pretty sure this zucchini bread will also go into rotation – I’ve got plans to try it this afternoon!

  104. I used the food processor to grate the zucchini, and weighed it – worked quite well.

    I did mix the dry ingredients, its easy to quickly was a flour bowl, and I was nervous about the leavens not getting distributed.

    I didn’t want to heat up the house, so took the toaster oven (which is big) outside, Alas, a portion of the crunchy top burned, but I just called it “caramelized” and everyone loved it!

    Quick and easy!

  105. thepacifier

    Made this on Friday night as I was hosting house guests and everyone loved it for breakfast the next morning. Perfect with coffee, and my toddler was a big fan as well! Followed the recipe exactly and it came out beautifully – the crunchy top was amazing.

  106. HilaMeansHalo

    The reports are in and the kids love this! My 2 teens returned today from 4 weeks away at camp and I wanted to have something baked and delicious ready for them at home. I had made a ratatouille and has 2 massive zucchini left over which I wanted to use up. The bread smells delicious and tastes even better! Thanks for a super easy, one bowl, mix with a fork (no mixer needed!), straight into the oven full-proof recipe Deb!

  107. findingmykd

    I made this in the 8×4-ish glass pyrex loaf pans, since they’re all I have. They burbled over with oil just a bit (I was glad I had a pan underneath them!) — but ended up turning out very tasty, if not as rounded on top as expected. At 350, they also took about 65 minutes, so a bit longer. I’d definitely use 9x5s if you have them, but if you have 8x4s, put them on a tray and go for it–the final product was delightful!

    Also, for those who have a glut of zucchini, the amount to make one recipe fits exactly perfectly in a freezer-safe 16-ounce/US pint wide-mouth canning jar. Your future self will thank you.

  108. This is super good! I made this sunday and took it to work on monday and got tons of compliments on it. I subbed half whole wheat for the ap flour, to delude myself into thinking it’s better for me and I had no issues.

  109. Danielle

    I made this the other day and it’s fantastic. Definitely listen to Deb – DO NOT skimp on the raw sugar you put on top. It will seem like too much but it’s so amazing once baked.

  110. I turned this into muffins, for ease of freezing and doling out to kiddos, and they turned out excellent. The only problem was that they didn’t turn out crisp on top – perhaps the shorter cook time prevented the moisture from evaporating. In any case, the taste and texture are excellent and I will definitely try this recipe again. Next time – loaf!

  111. This was SO good. I was given a calabacitas and was told it’s basically Mexican zucchini. The shape was quite different – it’s much rounder – and the one I had was almost 700 grams, but I ran it along a box grater on all the sides and just as I was getting down to the seedy core, I hit the grams needed for this recipe.

    I had only one small piece left after my book group fell on it. Thanks for the recipe!

  112. Lisa

    Love SK and so appreciate Deb’s recipes. This one was fun to make but really was so sweet at the end… I know she says it’s a larger than usual loaf, but for me at least this one really tasted like it had a lot of sugar in it, too. Would definitely experiment with lower amounts if making it again!

  113. Kat

    Just a note to say I didn’t have a loaf pan, but made it in an 8″ square pan and it was perfect in 55 minutes. Didn’t last the 4 – 5 days, and making batch #2 tonight!

  114. Alicia

    Reporting on Day 4–still delicious, and the crust is still intact! I subbed 1/4 of the flour with whole wheat and added about 1 tablespoon of ground flax seed because my former (note the use of that word!) favorite zucchini bread called for those, and I liked the nutty texture and flavor they added. My husband really liked the fact that this bread was a little less cloyingly sweet compared to others.

    I have a request: is it possible to provide the weights for the liquid ingredients you use as well? Being inherently lazy about cleanup, I use my kitchen scale for almost all ingredients. I know that milliliters=grams for liquids like water and milk, but oils are less dense and syrups are more dense, so it would be a huge help to have all of the weights listed in the recipe. Thanks!

  115. Deborah Rauch

    Sounds delicious. Have lots of organic blueberries on hand and wondering about adding them to this recipe and maybe some lemon zest. Do you think that would work

  116. Linda Martin

    Deb, I made this the other day. I had it all ready to go into the oven (the bowl was soaking, etc) and I noticed my Pyrex 1 cup measuring cup filled with oil on the counter. Oy….so I (and I wouldn’t recommend anyone doing it this way because it’s very messy!) poured it on top of the uncooked bread and messily mixed it in. Added another 2 T of sugar to the top and baked it (and hoped for the best). Gotta say….it’s pretty amazing. It came out great. It’s super moist, flavorful and is a hit here. I will make it the ‘right’ way next time ;)

  117. Susan

    Well, I am sorry to report I thought this was a major disappointment. Followed recipe to a “t”. Bland, not good enough that even my granddaughters, who had been waiting all day to devour it, didn’t even want to finish their servings.

    I normally appreciate SK recipes, this is a pass.

  118. Sharon

    I made this and it was wonderful. The zucchini bread recipe I have used for the last few years was from this site and it was my favorite. This one is better, moist and sweet and crunchy. One bowl and the grater-really easy to make.

  119. Reena

    I have made this bread twice this zucchini season. The first time I followed the recipe quite closely, with the exception of reducing the sugars a small amount and replacing one cup of the AP for whole wheat. The loaf was almost too moist and sweet for me. So the second time I replaced all of the AP flour with 240g of whole wheat. I also used 1/2 cup of maple syrup instead of the sugars in the bread. And because I was adding liquid with the maple syrup, I reduced the oil to 1/2 cup. And this time, I loved it! It was not very sweet and still moist, which I really liked. I think the next time, I will also up the spices in the bread as some other commenters have suggested.

  120. Sara Dankert

    I skipped the crunchy top (I know, I’m a monster) but still let it “set” overnight. I also used whole wheat flour. Delicious. Mine was done in 50 minutes. 🙂

  121. Rebecca

    Is there any reason this would not work with yellow summer squash (patty pan squash)? My patty pan squash is far more prolific then my zucchini this year. I know it wouldn’t have the visually appealing green specs but it otherwise seems to me it should be similar. Just wanted to check if anyone had tried it.

    1. Hannah

      Ah, this is why I made sure to review all the comments before posting the same question! Rebecca, did you end up using the yellow summer squash and if so, did it turn out alright?

      1. Rebecca

        Hannah, Yes I did and it worked great! Other then the visual difference the taste seemed identical to me. I hope it works out well for you!

  122. Peggy

    I see the NYT photographer fell in love with Anna. Can’t imagine why! Also, Deb, if you are 35 or over and born in the US why aren’t you running for president?

  123. Roxy

    The crunchy top is exquisite! My zucchini hating family loves it! My only change was that I whisked together the oil, eggs, spices, sugars and leavening in a medium bowl. Then I added to the zucchini and had no problem mixing together. I know this dirties another bowl but since I’m just putting them in the dishwasher anyway, who cares if it makes the mixing easier. The resulting loaf is great. Thanks for another memorable recipe!

  124. Anna

    I made this two days ago with half grated yellow zucchini and half grated apple, since I’m awash in both these days. Yumm! And so easy! I managed to protect it in the pan over night, but once I made the first cut at breakfast my teenagers polished off the rest of the loaf within 2 hours. LOL – I’m betting no one will complain if I make it again (so much zucchini, so many apples). FYI, I used walnut oil which I think added a quiet richness to the flavor. I sprinkled about a tablespoon of regular granulated sugar across the top because I didn’t have any fancy sugar, and still got a great crunchy crust.

  125. Alex Smith

    I made this and it was perfect. I’ve never made zucchini bread before and I just so happened to have some extra zucchini from my weekly produce box when this was posted. This was remarkably easy to pull together. I especially appreciated the emphasis at the critical juncture to give it “10 extra stirs”. I have to admit, it felt odd to leave it out and uncovered for so long, but I’m an instruction follower. I took this to a bridal brunch and it was adored by all. I saw some of the attendees a few days after the event and they were still raving. The only disappointment I had was that my sugar encrusted peak didn’t rise nearly as high as the photo here. Of course, no one knew but me, but I’m curious about where I may have gone wrong. I’d recommend this to anyone, and will be personally be passing along to friends (and to one in particular who has coincidentally been lamenting the lack of good zucchini bread).

  126. Caterina

    I just demolished two large pieces of this for breakfast. Best zucchini bread ever. I followed the recipe exactly except for reducing the sugar a tiny bit. Made this last night and left it uncovered on the counter, as instructed. One bowl and a fork is all you need to prepare this which is much appreciated. Perfection. Will be making this again.

  127. Barbara Miller

    Fantastic bread, my third time loaf is in the oven. Our garden is prolific in zucchini, and this was the perfect was to use some, thanks for sharing this!! have a wonderful day!

  128. Lynn

    This is the Zucchini bread of my dreams. No wringing, high volume of zucchini, customizable. I made 2 loaves. First was made with white-whole wheat/AP flor mixture, ½ coconut oil, ½ coconut sugar, and added 2T seed blend of chia, flax, and hemp. Second had (all of the above, plus) added dried cherries and slivered almonds. They rose so high and are perfectly moist even on day 3!!
    Will be tucking some of these in the freezer although I know that crusty lid will suffer.

  129. Anne Rose

    We made this with whole wheat pastry flour which worked great- I LOVE how fast it goes together & this is my favorite version after years of zucchini bread making! But I didn’t have a loaf pan so I made a dozen muffins & a little cake ( where I added chocolate chips & nuts- definitely a plus in my book) & we couldn’t resist trying a muffin each the first day & then putting away the rest. Have to say, the consensus was that they tasted equally good, but perhaps that was cause they were only a couple of inches deep? Have since bought a loaf pan & will try again. Thanks for all your work – you are my whole family’s favorite (only?) recipe source!

  130. Jason

    I made it exactly as written and as many others have noted, it was bland. I also didn’t like the texture. My loaf required an a 65 minute bake and ended up quite claggy. I love so many of your recipes, but this is not one of them.

    1. Barry

      Jason
      Not ‘many others’. Just one other person said it was bland. Dozens and dozens of others have said how delicious this is. And I agree with them. So so good and so so easy. Thank you hugely Deb from the UK

  131. Holy cow. This was too insanely good! I initially didn’t wait and ate a piece right out if the oven. It was good but not the crazy deliciousness it developed the next day (and got better each day afterwards). Yum!! I used olive oil.

  132. Kristen

    Absolutely delicious and very forgiving recipe. I spilled a little butter, used almost a cup too much zucchini, subbed cardamon for nutmeg, and had some sugar mix ups and it still came out perfect. YUM.

  133. Maxine Catalano

    So easy and 1 bowl, does it get any better? Mine came out of the oven domed, really excited about that, and tho it will be difficult, will wait to taste. Once again, Deb makes life easier and baking for those who are put-off by baking, a no brainer.

  134. Alice K.

    My zucchini bread took FOREVER to bake, and I still ended up with what seemed like uncooked areas, primarily on the bottom of the loaf. My son loved even the “uncooked” bottoms, but I didn’t. I think it was because I used 2 cups of thawed frozen shredded zucchini and didn’t drain enough of the water out of it. My son insists I make the same zucchini bread again, and I will, but next time I’ll drain the thawed zucchini shreds more. I have lots of frozen zucchini as many of us do this time of year. Oh, and I should add, the parts of the bread that were cooked well were fabulous. Best zucchini bread, and I have always used Deb’s recipe (older one) for zucchini bread. I will go with this one from now on

  135. Alice K.

    Has anyone made this with thawed frozen zucchini shreds? Did you drain out some of the liquid? or all? or none? I used thawed frozen zucchini shreds, drained out some of the liquid, and the resulting loaf took forever to cook and still had some unbaked soggy bottom parts (which my son still loved, but I didn’t). I want to make this again and I need to know how to proceed.

    1. deb

      I haven’t worked with them but my hunch would be to substitute by weight (you want 13 ounces of them), no need to thaw (just give it more baking time if needed) and do not wring out.

    2. Jess

      I’m puzzled as well about how much liquid to drain out of frozen zucchini to use in baked goods. The discussions I’ve found about it online seem to disagree with one another about whether to use all the liquid that collects from drained, frozen zucchini, or some or none. I don’t know if I’m organized enough to test out different methods on the same recipe, but I hope I’ll find someone else who is at some point to settle the matter!

  136. Anne

    I made this but substituted the eggs with flax eggs to make it vegan. Turned out great! Maybe it was a bit more dense than in the picture but still very delicious.

  137. bswnyca

    Today is the 3rd time I made this. First time was following the recipe except I only buy and use unsalted butter and didn’t add any salt. Loved it. 2nd time, I made it vegan for my friends using flax egg – they loved it. I was impressed. Today I made it again and having read all the comments, I added a pinch of salt. I will notate not to use any salt. I didn’t think it enhanced it and I didn’t like tasting the salt over the bread -maybe in 24 hours I’ll have a different take and will comment if that’s the case. [I’m not much of a salt user tho on choc chip cookies some maldon salt flakes rock. Salt aside, it’s easy and delicious and up there with the easy jacked-up banana bread.

  138. Diana

    Made this as written with a baby underfoot, baked it while she napped, but could only manage to wait an hour before I HAD to slice and eat. So good. The baby loves it too.

  139. Sarah M.

    This was absolutely phenomenal! Super easy to throw together, held up well for days, and gave me a new creative way to use up my MIL’s extra yellow squash from her garden. Definitely will keep this recipe in my back pocket for summertime!

  140. Nice and moist without being overly dense and had a crispy top. Thinking the sugar on top adds a dimension to the crust because I did not have any to put up there and therefore missed the final crunch bit. Used an 8×4 pan instead, so had enough for a mini loaf/cake round that didn’t make it a day cooling (not sorry). The other one is still in pan and looks beautiful. Thanks for the new recipe! And super thanks to how easy it is to prep and clean up. Wondering what using some apple sauce instead of oil might do to it. Thoughts?

  141. Paula

    Delicious cake. My friend from Boston brought me a loaf, and even though she had to wrap it, it was still great. Wish your website allowed for “print recipe” so I didn’t have to hand copy or print all the ads and commentary.

  142. Christi

    I made this but didn’t have quite enough zucchini and found the final result a bit dry and saltier than I’d like…so don’t skimp on the zucchini and consider toning down the salt if our make this. My old faithful recipe calls for the inclusion of ginger and cloves and I missed them here but I am a creature of habit/tastes.

  143. Debby Lee

    Id have to agree, you talked me into it once it was mentioned no wringing required. Waited overnight, per recommendations. So moist and tasty with crunchy top still intact. Definitely a go-to. I ended up having to bake it for about 30minutes extra (I think the loaf tin was a bit too skinny). Thank you!

  144. Dor

    Wow, yum. This really was the ultimate zucchini bread. The combination of the crusty lid with the super soft inside was incredible. We **may** have dropped in a couple handfuls of chocolate chips into the batter too. Love that everything comes in weights. Makes baking with the kids easier!

  145. Laura

    Yummy! I made this as a loaf (which my friend proclaimed was the best zucchini bread he’s ever had) and as muffins. The muffins took 30 minutes to cook through and I added chocolate chips to those. One recipe made 17 muffins. Fun activity to make these with kids!

  146. Tanya

    Sorry if this has been asked — but I have a ginormous zucchini (weighing in at 4 lbs) that my neighbor gifted me. Would it be ok to use this recipe for a more “mature” zuke without draining the shreds? I heard larger zukes contain a lot more water, so I didn’t want to ruin what sounds like a great recipe! TIA

    1. Barry

      Hi Tanya
      I have successfully used giant zucchini-or courgettes as we quaintly call them here in the UK in deference to our French neighbours! I sliced them into 3 or 4 inch chunks and only grated the outer third or so. In other words used the firm flesh and skin and left the watery core and seeds for the compost heap. Hope that’s helpful.
      Barry

    2. Emily

      made this with a zucchini the size of a small child that had been forgotten in the garden… scraped out the super mushy core and giant seeds and just grated the outer part. turned out beautifully! and the one zucchini gave me enough for a double batch :)

  147. robyn

    OMG!! Just made three loaves from one giant zucchini…..they look amazing, smell amazing and will soon find out how amazing they taste!! Thanks Deb, there has not been one recipe that has not been…..wait for it…….AMAZING…. since I’ve been following you all these years!! You’re the best!

  148. Baked this using the butter and it is exquisite. You can taste the butter, vanilla and spices and the top crunched up perfectly. It is a scootch sweet for my taste as a breakfast bread, but with a little whipped cream it is the perfect dessert. My bake time was 1:15… I think my oven needs recalibrated.
    For some reason, I have struggled with quick breads lately so it was so nice to have a “win”. Definitely try baking this with the melted butter as your fat. You will not regret it.

  149. Wendy

    Have been making the same zucchini bread recipe for decades, but this looked so good, I had to try it. I couldn’t persuade my husband not to try it right away, but he said he really liked it as is. More than the original. I did add 1/2 cup chopped walnuts and raisins. It was very easy to make – love the one bowl cleanup. I grated the zucchini in the food processor and grated enough for three more loaves – I’m going to try freezing it in 2 cup portions to use when I don’t have fresh from the garden. Has anyone done that successfully?

  150. I religiously follow this site, and have made many of the recipes, with universal success. This is the best zucchini bread I have ever had. I took the loaf camping, and maybe it was the Mount Adams view, or the crisp mornings in front of the campfire, but the bread was moist and spicy and everything good.
    I’m making my son’s wedding cake next month (2.5 weeks!) and have been scouring the site for tips/recipes. Thank you!!!

  151. Katie

    I just finished round 3 of this recipe since I found it! After the first batch, I realized the importance of actually following the instruction of mixing the baking powder and soda into the wet mix BEFORE the flour – the next two batches rose way better. I added 1.5 cups fresh blueberries to the loaf I made last night (they were sitting on my counter while I mixed the dough, so I thought why not!) with no other changes and it worked great. Thanks, Deb!

  152. Allison

    I made this last night and loved that you had to leave it in the pan overnight. My pet peeve of weeknight baking is letting it cool in the pan for a few minutes, taking it out of the pan, then having to wrap it in something which also requires waiting until it is cool enough and doesn’t steam itself soggy! Delicious recipe and something to look forward to this morning.

  153. Sara Kupchella

    I’ve made this like 4 times already this summer….. grandkids love it! No nuts, raisins, or pineapple to work around… and yes, I got that crunchy top! I do it exactly as written… let cool, unwrapped… stays 4 days on the counter! Winner for sure!

  154. Aislinn M

    I’ve made this quite a few times since our zucchini harvest has been coming in, and I didn’t realize until now that it was a recently published recipe since I found it through Googling “Smitten Kitchen Zucchini Bread”! I love how fast and easy it is to make, and the flavor and moisture is perfect. It tends to take 5-10 minutes longer than written for me. I do get the rise, but the whole cake tends to sink a bit as it cools and seems a bit compressed toward the bottom when sliced the next day. I love it, and everyone I’ve served it to loves it too.

  155. Emily

    I’ve made a lot of zucchini bread, and this is hands down the best I’ve ever had. Thank you!

    I made a few minor alterations to baking temp / leavening since I live at ~8000 ft (cut the leavening in half and baked at 375), and it turned out beautifully.

  156. TinaD

    I made muffins from this recipe today, and they’re very good. I had 2 10” zucchini on the way to meet their maker in the fridge; they grated down to just under 2 1/4 cups. 12-cavity standard muffin pan, light brown sugar vice dark and plain granulated vice raw (pantry cleaning), baked for 38 minutes. Eaten warm the cinnamon comes through nicely; I imagine when cold and if I ramped up to dark brown sugar they’d be stronger flavored still. 👍🏻

  157. lp

    I made a single recipe with unsalted butter and baked it in 3 cardboard mini “gift” loaf pans that were 2.5x7x1.8 and put 1 tsp of turbinado on top of each loaf.

    I wanted to post in case anyone else wants to make minis of this size.

    They’re baking and almost ready – I’ll post again when we get the chance to eat them!

    1. lp

      The 3 mini loaves mentioned above took 32 minutes to bake (my thermometer said the oven was right at 350).

      We were able to wait a whole 14 hours before succumbing – there was a bit of a crust, but it’s possible that part of the issue is weather (it’s been rather humid).

      The loaf we cut into is delicious!

      To speak to those folks who say it’s bland – I looked through a bunch of other recipes and it looks like the spices in this recipe are scaled way back. My preference is for less warming spices, but perhaps others are so used to overpowering spice that this felt bland?

  158. Thank you Deb, for simplifying things for the rest of us. Perfect for the massive late summer zucchini from a friend’s garden. I made two loaves of this – doing about 40% whole wheat flour and 60% regular flour. I loved the crunchy sweet crust but I thought the cake overall was a bit too sweet- will reduce sugar next time.

  159. lp

    I adore this recipe. It’s delicious. I made it as written, using unsalted butter as the fat.

    While I greatly appreciate the attempt to keep the recipe to one bowl, I have made this twice and found it’s much less fussy if I mix the dry ingredients together, and separately mix the liquids together without the zucchini. Then mix the two, and then add zucchini.

    It was easier to avoid pockets of flour and other ingredients, and washing 1 extra bowl was totally worth it.

    Also: thanks Deb for the zucchini quesadilla recipe, which we used for the leftover shredded zucchini!

  160. Em

    This tasted great! I made a couple edits (Bob’s Red Mill 1-1 gluten free flour, 1/3c of each sugar) and found it to be too moist even after baking an extra 10 minutes or so. Next time I might try wringing out the zucchini just a bit, but it almost seemed like it was a fat moisture issue. I used 80ml olive oil and 80ml butter. After cutting into it two days after baking to serve and still finding it wet, I ended up putting the slices on a baking sheet and back into the oven at 400 to dry out a bit. I’m new to baking with gluten free flour so I’d be curious if I would have had better results with regular flour, or if increasing the GF flour amount would improve.

  161. Louisa Barash

    Great recipe! I made it exactly as specified, then made one with blueberries in it and a sprinkling of crystallized ginger, then a batch of muffins with the blueberries and crystallized ginger. Making another batch of the muffins (trying to keep up with the zucchini!)

  162. This turned out beautifully. I made this as is (with unsalted butter as my oil) and added three quarters of a cup of dark chocolate chips. I brought it to a family gathering and served it with soft salted butter. It disappeared in about fifteen minutes. It was so flavorful. It didn’t even need the salted butter on top but it certainly didn’t hurt. I’m excited to make it again. So easy! Thank you Deb!

  163. Alyssa Leal

    I can’t stop making this recipe!!! My husband loves it, my 2 year old son cried for it for three days after we ate the last loaf, and I can buy a huge zucchini for 49 cents at Trader Joe’s right now! I’ve used up all my brown sugar making it three times in the last three weeks. Thank you for this recipe!!

    1. lp

      I did! I used the large-grater disc on my food processor and it was incredibly fast. I grated enough for 2 loaves and it took less time than it took me to actually clean up the food processor! It worked great.

      I’m actually considering freezing some grated zucchini soon, to be used for bread and/or salads and/or quesadillas.

  164. i’ve made this twice so far. once as written (it was delicious) and once subbing some of the oil for applesauce. i put a snack pack size container of applesauce in my measuring cup and then filled it with oil until it hit 2/3. it ended up being about a 1/2 cup of apple sauce. the texture was a little different but still very delicious.

    i also froze half of each loaf. i defrosted at room temp when i was ready to eat them and it worked out great.

  165. Michelle Engmann

    Deb- I’m 30 weeks pregnant and I’ve been baking your old version of this since back at 8 weeks when I couldn’t so much as look at a vegetable, carbs were my only friend and this was my way of “integrating more vegetables into my diet”. I always increased the zucchini ratio like this new version does (because it’s “healthier” of course). I’ve probably made at least 15 loaves/batches of muffins since then for breakfast, snacks and dessert, and can confidently say it has been my #1 pregnancy craving/staple. So just wanted to say thanks for being on this journey with me :)

  166. Laura P.

    Hi Deb! I came home from vacation to a HECKIN’ MONSTAH zucchini in my garden, and decided I wanted to make zucchini bread! I have heard that these gentle giants can be more watery than their younger brothers. Since that’s the case, would you recommend giving my grated zucchini a bit of a wring for this recipe, or should I just scrape out the middle bit with the seeds which is usually the most watery? (This thing is bigger than my not-that-small upper arm, so I think I will still have enough.)

    1. Laura P.

      I just have to come back and say that to my delight, that giant zucchini provided enough for FOUR recipes of this bread! I baked three in regular loaf pans (and topped one with walnuts because I meant to mix them in but forgot), and then the last batch I made into four mini-loaves. It’s utterly delicious! My husband loves a slice as a quick pick-me-up before going for a morning run, and my office-mates devoured a loaf in short order.

  167. JP

    I took a tip from a prior poster and have a banana/zucchini mix in the oven. I thought a change would be interesting after making the zucchini-only version several times this summer. I used 1 cup of each. It smells great so far. Here’s hoping!

    1. JP

      The zucchini/banana mix was wonderful! Today’s mash up – zucchini and coconut lime! I am going to mix / match Deb’s ultimate zucchini and her awesome coconut bread (with addition of lime juice and cardamom) recipes and see how this turns out!

      1. JP

        The coconut/zucchini mash up turned out well, but even with 1/2 a lime juiced in and some zest the lime was lost. A good try, though! Now I’m thinking of trying to marble the zucchini bread a la Deb’s marbled banana bread recipe, where you divide the batter pre-flour and replace the flour with cocoa powder in one half. Has anyone already tried this?

  168. Deb, this is a wonderful recipe. I have made it several times. I needed to make it gluten free and followed the recipe precisely only substituting the flour. I used Steves gluten free Cake Flour (http://www.authenticfoods.com) 290 grams instead of 260 (from experience) and we tasted both recipes side by side and they were the same and both excellent. The gluten free version a little lighter in texture. I did kill my ancient Cuisinart food processor recently, and I wonder if you use the current 14 cup Cuisinart food processor? Last comment for those who have the room the grow zucchini. Costata Romanesco summer squash (https://www.johnnyseeds.com/vegetables/squash/summer-squash/costata-romanesco-squash-seed-2053.html) is so nutty and firm and bar-b-ques and cooks up so well. It is great raw in salads also. Thanks Deb.

  169. Jackie

    I made this last night and was fretting for most of the ~60 minutes it was in the oven. I know you told us not to wring out the grated zucchini, Deb, but the second half of the on-the-larger-side-but-not-monstrous zucchini I used contained quite a bit of water (somehow, puzzlingly, more than the first half). So while the first cup of grated zuke was normal-looking, the second cup looked quite wet. But I did not wring. Once everything was mixed and in the bowl, it looked soupy. I came back to your recipe and consulted the pictures to confirm that yours also looked a bit soupy when you poured it into the pan. Even so, I fretted. But at the end of one hour, it came out of the oven tall and golden and a tester came out (mostly) clean. I left it to cool overnight and brought it in to work to share with my colleagues. That crispy lid was GREAT (you’re right, shouldn’t skimp on the raw sugar!) and the middle of the loaf was a teensy bit wet but nothing significant. The rest was so moist and tender, MM! I think I know exactly what to look for now in terms of water content for the shredded zucchini. It’s a super solid recipe and I’ll def be making it again. Thank you, Deb!

  170. WT

    We are egg free due to allergy and I made this using the chickpea juice substitute. It came out delicious but did not rise as much. This recipe is a keeper!

  171. lp

    (Please forgive the dupe post – I wanted this to also show up in the “I made this” section.)

    I made this recipe with carrots and it was delish!

    I used 2 cups of carrots, honestly because I forgot that I planned to use less, and it worked out well.

    I did reduce the granulated sugar by quarter of a cup – since the organic carrots tend to be so sweet. And it was perfect.

    I used un-peeled organic white, purple, and orange carrots from a local farmer, and grated them in the food processor.

    I’ll definitely be doing this again. It’s not better than the zucchini, just different.

  172. Batter came together SO FAST it was beautiful. I underbaked it – heartbroken to see that it sunk – so I just started eating the half-raw loaf straight from the pan with a fork. DELICIOUS just make sure you bake it long enough. I didn’t have any toothpicks or skewers but will buy some before I try this again

  173. nygirl56

    I made this last night to eat this morning as suggested. The is the best zucchini bread I have ever eaten in my life. My sister and I devoured half the loaf by ourselves. It is incredibly moist with just the right amount of sweetness. I only had light brown sugar and used that. Otherwise, I made it exactly as written. Just amazing.

    Thank you so much for this wonderful quick bread. I love reading your comments as much as I love trying your recipes. Keep them both coming!!!

  174. Julia Librone

    I just made your Zucchini Bread. I used 1/4 whole wheat flour, 1/4 GF flour and 1/2 APF. It is absolutely delicious. Moist and not too sweet. Sooo easy too, I will make it again. Thanks.

  175. tea

    It’s a really great tasting and easy dessert to make! I highly recommend it. Not sure I need a crunchy crust that much, but added the raw sugar anyway.

  176. Lauren

    I made it for friends and they raved about it–even better with 3/4 c. chocolate chips. I also made it for a gluten-free friend, using the King Arthur one-to-one mix and olive oil–she absolutely loved it, and thought it didn’t taste like gluten-free. Another excellent recipe from Deb!

  177. SJ

    I’ve been on the hunt for zucchini bread that I can add some extra brown bananas too- they seem to multiply in squares. Any suggestions? I mean I guess I could add it and see how it goes- haha!

  178. Dori Lacroix

    Deb, made this version of zucchini bread this weekend at it’s a real winner!
    The top crusty part is worth the whole thing and I had trouble waiting to dig in. But, dig in we did and it was wonderful. Thanks for giving us a truly worthwhile, single large, one pan cake/bread that will stay in my permanent collection.

  179. Mia

    Thanks for this recipe. I doubled and made 2 loaves anyway. Crunchy top is so yummy – I mean, sugar, what’s not to like.
    Added raisins and nuts which made it taste a bit like fruitcake in a good way!

  180. STACY

    i’m a long time baker, graduated in culinary arts almost 2 decades ago now and finally, now, a seasonal cook at home for my family. This is by far the best zucchini bread recipe in every sense – word for word – conduct the recipe as written with instructions. Thank you so much!!!

  181. Corrie- Onagoodday

    Can I (omit 1/2 sugar 1/2 dark brown sugar)and make it 1C sugar & add 2tbls Molasses if I don’t own dark brown sugar? Thx. Long time fan❤️

  182. Amy

    Deb, I can’t believe how good this recipe is. I’ve made it a few times now. I typically make two at a time and give one away to some lucky friend or family member. It’s incredibly moist and delicious! Thank you!!

  183. THANK YOU for making a recipe easy, the way it should be. I love a simple, delicious recipe that is unfussy, but still a winner. I’ve made this bread twice and I will continue to in the future. You’ve solved everything I found annoying about making zucchini bread in one go!

  184. Judy

    I made this bread twice. The first time I followed the instructions exactly. It was fine. The second time I added much more sugar on the top, which increased the crunchiness; added 1/8 tsp of cloves because I found the bread rather bland; and did NOT let it sit overnight before slicing and eating. The second bread was much tastier, and I didn’t see any difference in letting it rest overnight. So happy to have a one-bowl zucchini recipe that I can mix with a fork! Thank you!

  185. Alicia

    Would this work with pureed zucchini? I have a ton frozen over from the summer that I need to use.

    What about adding frozen blueberries?

  186. Julie

    Excellent! My zucchini-hating five year old devoured it. Based on prior reviews, I decreased the white sugar to 1/4 c and used 1/2 whole wheat flour.

  187. Karen Nelson

    Love this recipe.
    SUPER easy, all in one bowl and tastes amazing.
    I used all olive oil. I always add extra cinnamon and vanilla to any and every recipe. I also added some extra zucchini.
    *I made this with flax eggs because my son has an egg allergy and the loaves still came out perfect.

  188. Femke

    This recipe is absolutely amazing! It tastes great and I’ve made it multiple times in order to use up the courgettes from my vegetable garden. I’ve been tweaking it a bit so I can eat this for breakfast, by reducing the sugar and fat content, and by adding whole weat flour instead of all purpose. Delicious!

  189. Linda Crow

    It IS the ultimate zucchini bread! Everyone loved it and I’m making more now, a week later. The bread was moist, crunchy and very favorable. Thank you. I will stop my search for the ultimate bread recipe.

  190. Just made this and it’s absolutely the best zucchini bread ever. Thank you for making this recipe better than all the other stupid ones out there. Hip hip hooray!

  191. Erica

    For anyone looking for possible substitutions right now: I replaced the brown sugar with a little more than 1/3rd of a cup of honey, the vanilla extract with an equal amount of maple syrup, and used regular white sugar on top of the cake. It still turned out phenomenal!
    Deb, this recipe is so amazing. Thank you for giving us something so wonderful to make during a pandemic!!

  192. Ruthie

    Can some of the sugar be left out? And can I replace any of the flour for whole wheat? Dying for zucchini bread but have to watch sugar and carb w type 2 diabetes. Thank you!

    1. DV

      I used less sugar (25%) and it was still sweet enough (for us). I also used white whole wheat flour (that’s what I had). It was delicious.

  193. Maddy Morgan

    I used frozen shredded zucchini to make this – I microwaved the 2-cup portion for a few minutes until it was just thawed enough to break apart, then did everything else as written. I had to bake it for almost half an hour extra, with tin foil on top for the last 20 minutes or so.

    I’m so glad this worked, since I have lots of zucchini that I shredded, portioned out, and froze for just this purpose!

  194. danitaday

    Turned out wonderful. I shredded all of my CSA zucchini and made this bread plus some zucchini fritters. The bread raised nicely and has a very crunchy top as I was generous with the raw sugar as suggested. Followed the instructions as is. Nice to not have to spend time ridding the zucchini of excess moisture.

  195. This recipe makes excellent french toast! Just set out a few slices to dry out the night before. Some of the best french toast I’ve ever made.

    1. sange

      well….you’re a genius. I can’t wait to try this. zucchini french toast would never have occurred to me and sounds amazing.

  196. DV

    5 stars. Definitely delicious! Not sure why the instructions recommend waiting 24 hours to enjoy! It was equally delicious last night (2 hours after baking) as it is today. The ‘lid’ sadly didn’t stay crisp (left it uncovered in loaf pan) but it’s incredibly tasty and so easy to make. I love that it’s sweet enough but not overly sweet, is so quick to put together without fuss or special equipment – you only need 1 bowl, 1 spoon, 1 grater.

  197. I doubled the recipe and used two Pyrex loaf pans. It baked for one hour and twenty minutes before the knife that I inserted came out batter free. I’m hoping it isn’t too dry. Can’t wait to taste!

  198. Made this yesterday and it was the best loaf ever! Used coconut oil for the oil. Don’t know why we were to leave it overnight, it was delicious 15 minutes out of the oven! Next I’ll try a vegan version with some flax and water for the eggs.

  199. Lili

    Exactly what I wanted! Left it uncovered too and no drying out! I had to share my weird partial sub. I didn’t have enough zucchini so I grated some broccoli stalks and guess what? Totally works :) Also used mostly whole wheat flour and the bread was still moist and crumbly. You’re recipes never let down, thanks for your diligence!

  200. Hi there ~ not only has this recipe granted me great results, but I really appreciate the way you have it laid out: when ingredients in the list are grouped according to the order they should be added in, the logic centers of my brain (not to mention, the nervous / newbie / easily-overwhelmed baker that I am) breathe a sigh of relief… it helps me get a better sense for the science of how it all comes together so, thanks for the thoughtfulness you put into your recipes. * Cheers *

  201. Amy

    Well, I have found my favorite zucchini bread recipe. Perfection! My husband despises zucchini but loves this. We added 3/4 cup total of dark chocolate chips and mini semisweet chips. This loaf will not last long!!!! We will gobble it up straightaway,

  202. vivian

    both the ultimate zucchini(with olive oil) + ultimate banana(with butter) are hands down – gold-standard recipes in both ease + results.
    the one tip i would offer is to grate the zucchini only to the core – using only the firmer part helps keep the moisture in check + produces a juicier loaf with a more concentrated zucchini flecks + flavour.
    thank you for inspiring a non baker to bake + gift killer edible love !

  203. Ann Moore

    I made this yesterday with zucchinis I got through a farm share–I hate zucchini, and zucchini bread is the only way I’ll consider eating it. This recipe is delicious, moist and the best part is you can’t even taste the zucchini! Thanks again, Smitten Kitchen, for nailing it!

  204. Kasey

    The old zucchini bread is my go-to recipe and it’s much loved, but I made the Ultimate Zucchini Bread recipe and it is lovely. But why did the spices get halved in the case of cinnamon and vanilla? Is it a bad idea if I mash up the two recipes to get the Pinnacle Zucchini Bread for my tummy?

  205. alessia

    I made this and it was the best I’ve ever had. Now, I have an abundance of carrots and I know they don’t have the same water content, but could this recipe be used with them? Thanks!!

  206. Marianne Porter

    I can’t honestly say I was happy. I baked it 37 minutes and the toothpick seemed clean, but with the not-sqooze-out zucchini, it was just damp and stodgy, especially in the lower depths.

  207. Pamela

    Your recipe is almost like the one I have been baking for years! YUM!
    As a matter of fact the photo of yours is exactly like the one I took out of my oven a couple weeks ago. Was your photographer in my kitchen?

  208. Jean Robertson

    Made this yesterday with frozen zucchini that I’d bagged specifically for this recipe last summer. Figured I should do this before the new zucchini arrives. ;-) I had a lot of liquid and the bottom of the bread is a solid gummy line. The rest was cooked through although I didn’t get the full rise that I do with the pumpkin bread.
    Still eating it as the flavour is excellent, but wondering if I should partly drain the frozen zucchini for next time? How watery is everyone’s batter?

  209. Carlee

    I just made this and it’s definitely a keeper. I subbed a cup of almond flour since it was sitting around and it probably didn’t rise as much as it would have with regular flour, but the top is still crispy and the inside is moist! In order to get around not digging in right away, I took some of the batter and filled 3 muffin wrappers. Not overly sweet and soooo good!! Is there a way to print this recipe?

  210. Carrie

    Amazing, as expected, and also a big hit with my toddler. I used 130g AP white flour and 120g whole wheat; reduced the white sugar to 50g; and used 1 tablespoon of white sugar on top as I didn’t have any coarse sugar. Excited to see how it tastes tomorrow!

    1. Carrie

      Meant to add that i baked it for 55 minutes and checked the internal temp, which was almost 210. Learning to judge the doneness of quick breads and muffins by internal temp was a game changer.

  211. Emily

    I know I will lose the awesome crunchy good crust, but could I otherwise freeze the zucchini bread to save some for later?

  212. Amy Sawyers-Williams

    Holy Moly! I just made these as muffins and wanted to say they are so so good. I also added 3/4 cup roasted pecan pieces and about 1/3 cup mini chocolate chips. I baked for 30 min and they came out perfect. These will be a new staple in our house- thanks Deb!

  213. Wendy

    I followed the directions (and even double checked because I have been known to leave something out!), but something went wrong or my taste buds have failed. (isn’t that a sign of covid-19??? :-)) There was no flavor. The zucchini was fresh. I even added a 1/4 tsp ground cloves and allspice and doubled the cinnamon and nutmeg. But the texture was good and the crusty top was delightful. It won’t go to waste. Still enjoyable with a cup of coffee. But I don’t get it. ???

  214. Diana

    Just pulled a beautiful tall loaf out of the oven! Now to wait 24 hours before diving in… When I realized Deb’s recipe was almost a 2/3 sizing down (but 1/2 the sugar- less guilt!) of my chocolate zucchini bread recipe (which makes 2 squat loaves), I added 1/4 cup cocoa powder and instead of Deb’s spices did 1/4 tsp each of cinnamon, nutmeg, glove, and cardamom. I’ve always had luck with a mixture of oil/applesauce/mashed bananas to replace the oil in my recipe, so I might try that here next time.

  215. Celeste

    We made this last night as an emergency lunch for my daughter to take to camp today. OMG it was amazing. So easy to throw together, leave on the stove overnight, and enjoy the next day. I was skeptical, but we loved it, the kids loved it, the grandparents loved it. I will be making this again and again for sure. So good. I have never made a recipe of yours that wasn’t amazing. Thank you for all of the work you do!

  216. Elaine

    I like to bake quick bread in 4”x 8” pans – I prefer the smaller slice size. I’m thinking I’ll double the recipe and get 3 4x8s out of it.

  217. Michael

    I made the bread yesterday using the red mill’s 1 to 1 gluten free flour and it was great. Everyone loved it, although the kids have a slight preference for the banana bread.

  218. Amy

    Came home from vacation to find a humongous 2lb zucchini in my garden. Grated and weighed it and ended up making 3 loaves of this bread. Added a little ground ginger for extra spice. Delicious! And thanks for including weights in your recipes!

  219. Laura

    I am making this now. How much will I regret it if I don’t wait until tomorrow to cut into it? My kids are going to have a hard time waiting (as am I).

  220. Jenny Barron

    I made this in a Bundt pan, sprinkled walnuts & turbinado sugar on top of batter. Pretty in a ring! I couldn’t wait to try it! Love that it’s less sugar! Very Delicious warm!

  221. Nancy in CA

    Trying this today, with my customary add-ins of bittersweet chocolate chips and toasted walnuts. I may up the leavening a tad to compensate for the add-ins. I’d fallen out of love with my usual zucchini bread recipe, which is the only one I found prior to this that used enough zucchini. I’ll report back!

    1. anabanana

      Nancy did you up the leavening? I added in blitzed toasted pecans to one tray of muffins and got good rise but the second on with in chocolate chips is a bit flatter. Still yummy but I am curious of your outcome!

      1. Nancy in CA

        Anabanana, I did up the leavening by 1/4 tsp each for a total of 1.5 cups of chocolate chips and toasted walnuts. It helped, but next time I’ll up the baking powder by another 1/4 to 1/2 tsp. My bittersweet chocolate chips are oversized. Somewhere I have a note that indicates a ratio of leaveners per cup of add-ins, but of course I can’t remember where I stashed it.

  222. Sophia

    I find most zucchini bread recipes to yield underwhelming results — but not this recipe! It has less sugar, you can actually taste some of the zucchini, and the crunchy top is everything.

    I replaced a third of the all-purpose with whole wheat flour and added a bit more oil. You can’t even tell the whole wheat flour is there!

  223. Jen D

    just made this one. Didn’t discover that i was out of brown sugar until i was wrist deep in making it. Subbed about 2/3 of the 1/2 cup measure with raw and buckwheat honey. Waiting right now… don’t know if i can resist until tomorrow

  224. Liz

    It’s that time of the year when all the people who grow zucchini have a glut of them and give them away for free, so that means it’s zucchini bread season! I’ve made this recipe a couple of times, and it’s one I come back to – I love how tender it is, how easy it is to make, and how well the zucchini flavour comes through.

    I tend to tweak a couple of things – like Kelly I reduced the overall sugar content by about 50g, and subbed about 1/3rd wholemeal flour (spelt) to kid myself that it’s healthy. It yields one perfectly-sized loaf and two muffins for the kid who simply couldn’t wait until the next day to eat some. Really delicious!

  225. Sharon

    Can’t wait to try this! If I want to add chocolate chips, how much would you recommend? Regular chips ok, or do you recommend mini chips? Thanks so much for sharing!

    1. anabanana

      I used regular chocolate chips for muffins. I would start with 1/4 c and then add more if it doesn’t look like enough – I think the chip to muffin ratio is a preference thing.

  226. denise chase

    My family and I love love this recipe. Not only easy but the best zucchini bread ever. Not oily like so many recipes. I add blueberries and pecans. I plant zucchini shred and freeze it just for this. Thank you so much.

  227. anabanana

    Delicious! I made 2 batches of this today with zucchinis from my sister. I made one in a loaf pan and added about 1 cup toasted pecans, it took about an hour to bake through. For the second batch I made muffins and got about 20, filling each about 3/4 full. I added the toasted pecans in to the batter and for the second tray of muffins I added in 1/4 c chocolate chips and did not add the sugar topping (these are for today-snacking). The muffins baked 25-27 minutes but I started checking at 20. I used the food processor to grate the veg (I somehow have a food processor but not a box grater??).

  228. Jake MacZ

    I made it as per the directions. It’s a very dense loaf and rather moist. I waited overnight to try it and it seems a bit oily this morning. Taste wise, it’s OK. I even added a tbsp. of molasses to it.

  229. Nancy Mirshah

    Of course it’s delicious, it has all that sugar in it. Can you make a recipe without sugar or with stevia that would be good? Prediabetic and trying to stay off sugar (and honey and syrup) …..

    1. deb

      Yes, you can fill them nearly to the brim. It should make about 12, possibly 13. I’d check the muffins at 22 minutes but they might take as long as 28.

      1. Heather

        Thank you! After posting I realized that about a million other people had already asked this question (it’s hard to see the comments on my phone).

        Zucchini in my garden is getting ready to explode, so perfect timing on this recipe.

  230. Mom23Boyz

    Anyone ever make this with a gluten free flour? Recommendations on brand? We have a newly diagnosed celiac so trying to adapt our favorite recipes!

    1. deb
  231. Bean

    Has anyone tried using less sugar? I usually use half of what recipes call for, don’t have much of a sweet tooth. Will textured get messed up?

    1. deb

      You can fill them nearly to the brim. It should make about 12, possibly 13. I’d check the muffins at 22 minutes but they might take as long as 28.

  232. Heidi

    Great recipe! I’d never made zucc bread before and this came out perfect. I did add a half cup of mini chocolate chips.

  233. Kat

    HOLY CROW this was delicious. We don’t have the willpower to wait, so we ate a few pieces that night… and I added some chia seeds (I’m partial to them). But even with modifications, it was the best zucchini bread we ever had. This was FANTASTIC

  234. Laura

    This was so easy to make. My newborn woke up from his nap and I was able to finish making it one handed while holding him in the other. That’s how easy! It also smells amazing!! It’s going to be hard to wait overnight before digging in.

  235. Ed Kasky

    I made this yesterday but couldn’t wait until today to try it. It lasted about 8 hours before we stole a slice. So moist! I attribute that to the juice from the zucchini and the oil. Toasted some in a pan this morning, shmeared it with moscarpone and am now in heaven. I am sure my glucose level went pretty high but it was worth it!

  236. bratschegirl

    I *just* made this and even not-quite-cooled fresh from the oven it’s wonderful. I had to adjust based on what’s on hand, so it’s whatever little squashes were in the CSA box this week (small, yellow on top/green on the bottom), all brown sugar, and half whole wheat/half white flour, and I’m pretty sure it was the right amount of baking soda but it was absolutely the last dregs of the box (I don’t bake much these days, this box could easily have been more than 5 years old!), and I threw a little powdered ginger in there along with the nutmeg and cinnamon (might add some cloves as well next time?). Since I store flour in the freezer and hadn’t brought it to room temp first, I ended up baking it for about 70 minutes total to get the center cooked through. The texture of the top is delightful. This will be my zucchini bread recipe from here on!

  237. Monica Chalupiak

    I’ve made many different recipes for zucchini bread over the years … I’m always looking for THE ONE … I stumbled across YOUR recipe and it looked interesting… I love mixing everything in one bowl … I made two loaves at the same time … only took 10 more minutes…they smelled heavenly!! I want a candle that smells like that !! They both looked just like your picture… It’ll be difficult , but I’ll leave them out overnight… gonna take one to work tomorrow… can’t wait to taste it … I’m sure it will taste as amazing as it looks … I think I’ve finally found THE ONE …

  238. Eliza

    LOVE this recipe! We waited a day before eating and it is unlikely to last another day since we keep eating and eating it. Such an easy recipe. Definitely a keeper! Thanks for another great recipe!

  239. Moonvirgo

    For grating the zucchini, do you peel them first? I have so far and am wondering if it is necessary or typical to do so.

    1. Laura

      I had the same question – but after scrutinizing the photos it didn’t look like she had peeled them before grating, so I didn’t either. They turned out great!

  240. Julia Bailey

    This was SO good, seriously delicious. Couldn’t wait until overnight so ate it on the day it was made, and then kept well for several days afterwards (uncovered as advised!). Going to make them into muffins to take on our holiday tomorrow!!

  241. Tara

    So very delicious. I added Walnuts and raisens and it was absolutely, TO DIE FOR!!! Also made muffins using this same recipe without the raisens and walnuts and OMG!!! SO GOOD!!!

  242. Kristina

    Made this yesterday and let it sit almost 24 hours before trying it. I love the amount of zucchini that is put into it and I love the crunchy top. However, I think next time I will wring the water out of the zucchini and use a second bowl to mix the dry ingredients. I found the whole cake to be squishier than I’d like it to be. Not undercooked, though I probably could have left it in the oven a bit longer, but it did pass the toothpick test on both the top and middle after 55 minutes.

  243. Megan

    I love this recipe and make it multiple times/summer. I skip the topping and add milk chocolate chips. I have made it with too little zucchini and too much zucchini and it turns out fine; going to try it with summer squash (love to grow it, hate to eat it). It always took way longer than 60 minutes, more like 90, until today, when I accidentally baked at 400–done in 64 minutes. They’re a little brown on top, so I think 375 might be the perfect compromise.

  244. Lynn

    I have a neighbor who has a cinnamon allergy. Wonder if this would still be great without it? Has anyone tried omitting cinnamon from a zucchini bread recipe and can share the results?

  245. Becky

    I just have to say — I put this in the oven, got distracted with work and completely forgot about it. It baked for almost 2 hours and was STILL delicious and perfectly moist on the inside! The outer edges were a little crispy, but very much edible. What a great recipe. THANK YOU!

  246. Sarah S

    This zucchini bread is so good, and I’ve tried a lot of zucchini bread recipes! I completely agree about adding more zucchini and was glad to see that’s what this recipe called for – it’s the best part! I wonder if you or anyone has tried it with less sugar? I may experiment with that next time to see if I can get away with it. (Only because of a Doctor-ordered low carb, low sugar diet right now while pregnant). Thanks

  247. Laura

    Loved this recipe! I have never been a fan of zucchini, but when I realized I had it growing in my garden (I had purchased a “victory garden” flat of veggie starts that included a squash.. I thought it was pumpkin; I was wrong), I turned to Smitten Kitchen for help. I remember zucchini bread as being just ok. This recipe is incredible. My kids are now anxiously awaiting our next harvest from the garden. My kids like it even better than banana bread (a favorite around here). There was actually a squabble over who got the last piece. Great recipe! Thanks!

  248. Sarah Heltzel

    I love that you think this could last 4-5 days 😂. We knocked it out in two, and it took effort for it to last that long. Making another one tonight! Trying it this time switching half the oil for applesauce and hoping I don’t regret it. Good thing I have more zucchini to try another if I fail…

  249. Logan Clevenger

    Love this recipe. I did the sugar this way: 1/4 cup dark brown muscovado and 3/4 coconut sugar. It came out amazing and even more moist i believe because of the muscovado sugar

  250. Maggie

    This is a great recipe but it is way too sweet. I use 60% of the original sugar and add an egg to replace moisture. It always turns out great.

  251. Mary Collier Fleet

    This was delicious…I added 1/4 cup cocoa…then realized I forgot to adjust the flour amount but it turned out well and not too sweet, the way I like it. Will make it again, with and without the cocoa.

  252. Tess

    Best zucchini bread ever! So moist! I love how easy and simple this recipe is. Honestly, I’m not an avid baker, so I only have one 9×5 loaf pan. This recipe allows me to use the equipment I have whereas most other recipes require two loaf pans.

  253. Jean B.

    I made this as muffins. I added about a cup of bittersweet chocolate chips (as other posters have recommended). It made one dozen muffins that rose beautifully. It took 35 minutes at 350. The muffins are delicious, but honestly the addition of chocolate chips (not in the original recipe) was sort of distracting. Next time I’d make the recipe without chocolate chips but possibly with chopped walnuts. I think the flavor would go well. To my taste the muffins were a bit too sweet, but that was with the chocolate chips which add sugar. Still, next time I make the recipe I’d cut back on the granulated sugar a bit. Great recipe.

  254. Christiane Robinson

    What happens if I ran out of white flour and I had to substitute whole wheat flour instead? Also, is cane sugar the same thing as granulated sugar? Can they be used interchangeably ? Please let me know. Thank you.

    1. deb

      Granulated sugar is cane sugar, too, but cane sugar-labeled packaged sugar can range from fine, white, and very granulated sugar-looking to something more coarse and brown. Either should work but may bake up differently. Re, whole wheat, you can, but it might be more dry and less tender.

  255. Sarah

    Okay. Hot weather + small kitchen + gas oven = need to bake early in the morning. Just pulled it out of the oven & checked the rest of the recipe for cooling instructions. 24 HOURS!?!? Sometimes, Deb, I swear you live solely to torture us. But I trust you. And will be rewarded, even if not until tomorrow morning. Sigh.

  256. Maureen Ley

    I’ve made this twice now, first time added blueberries, second time added peaches. I also cut the sugar in half. Sheesh, this is fabulous! I made it as muffins and passed them out to neighbors, to raves. Thank you!

  257. Mahtab

    I was at the farmers market and decided to buy some zucchini toast to make that ultimate zucchini bread you posted the other day…got home and realized you posted it a YEAR ago! How did that happen?! In any case, my husband and two year old were delighted this morning when they were finally allowed to taste it! It was shockingly delicious :)

  258. Mahtab

    I was at the farmers market and decided to buy some zucchini to make that ultimate zucchini bread you posted the other day…got home and realized you posted it a YEAR ago! How did that happen?! In any case, my husband and two year old were delighted this morning when they were finally allowed to taste it! It was so delicious. Thanks for another keeper!

  259. Kate

    I made this twice in a week it’s so good! And, I made it with gluten free all purpose flour and it was great! It’s a perfect, delicious recipe and I can’t thank you enough.

    1. Anita Hensley

      Delicious! Even my Uber picky grandsons loved it, I was nervous they see the zucchini shreds and not eat it. I made it into 12 muffins and one small loaf. So moist and tasty. Did eat it immediately after cooling; but the muffins saved until morning were even more yummy. Excellent as always Deb- your recipes are always a thumbs up!!

  260. Teresa

    I’ve made this twice, it’s fabulous! The sugary top is brilliant. First time around it was kind of under done inside, I had turned the oven down a bit. So this time I omitted a little bit of zucchini because that’s all I had, and at around 50 minutes, I tented the top with aluminum foil so the sugar wouldn’t burn. Baked it for the full 60. Thank you for this!

  261. Caroline

    I just made a loaf and loved it! I’ve reduced the granulated sugar to 1/4 cup and added 3/4 cup of raisins to the mix. Maximum taste plus minimal effort = recipe to keep!!

  262. Cathy

    So very good, so easy…I will make this again and again and will never need another recipe for zucchini bread!! Thank you!!

  263. I made this because a friend gave me a big zucchini from her garden, followed the recipe exactly and have never gotten so many compliments. I’d like to make two 1 lb. loaves rather than the 2 lb. loaf the recipe calls for. My question is should I bake the two loaves for the same amount of time (55 – 60 minutes) the recipe calls for or reduce the baking time? If the latter, for how long should I bake them? Thanks!

    1. deb

      Smaller loaves will bake faster, but I’m not sure how much. I’d check in about half or 2/3 of the way through the baking time, and from there, more often, until a toothpick comes out clean.

  264. Lisa G

    OK two thumbs up for this! Hubby says it reminds him (postively) of bread pudding (which I do not like), but it just really lovely. I used pearl sugar on top – nom, love the crunchy topping.

    I am harvesting about 12 courgettes (zucchini) each day so a really good recipe is vital. I have grated portions already for the freezer so we won’t miss it after the deluge…

  265. Peggy Haine

    We got “zucchini bombed” by a neighbor, and were searching for non-wasteful ways to use a huge squash (we usually use them for target practice). Your best-ever zucchini bread recipe came just at the right time. We loved its crunchy top and perfect spices, but thought it needed some walnuts for additional crunch. However, no basic complaints here.

  266. Donna Nowell

    So so delicious!! I had bought the raw sugar for your banana bread and never got around to it! Glad that I found this recipe to use it. Love it! I’ll be using this sugar topping method for future baked goods.

  267. Dana Kitchens

    I made this zucchini bread last night. Love the recipe and your take on keeping zucchini wet and the ease of putting it together, but then was surprised that the bread was still a bit dry! What could I have done wrong?

  268. laurie rainer

    My zucchine bread is in the oven. I’m one person and bake often. Can you freeze half of this? If “yes” how do you suggest wrapping it?
    I ❤️ Smitten Kitchen. My pandemic site of choice. Always hapoy with the tesults
    Thanks

  269. Fran Woodrooffe

    I made this two of them actually one after the other because the first one was so good..
    it is easy and uses a bunch of zucchini ..I loved the special instructions about leaving it uncovered overnight so that the top retains the crunch..very cute and true!!

    Delicious..thank you

  270. Theresa

    This is my new go-to zucchini bread recipe. I grated all the squash I had in the fridge, and it was enough for a double batch. I used half melted butter and half avocado oil. I also used Trader Joe’s Pumpkin Pie Spice, because much to my surprise, I was out of cinnamon. Must’ve been all of the pandemic baking! Threw about a half cup of chocolate chips and a cup of walnuts in. 2 large loaves took about an hour to bake. It was perfection. Easy, moist, not overly sweet.

  271. Kirsten Eastwood

    Hello! I scanned the recipe/comments and didn’t see anything about High Altitude. Any thoughts? I’m at 5280′ in Denver and definitely want to give it a try, but don’t want to mess it up!

    Thanks much!

  272. Clara

    I usually have good success with smitten kitchen recipes but this was a huge fail. The only good part was the crusty top with the turbinado sugar. Ate the next day as recommended and the loaf tasted and smelled like raw flour. Definitely better recipes out there, I absolutely wouldn’t make this again

  273. Sue

    I made this bread last night. By far the best recipe I have ever had for zucchini bread. I made 4 loaves baked all 4 loaves on the same rack in the oven. Added about 8 min. For a total of 68 min. They turned out perfect taste great. Thank you for such a good recipe.

  274. Yenny

    Delicious! I have made this twice. My favourite part in the crunchy topping! I loved the ease of the recipe plus the fact that it is only for 1 loaf instead of 2! Two adjstments I made:
    – Cook time: First time I made it in a loaf pan and it was very undercooked. Second time I baked it in a 8×8 pan and had it in the oven for an extra 15 mins and it came out perfect!
    – I added extra cinnamon as well as nutmeg and clove! I love my spice!
    – I also did not wait the 24 hours to eat and it was just as delicious! I loved it warm from the over

    I will def be making this again! Thanks!

  275. Taranee Albert

    Hi! I made this recipe – delicious, by the way – but I did have an unexpected result. The ends were baked, but the middle section was raw, and had a hole in it the size of a golf ball. When I was done baking it, I had tested it with a toothpick and with a skewer (I don’t have a cake tester), and both came out clean. What happened?

    Been following you for years. Your site is my go-to for all things baking :) Thanks so much!

      1. Taranee

        The hole may have been too deep for the toothpick, but I was pretty sure I had poked the skewer through it; the raw parts were throughout the middle of the bread, I thought the skewer would have at least hit some of it. Could it also be because I used too much zucchini?

        So for next time – I’m hearing I should definitely poke around at bit. Are there any other signs I can look for to see if it needs a bit longer?

        1. Jean B.

          I’ll jump in here and respond that yes, if you added more zucchini than the recipe called for it will affect the batter, making it wetter and heavier. That will affect cooking time and give it a heavy, gluey texture. So you may have figured out what went wrong. I made this and it turned out great. But any time you tamper with a baking recipe you may not get the result you expect! Good luck!

    1. deb

      There is a print icon that leads to a print template at the bottom of each recipe, where it says “DO MORE:” You can also click CTRL or ⌘ + P from any recipe post and it will take you to a streamlined print template. We will definitely make it easier to find when we next redesign.

  276. OOh, looks interesting. I’ve never eaten or made zucchini bread before. Will have to wait until summer (I’m in New Zealand), when I’ll have a crop in my garden to use. Due to covid, zucchini are ridiculously expensive here at the moment.

  277. Fran

    I absolutely love this ZucchiniBread thank you for the recipe…
    don’t understand people having trouble with holes etc..
    I made one one day another the next ..no prob..
    I guess everyones ovens are different..

    Crunchy top the best!!

  278. M

    Can you sub unsweetened apple sauce for the oil? I love this recipe, I’m just also on weight watchers and while I usually don’t count daily drizzles of olive oil, I’d have to count 2/3 of a cup! Thank you for everything you do!!

  279. Bev Appleby

    This is the best zucchini bread I have ever eaten. My husband made it yesterday, loved the one bowl, get it done method. We have devoured most of the loaf ourselves.
    It is everything you said it would be and will be our absolute go to for the overflow crop. Thank you for your many foolproof recipes.

  280. Rachel T

    Made these just now, DELICIOUS! I made them gluten free muffins: 120 g sorghum flour, 50 g tapioca flour, the rest i used a GF baking mix (but I’ll use just sorghum and tapioca next time, increasing the weight according to the above ratio). Also added 3/4 tsp xantham gum. Baked both muffin tins at once for 20 mins on convection, rotating halfway through.

    As GF baked goods react differently with, among other things, air, I’ll test out half the batch left out as per the recipe instructions, half go in the freezer once cooled. Couldn’t resist eating one immediately- I can rationalize it by referring to the previous comment on air, but really it was because they smelled so dang good! I regret nothing.

  281. Susan L. Stillman

    I made this zucchini bread vegan by using ground flaxseed and water to sub for the eggs (2 TBS flaxseed meal and 5 TBS water that sits for 10 minutes before using). I always make my as muffins because I can freeze muffins for longer keeping and portion control. It is true that the muffins/bread are better the next day. The baking soda taste disappears.

  282. Michael

    This is the best zucchini bread recipe ever, I’ve made it many times this summer since my garden is producing massive amounts of fresh zucchini. I like it a little bit sweeter so I usually increase the total sugar to 1-1/4 cups. The sugar topping is good while fresh but turns sticky quickly so I usually skip it if i’m going to give the bread away. This recipe is infinitely adaptable and I sometimes add nuts/chocolate chips and vary the spices. I have also tweaked it to make chocolate (replace 60g of the flour with cocoa, increase total sugar to about 1-1/2 cups) and lemon varieties (all granulated sugar, add zest of two lemons, 2 tablespoons of lemon juice, and 1/2 teaspoon of lemon extract).

  283. JT

    Thanks for posting this recipe! My father and sister both garden and have been giving me vast quantities of zucchini. I am expecting my first child in 3 weeks so have been baking up goodies to freeze so we have treats to munch on when baby comes. Perhaps worth noting that I am at high altitude (6,000 ft).

    I made this twice: the first time as a loaf using vegetable oil and chia seeds to replace the eggs. (I have some vegan family members) This was tasty but it did not dome up in the middle and was a little soggy in areas – at first I thought it was underdone (baked for 1hr 10 min) but I think the issue was the chia seed replacement. It seemed that the zucchini clumped up in areas and made little soggy spots. It did have a nice crust on top. Even with the soft areas, I would make again with the egg replacement – my family members said “it’s not soggy, it’s moist”. (Next time I may wring out the zucchini when using the vegan egg replacement in case that might help.)

    The second time I made muffins and used actual eggs (filled my muffin tins pretty much to the top – there was enough batter for 12 and they domed up but not too high. Baked for 25 minutes at 350.) These were perfect which for me confirms that the issue with the loaf was the egg replacement. Overall very happy with the recipe and planning to make another batch of muffins to freeze!

  284. Amy

    Added 1/2 cup of carrot because I ran out of zucchini (1 1/2 cups) and they were not only delicious but really lovely to boot! And we baked them as muffins and mini- muffins. 25 minutes and 16 minutes respectively. They freeze very well.

  285. Rebekah Baylus

    Well, this was just perfect! I will say that no one wanted to wait until tomorrow to try it, and it’s half gone now. The three kids who ate it like zucchini in most forms, but this was a big hit. I followed the recipe exactly, and baked it for an hour. One bowl. One mixing fork. Deliciousness. Win-win.

  286. joanne opdahl

    Made this yesterday and it is hands down the BEST ever !! The neighbor gave me a large over grown zucchini and she is allergic to eggs so I followed the suggestion and used applesauce in place of the eggs. ( 1/4 cup per egg ) Followed all the other directions to the letter and everyone raved about it . Moist, full of flavor and loving the sugar sprinkle on top. WINNER !! Thanks for the excellent recipe. Joy !!

  287. Xara

    I’m here to report that this is an extra-good recipe. My mom died recently, and a week or two later my friend gave me a large zucchini from his garden. It spent a few days on my counter, then got put in the refrigerator. It was all but forgotten during the very busy days of working on emptying my mom’s house for sale, and eating lots of carryout. Fast forward to last weekend when I took the six-week-old zucchini out of the fridge, grated it up, and made this. I took some that night to the zucchini’s grower and told him that it had been made with his antique zucchini. He was surprised. We both found it delicious even though yes, we were eating it on the very day it was baked. I’ve kept the remainder in the loaf pan, haven’t even bothered to wrap foil around the exposed end, and it is very, very good. Hard to say if it’s actually improved in the three days since I baked it, but it certainly hasn’t lost anything.

  288. Marianne

    Delicious! We’ve made them twice in the past week, in loaf and muffin form. My daughter is allergic to eggs so I tried several subs to make them vegan. The best results were with half a cup of seltzer water. It was surprisingly fluffy for a vegan baked good and stayed moist even after a few days.

  289. Holly

    So I made a couple loaves tonight. I let them cool and tried two slices. I found them to be bland. They had a hint of sweetness but not like my mother’s recipe. I had to make honey butter to put on them to add some more sweetness. Normally I love your recipes but this one will be a no for me.

  290. Lynn

    I’ve now made 4 loaves of this stuff in the past 2 days. Hands down, the best zucchini bread recipe I’ve ever tried….and I’ve made a LOT of zucchini bread in my day! I never even bother growing it because my neighbors will “zuke bomb” me, leaving a zucchini on the porch, ringing the doorbell and running away (not really on that last part haha).

    Because of the number of loaves I’m making, I didn’t leave it in the pan overnight, but it’s just as tasty with that crunchy top out of the pan. Also, added about 3/4 – 1 cup chopped walnuts because I like them in my bread.

    I seriously will never need another zucchini bread recipe, ever. Thanks so much!

  291. lauralynn stephen

    Thank you so much for sharing this recipe, it is a keeper, for sure! First time I made it, I followed directions with the exception of using light brown sugar instead of dark (its what I had in the pantry). This time, I spread my wings a bit and added some walnuts and cranberries…not too many, just enough for a little bud surprise. Hubs is super excited to have some tonight…..don’t think I have the heart to make him wait until morning.

  292. Katie

    I made this and it turned out great. Perfect texture and moisture level. I replaced cinnamon with cardamom for a different flavor and it was delicious. While it is hard to wait overnight for it to cool, it does taste better the next day.

  293. Donna Currie

    Great recipe, came out moist and wonderfully delicious. I did add 1/2 cup of chopped walnuts. Thank you and this will be my only zucchini loaf that I will be making in the future.

  294. Andrea

    I have a fresh blue Hubbard squash that is curing at the moment. Do you think I can replace the zucchini with the roasted and puréed squash?

    Thanks!

    1. deb

      I’m not sure it’s a clear swap here because there’s a different moisture content, however, I do think you could use the mashed puree in this pumpkin bread. The key is you want the puree to have the same moisture content as canned pumpkin; add a spoonful or two of water if it’s more dry.

    1. deb

      My cups of flour weigh in at 130 grams. Some people (King Arthur Baking) get 120 grams. Cook’s Illustrated uses 140 grams. I find the middle to be the most accurate.

  295. Sue

    It’s great in a coconut chocolate chip variant as well. Omit the cinnamon and nutmeg, and add 1 cup shredded unsweetened coconut and 3/4 cup mini chocolate chips, plus 1/2 teaspoon coconut extract.

  296. Shawn

    For the zucchini bread in the pictures, did you use butter or oil for the fat? The texture looks perfect and I want to do my best to recreate it.

  297. Nancy McCormack Demren

    Hi Deb! I’ve made this numerous times before and love it but just wondering if you think I could do half zucchini and half grated apple? I happen to have a bunch of apples on hand. Also maybe I should cut the sugar a bit? Thanks! Love your recipes! Been following you for quite a while :)

    1. deb

      Thank you! I think you could. I’m not sure it would need much less sugar because I don’t find that apples bake up sweet unless sugar is added. But you might be able to drop 3T

  298. Megan

    This was delicious! So moist. After seeing the recommendation to add miso to banana bread over on 600 Acres, I tried that here with 1tbsp (I have too much miso and am trying to pare down the jars in my fridge!). Also, discovered I was out of white sugar, so subbed brown sugar for the whole recipe. And used a summer squash from my CSA, rather than green zucchini. All amendments seemed to have no negative effects, and look forward to making this recipe again!

  299. Elizabeth

    Thank you for providing delicious, one-bowl recipes! I have really enjoyed making your one bowl banana and pumpkin breads and sharing them with friends and family during this pandemic. I so appreciate not having to wash extra dishes or drag out heavy equipment. Thank you!!

  300. Emily

    I have made this all summer with lovely results. But the last two times, especially leaving it on the counter as Deb recommends, an unpleasant taste and excessive moistness has happened after 2 days – I can’t even quite explain the taste, but it’s not good. Is it that I didn’t bake the bread long enough (I did at 55 min)? Or the zucchini are just too most? I did the recipe exactly as called but subbed in 1/2 cup of whole wheat barley flour. I don’t want anymore to go to waste in the compost bin :(

  301. KatieK

    It’s right up there with your ultimate banana bread; I think the crunchy topping is the crowning glory!
    It look more than one bowl; I had to weigh out the flour and I mixed the oil, eggs, sugars, etc. together. But it was pretty easy sailing and that. It took 65 minutes. I let it cool off but was feeling the need for a little sweet thing at 4 this afternoon and had an end piece. It was PERFECT! I know it’ll be even better tomorrow.
    Thanks again, Deb.

  302. Emily

    I made this twice this weekend. So many zucchinis! The first time I made it exactly as written. I used a scale to weigh the ingredients in grams which is my preferred way to bake. The loaf took about 57 minutes to reach perfection and it had an amazing dome. I love it. My husband found it much too sweet for his liking, so I said I’d make a second batch with 50% reduction in sugar. So, the next day, I shredded more zucchini (used a food processor. So easy!) I followed the recipe except for I cut both types of sugar in half. I made muffins with this round and still used copious turbinado on the top. They needed about 30 mins in the oven and came out great. A bit more breakfast and less treat with the sugar reduction! I liked it both ways.

  303. Natalie

    This was excellent (even when we ate it right out of the oven since we couldn’t stand to wait a day)! My go to recipe from now on.

  304. Maureen

    Are you telling me (after an exhaustive missive about how common-sense, practical, and easy this recipe is) that you have to cool it OVERNIGHT?!
    Yeah, that’s not going to happen. Mine’s in the oven now – I’ll report back if there is an unparalleled disaster when I bust into it a couple hours from now!

    1. KatieK

      I’ve made this several times; the texture is definitely better if it waits until it’s completely cool. Deb posts in a couple of places how it firms up and doesn’t crumble as much. Same is true for her ultimate banana bread.

      1. Maureen Carroll

        KatieK,

        Thanks for responding! My question is: isn’t a couple hours enough to completely cool? Is overnight going to improve it much more? I did a couple hours, and we LOVED it. Hmmm – I guess I’ll just have to make it again and see if there is a difference! ;-)

        thanks!

        1. KatieK

          Several hours will get it cool enough so it can get out of the pan to further cool. I admit, I usually sneak a piece from the end. But it is still better the next morning. Nothing is lost by cutting a piece off a bit prematurely. The trick is keeping the top’s wonderful sugary crust, so I usually tip it over cut side down, with the other end up in the air. Make sense???

        2. deb

          It’s not really about the cooling, as much as what happens when the ingredients settle in for a bunch of hours. I promise, it’s great right out of the oven. But it’s exceptional the next day or, say, 8 to 12 hours later. The crumb becomes more unified, less loose. The bread tastes more moist. And the top gets further dry and crisp.

  305. This is WONDERFUL. I followed your instructions to the letter, except (ha ha!) I stirred it not with a fork but one of those bread dough stirrer things (aka Danish dough whisk), which works a treat. Thanks to all the zucchinis random people give me, and thanks to this recipe, I have bags and bags of preshredded zucchini in my freezer, all weighed to the gram just for this recipe. I love the crunchy top; I love how moist it is; I love how you just leave it in the pan out on the counter, so you can have a slice while on a break. This recipe is a total win.

  306. Adriana

    Have just converted my entire family to zucchini bread…the same family that swore they wouldn’t like zucchini bread or anything with spices! awesome recipe! So delicious!

  307. Traci

    I recently made your ultimate banana bread and looooooved it! I was looking for a lemon zucchini bread recipe and came here hoping you would have something like that. I was thinking of adapting this recipe to make a lemon zucchini bread. Aside from the obvious change in spices, do you think I would need to make any major modifications with regard to moisture? Thanks!

  308. JP – Seattle

    I made this for the zillionth time today but realized at the end a stupid mistake. I was using a 3/4 cup instead of a 1 cup for the flour. Ugh. No wonder it looks a little short, rather than it usual glorious crowning magnificence! We shall see what happens.

  309. Kathleen

    I have a question about testing for doneness. The recipe says to bake until the toothpick or tester comes out “batter-free” but later in the comments people are saying until the toothpick comes out clean. Which one is correct? In my mind, batter-free means that there may still be crumbs on the tester but no wet, raw batter and clean means nothing on the tester. Maybe I am wrong though and they mean the same thing! What do you all think? Are batter-free and clean the same thing? And which one should I use to measure the doneness of this cake?

  310. Kate

    Made this last night and it looks just like the photo – gorgeous. I used two really packed cups of grated zucchini and waited until morning to eat. The bread was very moist, and I loved the turbinado sugar topping, but it tasted a wee bit vegetal to me – probably the result of me using a bit too much zucchini. And I missed the crunch and savory taste of nuts. I see the other zucchini bread recipe on this site calls for walnuts. I’ll use that one next time. It looks to be the same except for the nuts!

  311. JP

    I made a double batch of this zucchini bread and both loaves look just like yours. Really like the crunchy top and it is still delicious after 5 days on the counter unwrapped! It is just the two of us, and we will finish it off tonight. All went exactly as you said…so nice not to have to squeeze zucchini juice out of the grated zucchini! Thank you for the recipe. The second loaf went to two friends and they loved it. One is from Samoa and he had never had zucchini bread- but they finished their loaf off before us!

  312. Natasha

    I’ve made this twice now. The first time it was beautiful! Really tall and moist and the zucchini bread of dreams.

    The second time it was not ….. it flattened out while it cooled and was very very stodgy. I ended up binning it to be honest – deciding it wasn’t worth the calories. I did use a mix of pastry flour and bread flour (about 60-40) rather than AP as it is what I had around when I decided to make this at 9pm. But I don’t think that would do it.

    That said I would still try the recipe again on the memories of the first loaf. Worth noting that for me both times it took more like 75-80 minutes to be cooked.

  313. Nancy

    Just finally made this zucchini bread yesterday with a late zucchini harvest from my COVID garden. I have never really liked zucchini bread BUT you have converted me!
    Delicious, moist, crunchy top, flavorful! I’m so glad I waited overnight and left it in the pan! Perfect breakfast! Thank you!!

  314. Suzanne Roberts

    I’m a diabetic and this recipe has way to much real sugar in it for me.
    I usually use Mankato Monk Fruit Sugar substitute. Can I use it in this recipe without any “damage” to the outcome?
    Thanks

  315. Maureen Therese Blackmun

    Hello, Thank you for the great blog! I have a question about bread pans. Which is the best and what do you think about foil pans?

  316. Anna K

    I made this last night.
    I used half the caster sugar, and didn’t have raw sugar for the top so sprinkled some light brown.
    Put it this way; it did not make it to 24 hours before the plague of locusts that are my two young children ate the whole thing. It was delicious. The only effort required was grating the courgette; easiest recipe I’ve ever made. Thank you Deb. Next time I’m making two and putting one higher than the telescopic reach of the four-year-old.

  317. Camille

    My first zucchini bread and it was so easy and turned out perfectly! For some reason I’d been thinking shredding zucchini takes so long but it goes quickly, even with my toddler “helping” me make this. Didn’t have raw or turbinado sugar so sprinkled 1 TBSP of granulated sugar on top and still got the crunchy crust. Will def make again.

  318. Sarah Ewick

    Deb!

    I’ve made the ultimate zucchini bread a few times now and the first few times it came out absolutely delicious and perfect! the last 2x I made it though (most recently this morning), it doesn’t cook through and I don’t know what I’m doing wrong?!

    I have an oven thermometer and the oven temp seems right. I may have added a *bit* more than 2c zucchini, but not much. I added 15-20m to the cooking time and it was still really raw throughout. Beyond that, after I took the pan out of the oven the top (that has in the past always stayed really puffed up and crispy) completely sunk in and deflated.

  319. Ok lets be real…it’s a pandemic…I’ve baked a million different types of “breads”. I have to tell you, this is THE best zucchini bread I’ve made. It’s like, walk by and take a corner, “straighten out the loaf” good…You can’t stop yourself. I’ve told everyone I know to stop looking at other zucchini bread recipes and make this one. Thanks Deb!

  320. Abby

    Stole the proportions from this to make apple-carrot-ginger muffins, and reporting back for the legion of other egg-free bakers in the comments. I one-and-a-halted the recipe to make two pans of smallish muffins (for little kids).

    Grated two apples and two carrots to match the zucchini by weight. Used flaxseed instead of eggs; didn’t add any water. Olive oil. Used about 60g less sugar, because (1) apples and carrots are sweeter than zucchini, and (2) I was adding about 80g of minced crystallized ginger. Skipped the cinnamon and nutmeg. Used about half white whole wheat flour and half all purpose.

    This got me 21 muffin cups filled ~7/8 full; I baked them for 30 mins.

  321. Kathryn

    I made this recipe with half of the sugar and stirred in walnut pieces and cacao chips at the very end. Delicious! (And maybe healthy…?)

  322. Laura

    I just made this and it looks amazing. I do have a question though – I feel that all of my quick bread recipes (this, banana bread, the morning glory bread) never puff up like I want them to. Any advice or ideas? All ingredients are fresh. I live in SF so the altitude shouldn’t be a problem. Thanks in advance! :)

  323. Raphaelle

    I made this according to the recipe and baked it in my 1 cup Souper Cubes (~45min). One batch of the recipe made 4 little loaves, which cut well into 2 or 3 slices each (depends on how thick you like your slices). So pleased with how they turned out! Crunchy top and all :)

  324. Vanessa

    This is a great recipe. I love that it uses so much zucchini. I’ve made it with olive oil and also with a more neutral oil (peanut, in this case) and I substantially prefer it with the neutral oil. It is extremely moist and the sugar crust really makes it.

  325. jessica michaud

    I have made this and followed all your directions and it was delish. I want to make again but am curious about freezing since you don’t mention that.

  326. JP—Seattle

    Has anyone made this with the addition of yogurt or Greek yogurt? We have an excellent local yogurt company which has lemon curd Greek yogurt and I’d like to sub some of this in, but don’t want to wreck it. Would I replace the oil, or part of the oil, with yogurt? Or is this a bad idea? Thanks!

  327. Diane Lansing

    Best zucchini cake ever! Light, not too oily, not too sweet. Great the second day BUT, a warm slice fresh from the oven was delicious, too.

  328. Ashley

    I LOVE this recipe! I was so excited to find a zucchini bread recipe that used the whole thing – that you didn’t have to squeeze dry. I made it – followed the directions to the t which I don’t normally do. Well it certainly lived up to it’s name. I’ve made it several times now and have deleted every other zucchini bread recipes from my Pinterest board.

  329. Sarah

    I must’ve made this a dozen times last year, it’s so delicious. Can’t wait for the zucchini deluge from my garden to start again! I have a question. Do you think there’s a way to incorporate sourdough starter discard? Thank you!

  330. Marcia

    Quick and easy bread! Two zucchini around 18cm long got me the perfect amount of grated zucchini. To decrease the sweetness, I cut the dark brown sugar to 85 grams and the granulated sugar to 50 grams. Good if you don’t want a dessert-y bread but I may increase it a tad in future.

  331. shmelse

    I make this with everything as is except way less sugar inside. 60ish grams of brown sugar, no white sugar. No change to the sugar on top. If you’re wondering about less sugar, this is definitely doable.

    Recipe is amazing. Cannot get enough. With some creme fraiche on top it is life changing!

  332. Sabrina

    I have never for the life of me understood why one would squeeze all the juice out of the zuchinni and then re-add moisture later. This bread is fantastic and super forgiving. I didn’t have the raw sugar on hand so no delicious crunchy top for me, but it turned out absolutely AMAZING. I added in some walnuts for a little crunch instead. So delicious and easy to make! Thank you for including weights for all your recipes, especially when so many veggie or fruit based recipes on other sites say “medium” or “small” – like, what does that mean?!

    Highly recommend this recipe exactly as written!

  333. Kate

    I’m in Uzbekistan until the end of the year and am doing my best to introduce my colleagues here to Smitten Kitchen cakes, cookies, etc. Now that we are entering zucchini season I’m hoping to make this zucchini bread for them. However, there is no brown sugar here – and also no molasses. Do you have any recommendations – both for this recipe and more generally in your recipes – for brown sugar substitutions? Can I just use white sugar? Should I add a little bit of honey?

  334. Ross Rasmussen

    Wow! This is the best I’ve ever made. I served slices spread with cardamom scented cream cheese sweetend with blackberry blossom honey, finished with a bit of Fleur de Sel. It got rave reviews (and several requests for seconds). This moves into my permanent collection of tried and tested recipes. Thanks so much!

  335. Phil Tattersall

    This is definitely the last zucchini bread recipe I’ll ever need! Sooo good…it is the ultimate one that I’ve made….especially needed as it is a way to try to keep up with my sprouting zucchini plants. As Marge Piercy says “They’re coming, they’re on us, the long striped gourds, the silky babies, the hairy adolescents, the lumpy vast adults like the trunks of green elephants….You give and give too much, like summer days limp with heat…”

  336. Sherryn

    My ZB looked exactly like yours. Gorgeous and yummy! Thank you for helping me quickly dispense with a zucchini the size of my thigh (which is sure to be bigger after devouring this loaf!)

  337. sara

    I really tried to wait the 24 hours but I couldn’t manage the wait. Made as written except…. I didn’t have white sugar, so brown + maple syrup. Really fantasic and proclaimed the best zucchini bread my audience has tasted. Thanks Deb! Next time, I’ll double the recipe.

  338. Ilene

    I am trying to find a 9 x 5 loaf pan. Very difficult. All of the name-brand ones (Williams-Sonoma, Sur La Table, Chicago Metallic and USA) are 8-1/2 x 4-1/2. Can you please tell me where I can find a 9 x 5? For zucchini bread, banana bread etc. Thank you!

    1. deb

      8.5 x 4.5 should be fine too. You can do the water test: See if it holds 6 liquid cups. If it does, you should be good to go. If it doesn’t, just bake off a muffin or two to be safe.

  339. Ruth

    Hi Deb,
    I am making your zucchini bread recipe today. I had one zucchini. Usually I do not mess with a recipe the first time I make it but today, well , I had to make some adjustments. One zucchini yielded 1 3/4 c shredded. Oops. So I shredded a carrot to make up the difference. No turbinado sugar. Oh well. I ‘ll miss the sweet crunch. Added chocolate chips ( some semisweet and some bittersweet because I didn’t have enough of both). Oh and decided to make muffins not bread….. Roughly 20 min to bake. Still cooling. Look and smell great. The true test is if my husband and son approve. Fingers crossed!

  340. Bobbi

    First of all let me say you are my favorite food blogger, I’ve never made a recipie of yours I didn’t like! I do have a question on this, can you add in any chocolate morsels or nuts or reasons to this recipie? It looks fantastic and I’m planning on making a plain one just as the recipie says but wanted to see if you thought it would still be ok to make a second loaf with added morsels or nuts.

  341. Julie

    This is glorious. I made it vegan by swapping the eggs for aquafaba, but otherwise stayed true to the recipe. It is easily the best (and easiest) zucchini bread I have ever had. It looks exactly like the photos, even with the swap, and the texture is moist, tender, and perfect. Thank you!

  342. Kara

    This is seriously the best recipe I have tried. It is easy, quick, and delicious—one bowl, no mixer. Skipping the step of straining the zuc makes sense and saves time. I made it gluten free, dairy free and subbed coconut sugar—still dense and delicious. Follow the directions!! (Except of course if you are subbing for allergies;)

  343. Niki

    I died laughing reading this post….and your witty zucchini sarcasm is spot on! I want a tall, craggy, crunchy top that I have to swat hands away at….and you gave it to me! One tall, gorgeous loaf, not 2 squat ones. yes please!!! Cannot wait to make this as soon as I can harvest my first zucchini!!! I’m counting down the hours….maybe I’ll sneak one in my cart at the grocery store. Shhhhhh!

  344. Erin C

    I just made this zucchini bread recipe, and it is the absolute best I’ve ever tried!!! It was gone so fast, it didn’t make it to the next day! I was hoping to buy it in book form because I’d rather make a recipe from a book instead of a website – I’m “old school”! Can you tell me which of your cookbooks I might be able to find this recipe in, so that I can order it?

  345. Victoria

    Made it, so good! I used my food processor for the zucchini. Added some chocolate chips, otherwise followed the recipe exactly. Moist and not too sweet. The turbinado sugar on top makes all the difference. Thank you!

  346. Katrina

    When a zucchini the size of a toddler arrived at my door from the neighbour’s garden I made this! Twice! I only subbed the sugar for half a cup of maple syrup, everything else stayed the same and it was absolutely delish.

  347. Joanna

    This was tasty. I had some lavender buds just dried from our garden so I eliminated the spices and added some crushed buds and lemon zest – I took a suggestion from a Bon Appetit recipe and put the lemon zest and lavender buds with the sugar into the food processor first. Great flavors. Mine came out even a little too moist. I think this is probably because I weighed the flour – for me, Smitten Kitchen recipes (cookbooks and website) consistently have more flour by volume than by weight, and I have checked the calibration on my scale. (Anyone else have this problem?)

  348. Amy

    This is HEAVENLY! Made it exactly as noted minus the nutmeg (didn’t have any), and I had to bake it a few more minutes, but I think that’s just my oven. It has been 3 days, and today’s slice was just as good as the day-after-baking slice! Top still crunchy and everything! I can’t believe how easy this was and also how well it works just leaving it out uncovered minus capping the end with foil. I’ll never make another zucchini bread recipe!

  349. Candy Higgins

    Can you make this in muffin tins? (Can’t find my load pan). How would you adjust the baking time/ temperature

    1. deb

      I haven’t made them as muffins but from other comments it sounds like it makes about 12 and up to 18. Same temp. I’d check them at 18 to 20 minutes, then 25 if they’re not done yet. You can fill the liners nearly to the top.

  350. Hillary

    First time baking the recipe. I used up a small pc of green zuke and the rest from one yellow zuke. The Burlap & Barrel cinnamon and nutmeg. Baked for 45 mins in a metal loaf pan. Perfection. Super easy one bowl bake!

  351. Milena

    Just made this and it’s very good, my batter looked a little dry so I added some sour cream and topped half of the loaf with chocolate chips to make everyone in the house happy!

  352. TJ

    Reporting back on multiple modifications: I made this as muffins (baked for 35 minutes) using aquafaba for the eggs and home-blended gluten-free flour made of equal parts sorghum flour, teff flour, millet flour, and potato starch; no gums. (No need to blend your own if you already have a fav gluten-free flour; I just like messing with variations on mine.) They were crumblier than standard muffins this way, but the zucchini made them fluffy and moist. This recipe is really flexible.

    1. Lisa

      I made this yesterday and per Deb’s previous comment, I added 1.5 cups of blueberries (tossed with one tablespoon of flour to prevent them from sinking). But by doing this, the recipe made too much to fit in one loaf pan, so I used two. There was less batter in each pan so the loaves came out shorter, and I only cooked them for 45 minutes. Still came out delicious, but just not that nice tall “loaf” look. I’m wondering if there’s a way to adjust the recipe to add the blueberries and still have it fit in one pan? I thought about cutting back on the zucchini, but then I was afraid there wouldn’t be sufficient moisture.

  353. Haviva

    Man I love this recipe – comes together so easily and it does get better with age if anyone has any control to let it last even the 24 hours.
    I know a lot of people have made comments about making this healthier – all my respect to you – but I went in a different direction… I added dark chocolate chips and I highly recommend it!

  354. Melissa judy

    This id the BEST zucchini bread ive ever had!! Like for real. I made it with coconut oil, the house smelled amazing …we could hardly keep our hands off it. Its great the 2nd day, but I love it as soon as it cools, 1st day too!! Second loaf ive made this week. Ive sent 3 people your recipe already! Going forward, I will make 2 loaves at a time! I may even experiment adding a little less of each sugar to the batter because I really love the crust the coarse sugar makes on top and i add extra to mine. Every recipe that comes from smitten kitchen is always great!! But this one is a gem!! Thank you!

  355. Morgan

    I’ve made these as muffins a few times now- and I’ve enjoyed them immensely! I usually measure the amount of zucchini I’m using but other than that it’s a very forgiving recipe. I use it to make 12 regular sized muffins- bake at 350 for about 25 minutes. Highly recommend

  356. Tonia Hoefner

    Works really good with summer squash (the yellow kind), too!! I used half white whole wheat flour and half AP flour and less cinnamon. Good with cheese! Next going to add basil, sun dried tomatoes and cheese and make into muffins….mmmm, yum! ;-) Thanks for a great “basic” recipe Deb!!

  357. Janet

    Quick question which I’d like to get expert opinions on. When a recipe asks for packed brown sugar how hard are we to be packing? Lightly, medium, as hard as we can? Thanks!

    1. deb

      You press it in with your hand, so I’d say medium. It’s more about not scooping brown sugar into the cup, which will leave unfilled air pockets. This isn’t an issue with granulated sugar, which naturally fills out in the shape of the cup.

  358. Kirsten

    This is delicious bread. Of course I modified it a bit…I reduced the granulated sugar significantly in one batch, and in another batch omitted it entirely, instead adding about a cup of chocolate chips. I definitely wouldn’t want either batch to be sweeter! I might even try slightly less brown sugar next time. And both breads were moist and soft, excellent texture. I love the amount of zucchini in this recipe and the ease of mixing it in one bowl, using a scale! It’s a bit dangerous to have such an easy recipe on hand during zucchini season…

  359. Letty Borrego

    I made this bread last week. It is absolutely delicious!!!! Followed the directions and left the bread uncovered….the crunchy top was so yummy.
    I used organic coconut oil for my liquid fat.

  360. Kelly

    Can I make it, let it cool over night and then freeze it? I want to make it tonight for Saturday morning breakfast — should I just wait until Friday night to make it? (I’ve already made your zucchini gallette this summer and it was amazing…

  361. Lucy

    I’ve made this several times, and it’s perfect every time. Also, the Deb method of mixing in leaveners/salt/spices into wet ingredients *before* adding in the flour to prevent over-mixing/developing gluten while obviating the need for a separate dry ingredients bowl? Brilliant, and has transformed the way I bake. No one needs an extra bowl to wash.

  362. DV

    Fantastic! Made 12 muffins (+ 2 small ramekins). Used 3 small zucchini’s. Light and delicious. Added a handful of dark chocolate chips. Sprinkled white/brown sugar mix on top (didn’t have coarse sugar). I love that you can (and should!) bake them a day ahead (such a nice bonus if traveling with them); they keep well (uncovered) and the tops stay crisp. They didn’t last past day 2!

  363. Dawn

    I am a longtime America’s Test Kitchen kind of cook/baker, and this recipe is the first zucchini bread I have made that wasn’t ATK. Needless to say, it is now the go-to recipe for me. My husband claims it is the best zucchini bread and I’m going with that.

    After years of squeezing out zucchini in a towel, I am totally into a one bowl recipe for sure. I use coconut oil and the texture is excellent. I am turning to this website more and more for recipes, and I have not been disappointed.

  364. Emily Schwartz Greco

    I’ve made this several times before, and just made my first batch of the season. Simply amazing and so easy. You can make muffins this way but I’ve found it has a better texture when you use a loaf pan. I dislike nutmeg so I use ground ginger instead, then sprinkle in a little dried orange peel and sub some ground almonds for a bit of the flour. Next time I will try cutting the sugar in the batter by 1/4 cup but would never skip the sprinkling of sugar on top.

  365. Denise

    OMG this is the One! I made this Saturday evening to bring to brunch at my daughter’s NYC apartment and it was a huge hit. Everyone ate more of the bread than the NYC bagels which really means something when you live in Manhattan! I did substitute one cup of KAF white whole wheat and it was perfect!

  366. Carmen

    Absolutely delicious, only one bowl, AND no wringing of the zucchini?!? Where has this method been all my life? SK’s recipe is my new favorite! Thank you!

  367. Paola

    Oh dear…I made them into mini muffins and something strange happened! They are very oily on the bottom, so much so that the cupcake liners are oily. What did I do wrong? Should I not have made the cupcakes? I used olive oil. Which tasted very olivey. The only thing that I can think of is that I left the batter for a little while…maybe twenty or thirty minutes, before adding the dry ingredients? Let me know what you think Deb!

  368. Margar

    I love this recipe! I have made a single batch, triple and double batches ( can you tell I planted too many zucchini? Lol) have done it with chocolate chips, nuts, as muffins, with some whole wheat added and they’ve all turned out great! Seriously simple to put together, easy clean up and so so moist and delicious! Oh! And it freezes perfectly! Thank you deb!!
    (My tenth batch is in the oven at this moment- walnuts, choc chips and cranberries added this time, yum!)

  369. Rebecca

    This recipe did not work for me at all! It was not baked after 50 minutes and turned into an unbaked, glutinous jelly-like texture. I even added on almost 35 extra minutes of bake time. Anyone else have this issue?

  370. Steven Summer

    Sorry to be a Debbie Downer, the Silver Palate zucchini bread is superior. It’s more flavorful and actually crispier. I did a taste test and my family overwhelmingly voted for the Silver Palate version.

  371. Elizabeth

    Deb, I don’t know if you know this but you’re a genius. Thanks for all your trials and errors to bring us this perfect zucchini loaf! I just put my very short-napping-7-month-old down for a nap and decided to take a stab at this. Voila! It turned out perfectly with very few dishes and the babe stayed asleep until it was well into baking time. And now my husband thinks I’m some sort of wizard. And I feel like I could conquer the world lol. Thanks for all you do! I’ve followed since like 2013 and you were a big reason I got so into cooking/baking. Best ❤️

  372. Monty

    I used 100% whole wheat flour (250 grams), skipped the sugar topping, and didn’t have nutmeg, so I used a little extra cinnamon. I baked it in an 4×8 loaf pan, and it took a little bit longer, but it was just a stunning, towering loaf – no overflow! It came out incredible – moist, not-too-sweet, flavorful. I often find zucc breads to be a little too moist and gummy, but this one holds together beautifully and the crumb is just delightful (I waited until the morning after to slice). The perfect breakfast!

  373. Wayne Lind

    I just made a loaf, still cooling off a bit. I just had to taste the top, so good.
    Very easy to make. Can I keep it on the kitchen counter with a tea towel over it with having the topping go soft.
    Thanks
    Nakusp, B.C.

  374. We are addicted. A loaf every fortnight since discovering, and that loaf gets demolished in a couple of days, tops. Can we have an ultimate carrot cake recipe exactly like this please?? Thanks for another winner Deb!

  375. Sarah Luthey

    Deb, I just have to say this recipe is. REVELATION. I am a fan of all the traditional quick breads, i.e. pumpkin, almond poppyseed, banana, date, apple, etc but always strayed from zucchini for all of the reasons you describe. Enter your wring-free recipe that was so good and so easy I made it twice in one week. Thank you for finally bringing zucchini into my quick bread rotation!!!

  376. Kim

    I just baked this yesterday and like others, I couldn’t wait and dug into it right after it cooled. It was delicious!

    We still had some leftover today though and I have to say it truly is better, the top has a lovely sweet crunch and the flavors are bursting in every moist bite.

    Definitely a win-win both the day of and the next!

  377. Aurora Gandara

    This is everything Deb says it is. This is the best quickest zucchini bread ever. I had Bobs red mill sugar crystals to top it with and it was just amazing. No, we couldn’t wait for the next day but I’m sure that tomorrow the leftovers will be amazing.

  378. Julie

    The most delicious, least dish-making recipe ever!! Classic Smitten Kitchen!! Like others I search each year for ‘the one’ recipe for zucchini bread. NO MORE! I did use more cinnamon as I love it and had no turbinado, so I used dark brown on the top instead. My kids ate most of the loaf today, (would have finished it if my fella didn’t insist on saving some for me), asking over and over for ‘more vegetables’. The 24 hr waiting period was impossible – all we could manage to wait was overnight. I look no further for my autumn loaf. Amazing!! Thank you Deb for the joy you bring me and my family.

    1. deb

      While you can, a full 1:1 swap with regular whole wheat will probably seem more dry or coarse. I might only swap 2/3 to start. If you have white whole wheat flour, a full swap would probably be fine.

  379. Megan

    I am 2 years late to this party but this bread is absolutely amazing, I skipped the extra sugar for the top but I don’t like my sweets “too sweet”. No other modifications because the base recipe is so delicious. It’s 175 C for anyone baking with a metric oven, I have english measuring cups.

  380. Katie

    I woke up this morning with a sudden craving for zucchini bread, and smitten kitchen (as always) did not disappoint. The loaf turned out PERFECTLY, though I have to admit, I only gave it a couple hours to cool instead of the recommended overnight. Can’t wait to see how it tastes tomorrow!

  381. Deb

    I’m making my second loaf in 5 days, I was able to sneak one slice for myself with the first one, and I hope for a little more the second time around. The texture and the flavor is so, so good. Sugar crusted top seals the deal in this house. Thank you.

  382. Penny

    I used Bob’s Red Mill 1 to 1 gluten free flour to make this recipe and it was AMAZING! Almost couldn’t tell it was gluten free. I let the batter rest about 20 minutes before baking to allow the gluten free flours to absorb the liquid ingredients so it wouldn’t be overly gummy. And there is no dairy in this recipe either, so it’s a good option for those with dietary restrictions. The bread rose beautifully and had that crusty top. Perfection! I used 300 grams of the Bob’s Red Mill flour to sub for the 2 cups of all purpose flour.

  383. Linda

    I’ve made this recipe many times, with some modifications. I usually grate a small zucchini and add enough crushed pineapple to add up to the 370 g. I use gluten free flour due to being celiac, and I add a couple handfuls of chopped pecans or walnuts. Instead of oil, I use 1/3 c of pineapple juice and 1/3 cup of sour cream. It always turns out great. In fact, I might try this recipe someday with all pineapple + some chopped macademia nuts.

  384. Sienna

    completely agree this is the best zucchini bread ever and tastes so good the next day (even though we ate half of it on Day 1 :) I didn’t change a thing—Kids devoured it. By weight, I actually used 3 zucchini!

  385. leora

    Hi,

    Do you have exact standard muffin size baking instructions? Also, with the muffins, do you leave them out overnight as well?

    Thanks!

  386. Lisa

    Came together so easily (here’s to one bowl recipes!) and was an absolute hit! Super moist — even with me failing to properly multitask while making dinner and pulling it out several minutes later than intended… The crackly sugar crusted top really sets this apart from other zucchini breads. Definitely my new go to recipe!

  387. Mary C.

    This came out delicious. I was a little shy of zucchini, so added 1 medium carrot, grated to the zucchini mixture. And replaced the same amount of nutmeg with cardamom because I was bringing it to friends from India.
    Will make this again with the cardamom!

    1. deb
  388. Michelle

    I’ve made this recipe a few times already this month, it’s THAT good! By far my favorite recipe – incredibly easy to make (no wringing out the zucchini liquid, yes please!), flavor profile is delicious (crunchy topping cannot be beat) – you better make two loaves because one just won’t be enough! The only changes I made and had success with it, was instead of 2/3 cup oil, I did 1/3c plain Greek yogurt and 1/3c oil, and I cut down on the sugar, rather than 1/2c white granulated sugar I added 1/4c cane sugar – thank you for such a wonderful recipe!

  389. Terri

    This is my favorite zucchini bread and I had a bunch of apples ready to go south, so… I substituted grated apples (skin on) for the zucchini. Followed the exact measurements on everything. Delicious! Super happy I didn’t have to toss the apples!!

  390. Victoria

    I’ve made this twice now. Once as a delicious & perfectly moist loaf and once as chocolate cupcakes. Both were delicious.

    For the loaf, I used 1/2 tsp cinnamon, 1 tsp ginger, 1/4 tsp each allspice & nutmeg, as we don’t love cinnamon.

    For the muffins, I replaced 1/3 of the flour with unsweetened cocoa powder & added a cup of mini, semi-sweet chocolate chips.

    I’m so glad to have found & used this recipe at the *start* of zucchini season!

    The loaf took an extra half hour to cook & the muffins took 50 minutes @350°.

  391. Jennifer S.

    Went halfsies on butter & oil, and swapped out 1/2 cup of whole wheat flour. Since I only have 8 x 4 inch pans, I split the batter between two pans. They came out pretty flat – I think I would have been fine with all the batter in one. But absolutely delicious!

  392. Jess

    Made a double batch of these today and they are monstrous, but have taken a lot longer to bake than listed, still a bit gooey near the top after 65 minutes, though dark brown on the edges. Luckily, I am an insane person who likes a slightly-burnt flavor so I’m hoping they still make it through!!

  393. Aware

    Just made this! I used 3/4 cup of light brown sugar and 1/4 cup granulated sugar, with jaggery on top instead of turbinado. I’m already picking the crust off in little bark-like flecks, the sugar on top is absolutely nonnegotiable.

  394. Caitlin

    Delicious! Turned out moist and not too sweet. It’s been wonderful to eat with coffee for the past few days. I was a little confused by the weight of the flour because two cups of flour is 240g, I thought? (Maybe I’m wrong. What is math!) But I went with 260g and it was fine. I didn’t have dark brown sugar so I used light brown and added 1.5t of molasses to my recipe based on substitutions I read online. Two thumbs up, will definitely be making again with all of the homegrown zucchini we have 🥴 but I’m glad to finally find a recipe I liked this much! Thanks!

  395. Rachel

    I recommend sitting in flour while you stir or add in a few batches. I ended up with small lumps of flour in the batter that you could still see in the baked loaf. Side from that, this is a wonderful recipe. I added mini chocolate chips like my grandma used to do. Loved not having to wring out the zucchini.

  396. Teresa Fristick

    Wow. This was fabulous. I had to use light brown sugar. I used a lil canola oil and olive oil mixes. I had some young fresh picked zucchini from my garden so of course I used them. I did add an 1/8th teaspoon of allspice along with the nutmeg. Had no torinado sugar so used half and half white and light brown blended. I just tasted it and I see no reason to use another zucchini bread recipe. I use to use a little cinnamon basil in my zucchini muffins. I wonder how that would fare in this recipe. I saw where you had changed your recipe up some and think you did a fabulous job! Thanks!

  397. Ellen Levine

    Hi. I love love love your recipes, follow you on Instagram, etc. However, the search function on your website is soooo frustrating, type a couple letters and the oddest stuff comes up. (in this situation, I was looking for zuchini bread!) Usually not what I’m looking for. Yes, I know I can scroll down to the section titles and hopefully find what I’m looking for there.
    Any possiblity of improvement in the search function? I will continue to love you and your site no matter what.

  398. WOWZAWOWEEEE! Not only is this so incredibly easy but the baking and taste are just so GOOD!!!! There is only one little teensy problem…waiting to eat it the next day! Geesh! But,boy oh boy,the wait was over this morning and it is just simply divine! Slathered with that evil cream cheese sent me into nirvana! (It’s also great without,but who wants that?) Thank You Deb!

  399. evl

    I made these as muffins with a handful of mini chocolate chips; I got 18 muffins and baked for 22-23 minutes. I used melted butter and shredded the zucchini in the food processor. I baked them on Thursday and let them sit at room temperature, uncovered, until I took them to shul on Saturday. They vanished in a flash and nobody guessed that they had zucchini in them. I’m looking forward to trying them with blueberries next.

  400. Tricia Berkow

    Hi!
    I just wanted to let you know, I made this in my air fryer! Being that it is a 105 degrees in Northern California, I couldn’t bear to turn on my oven so I used my much under-utilized air fryer on the bake setting…out on the porch. I love how you describe the process. The zucchini bread came out tender and moist. I also wanted to put it out there that I used white spelt flour instead. I was nervous about substituting flours but it came out perfect!

    Thanks! Looking forward to making more of your recipes and reading your humorous blogs.

    Tricia

  401. C. Lange

    Well! You’ve gone and done it! This recipe is fantastic! Made the BEST zucchini bread I’ve ever had. We were recipients of 5 humongous homegrown zucchini and they weighed almost 20 pounds for the 5 of them! So I have had a helluva zucchini week. Made fritters. Made lasagna. And then, your Ultimate Zucchini Bread. What a way to end the week. A delicious loaf, tender crumb, very sliceable and the sweet crust is a nice counterpoint to the bread. Thank you!

  402. Linda Potter

    Ho Deb, your Blueberry Muffin recipe is INSANELY GOOD! I have now been gifted with some Zephyr Squash (the zucchini that is half green/half yellow) I am dying to make this zucchini bread recipe! What do you think about making it in 3 mini loaf pans instead of 1 regular size loaf pan? I do this with banana bread regularly and then wrap individually and freeze the extra loaves to enjoy another morning.

      1. Linda Potter

        Great recipe!! I made 2 batches and now have 6 mini-loaves (one polished off, 1/2 loaf for breakfast tomorrow and 4 in the freezer). I have learned that it is best to use an instant-read thermometer to check doneness (200 degrees F for quick breads) as it is easy to hit a spot of chocolate or fruit with a toothpick and the bread can appear under-baked. This recipe is a bit softer and more moist than my go-to banana bread (Bon Appetite), but I have changed up that one by swapping half the AP flour for white whole wheat. Will try that swap next time on the Zook bread. I also added in walnuts because I love any nuts in quick breads.

  403. Melanie McCauley

    This recipe is stupid good. Super easy to make (8 mo pregnant and not able to handle complicated recipes right now). Made it in 4 mini loaf pans and baked for 30 min (more like 27). Have basically eaten half of it already and had to give some away to the neighbors to avoid eating the whole thing in one sitting.

  404. Lisa

    Love this as a one-bowl recipe lacking the need to wring out the shredded zucchini! Found my loaf took more than an hour to bake and it still came out a little undercooked towards the middle. I am going to make it again! The first time, I weighed the zucchini, but dry measured the flour. I think that may have made a difference. I’ll weight everything next time — and buy more bamboo skewers for testing! (Only had toothpicks to use yesterday.) The flavor of the quick bread was excellent though — and much improved a day #2.

  405. Lisa

    I’ve made this 2x now, and while I love the flavor, both times it was dense or soggy in the middle. First time I should’ve baked it longer so my bad. Second time I baked it 12 mins longer, had lovely high split top, and a dry toothpick! But, unfortunately it sank as it cooled and while not raw it was very dense in the interior. I’ll try it again but somethings off for me; could be I’m still using too much zucchini.

  406. Nancy Belgue

    Everything you said it was and more! Genius recipe really. One bowl, crunchy top, no draining the zucchini and Bob’s your uncle! Best zucchini bread ever.

  407. Verónica

    Hi! I’ve been making this recipe for a while, and last week I made a small tweak and it went from good to the best sweet bread/coffee cake I have ever made. Just go back to 2 bowls: zucchini and flour in one, all the rest of ingredients in a smaller one before combining… I’ve always been one-bowl for everything humanly possible, but in this case, believe me, it’s worth it! By the way, thanks for all your recipes and newsletters, I really enjoy them!

  408. Hi! I made this yesterday (Wednesday) and need to save this till Sunday breakfast. What would be the best way to do this? Leave in pan uncovered? Compromise the crispy top and wrap and freeze? Love some help!

  409. susan

    this recipe is so wonderful! admittedly I made it less healthy by using browned butter and added orange zest, and it’s a delicious dessert. thanks deb!

  410. Patty Cucman

    Yep. It is the only recipe you need for this treat. I made mine as three small loaves, baked for 35 minutes. It is a way to have your cake and eat it too. Two in the freezer for another day.

  411. Claire

    This is my ONLY zucchini bread recipe. I’ve added roasted walnuts, chocolate chips, and have made 20 times. I’d like to try one and add cocoa powder and wonder if you have a suggestion for amount of flour to swap out?

    1. Zenobia

      I just made a batch and subbed about 60g flour with 50g Hershey’s special dark cocoa. I used about 200g total brown sugar instead of the mix, because that is what i usually use for brownie and other chocolate cake recipes, and because I was worried about the cocoa being too bitter, but it probably would have been fine with the same sugar amount. We added ~1/2c mini chocolate chips and unmeasured amount of walnuts and baked as muffins, mostly filled 18-20 muffin cups, baked. around 20-22 min. @350. Crumb is perfect. Not sure if they will last 24hrs to check for crunchy tops later. :)

  412. Lois

    I substituted 1/2 c cocoa for flour in one of the loaves I made. Instead of the turbinado sugar on that one went chocolate chunks. I also made the original one to get the pure taste I craved. But the chocolate worked!….I’d try it again.
    Thanks Deb for the inspiration and no-nonsense approach. You come through every time (and that must be at least 100 times by now:)

  413. Patricia Wentworth

    I wanted to make 2, but I did not have enough zucchini, so I added about 1/2 cup of grated beets to 3 1/2 cups zucchini. OMG so sweet and delicious. And the end product was not red.

  414. Gina L

    Made this delicious recipe a few days ago. Put half in the freezer. It turned out perfectly. Now I want to try making it in mini loaf pans. How long would it normally take to bake small loaves versus the regular size pan? Thanks again.
    Gina

  415. Siggi D

    Hi, I have a problem with the recipe. Followed your recipe to the tee. The bread looked great when it came out of the oven with a nice, crunchy top. I let is stand overnight and just cut the first slice. It smells wonderful, but it is very spongy. What did I do wrong?

  416. Judith

    If this bread is going to be better tomorrow, it will be out of this world, because it is fabulous 2 hours out of the oven. I added mixed dried fruit and chopped nuts. Glad I doubled the recipe.

  417. Sarah

    I made these into 18 small muffins, baked at 350 for 20 min. I added more cinnamon, about a cup of chopped walnuts, and I used an unfiltered evo olive oil as the oil base. You can taste the olive oil a bit ( on purpose!), and they turned out lovely.New go-to recipe! I will be freezing these. Thank you!

  418. SeasideinRI

    I have made this so many times this summer with our zucchini crop. One version I make is a bit “healthier”. I replace 1/2 c white sugar with 1/2 c chocolate chips and replace the oil with a few glugs olive oil and a mashed ripe banana. Baked in a 9×12 pan for 30 minutes. Very moist and a different texture from the bread but still delicious.

  419. Lisa

    As fall approaches, I opted to replace the oil with an equal amount of canned pumpkin. (As usual, also cut total sugar down to 3/4 cup and used half white and half whole wheat flour.) Delicious as usual. I am convinced this truly is the ultimate zucchini bread recipe. Thanks as always, Deb!

  420. Outer Avenues, SF

    I was able to make two loaves with the amount of zucchini I had. I followed others’ advice to decrease the sugar, and I opted to halve the granulated sugar and leave the brown sugar alone. Even with that reduction, I felt the bread was a smidge too sweet. Next time, I will try eliminating the granulated sugar altogether and adjust up from there, as needed. Based on another quick bread / cake that I make, I decreased the oil to 1/2 cup (per loaf), and I think I can decrease it even to 1/3. With this amount of zucchini, you’re not lacking in moisture, and the slices felt greasy to me with the 1/2 cup amount. I loved the sugar topping the next day, but it didn’t take more than another day or two before the topping absorbed moisture from the loaf and lost its crunch. If I were to make these loaves in muffin form, I might sprinkle the sugar on just the few I know we’d eat the next day. Otherwise, I’d do away with the sugar topping. I don’t always love nuts in my quick breads, but it brings a crunch (and nutrition!) that I don’t have to worry about losing. So perhaps some toasted walnuts or pecans next time. I also think you could easily double the amount of seasoning. It would add more dimension to this bread. I enjoyed having these loaves to accompany my morning coffee, but I hope never to have enough zucchini to make these again! :P I’ll stick to quick breads made with carrots, sweet potato, or winter squash.

  421. Linda

    I’ve made this recipe twice this week! My second loaf is still cooling in the pan. My mother-in-law gave me a very large zucchini, and my husband loved the first loaf so much that I made a second one tonight. This recipe is so good and so easy. I love using only 1 bowl. The loaf is so moist! I probably should have baked the first loaf 5 min. longer as it was a bit under-baked where the sugar topping was. Oh well. I left the second loaf in the oven for 65 min. I blame my oven – it tends to run a bit cooler, I think. Will definitely make this again.

  422. Marta

    How much do I love this bread?
    Thiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiis much!

    Thanks for the great recipe! I love it so much I just wrote it into my kids recipe books (credit assigned!)

  423. Stephanie

    I don’t understand what you mean by this: “toothpick or tester inserted into the middle cake but also into the top of the cake, closer to the dome, comes out batter-free.” Where do you insert it to get to the middle? I’ve always gone in through the top of the dome.

    Thanks.

  424. Gahlia

    I just made a double batch of this bread and it is definitely amazing. I still have more zucchini tho! Im wondering if anyone has tried a more savory version…….I was thinking no cinnamon/nutmeg, half the sugar and adding cheddar cheese…..?

  425. Paul

    I love the combo of pumpkin and zucchini in baked goods. Any suggestions on combining both your pumpkin and zucchini bread recipes?

  426. Kim

    I’ve made this at least 20 times this year and probably 15 last year. We always have two zucchini plants and they have been so prolific…I don’t know how we’d use them all without it. I always use flax eggs and olive oil and it turns out perfect every time.

  427. Kate

    I’ve made this a half dozen times now and saved to my personal recipe box (written on an actual recipe card). It’s just so good. It IS the ultimate! I love it with a schmear of Nutella, and have even added a little layer of Nutella before. Doesn’t get much better than that!

  428. Courtney

    Followed the recipe exactly but made into muffins. I filled the muffins tins all the way to the top and cooked at about 375 degrees. They were done in about 22 minutes. They were delicious and so tall and beautiful!

  429. Leanne

    This is my third time making this – absolutely love it. Especially the turbine sugar top crust. Somewhere along my process, I forgot the oil. It still looked ok, rose well, but I figured it out once bitten. Still very edible and delicious (I guess this is my no-fat version?!) Let’s see how this stands up overnight. I have a feeling it may get a bit chewy, if that makes any sense (for those who have baked low-fat, you’ll know what I mean). Anyways, in case anyone was curious about the results if the oil was reduced, it would still work. Oh, And I put in semi-sweet choc chips for an extra treat! It’s amazing with the cinnamon.

  430. karen

    NO need for the turbinado sugar topping. If the bread is good and moist, the sugar topping is NOT needed. I’ve been making my mom’s version for YEARS. NO sugar topping. LOT of family members LOVE it. I never wring out the zucchini. I will try your version and see how I like it. The recipe I’ve used for years uses no brown sugar, only white. I’ve also recently added a shake of pumpkin pie spice, in addition to cinnamon, since I had no nutmeg!! It adds a touch of flavor, which I like!

    1. KatieK

      Why comment about Deb’s if you haven’t made it?!?
      I too had made zucchini bread for years, but Deb’s was an eye opener. The crispy topping took it to another level. As far as wringing about the zucchini; some, depending on age, have more liquid than others.

    1. deb
  431. Marsha Spears

    Making this tonight for a neighbor who’s hubby just passed;(. Thinking this would be good for a snack with a cup of tea on a tedious day. Or not.
    I’ve been a fan of yours since you started blogging and and happy to see you grow with the times.! And i love your honest down to earth commentary”constantly swap hands to keep them off the bark like flecks”. That’s what we do-

  432. Marsha Spears

    Made 2 batches tonight for my neighbor and me. Made it exactly snd weighed my ingredients. Cant believe how moist! Added a handful of raisins to mine- left them out for the neighbor. Not wringing the zucchini really made a difference. And the turbinado sugar on the top made the top crispy! Yum!

  433. Karen Wilger

    I made this and it is the only zucchini bread that you should ever make. Stop looking and make this perfectly moist bread.

  434. Hannah Elise White

    Another perfect recipe! I make your sweet breads all the time, and this will definitely be added to the rotation. I’d been avoiding zucchini bread because of the step that’s always included of wringing out the zucchini, so I was very thankful you skipped that step. I used a box grater with a cup attached at the bottom that measures, and that worked perfectly for this recipe. Thanks Deb!

  435. We just made this last night and it is truly excellent. I came across the recipe on a reddit thread discussing what to do with the 700 pounds of zucchini we all have right now. I’ve been a longtime fan of Deb’s but am brand new to zucchini bread. So when I saw this recipe was hers, I knew I had to try it even though zucchini bread wouldn’t otherwise have been high on my list. Happy to say my judgment of zucchini bread was wrong (and as always, my judgment of SK recipes was spot-on)! I woke up too late and everyone else already dug into the loaf, but it was two thumbs up from all family members. We are all fighting over the craggy top.

    Question: Since we love the crunchy top so much… has anyone else tried this recipe in a low/wider brownie pan (and cut into squares) for more surface area? Next time, I think I will also try lining the bottom and walls of the 9×5 pan with turbinado sugar to increase crunch on all sides (like Alison Roman’s chocolate banana bread recipe)

    1. Verónica

      Hi! A couple of weeks ago I had the same thought, partly because I made 3 of these and only have 2 bread tins. I usually make 2 and freeze one for later. Anyway, it worked wonderfully. I used a round low pan and cut it in triangles, so the concept of a lower bread with more of the deliciously crunchy top was the same you’re suggesting. You just have to be careful with the baking time, as it takes a bit less with the batter spread out. But I truly recommend it: getting a bit of crunchy top with every bite was amazing!
      As to the other suggestion of lining with sugar, not sure it would work, as the bread itself is pretty moist… But if it works, let us know!

  436. Nancy in CA

    This is a staple around here during zucchini season. Made a batch yesterday as muffins – I got 13 muffins (the last liner got slapped into a pyrex custard cup). Muffins are easier to portion control, since I have a husband who would cut great planks of a loaf and top them with slabs of cream cheese. We freeze them, which ruins the crispy top, but no matter, they’re still delicious. Don’t skip the walnuts – and toast them. Yum!

  437. Lucille Trzcinski

    I would love to send you a picture of these zucchini breads. The are incredibly high. My son called me to say, “Mom, these are going to explode in the oven!” Of course they didn’t but they are about three inches above the top of the pan with huge ‘sheets’ of crust lifted from the top of the bread. They don’t even look like normal quick breads! If only you could see them! Thank you so much for this recipe not only because of the way they taste but also because of the way they look! OMG!

  438. Nicolle

    This recipe is so simple and turns out perfect every time :) I often sub shredded carrots in the same amount with no regrets, and usually use an 8×8 pan. Today, I only had one egg and was craving chocolate, so I halved the recipe, subbed 1/3 flour with cocoa, added 1/2 cup of dark chocolate chips, threw a few on top with the sugar, and baked 11 muffins for 35 min. They are soft and lovely, but next time I may skip the cinnamon and nutmeg with the chocolate and use a bit of instant espresso powder instead. Thank you Deb!

  439. Sara M

    Has anyone done this as muffins? I’m trying to get a sense as to how many it would make. (I love it as a bread and am hoping to make it for a thing where I need muffins.) Thanks!

  440. janice landers

    I want to try your version- just a fyi
    My mother in law was a great cook and substituted grated lemon zest for the cinnamon. – just great!

  441. Renee Kaplan

    Can I use my Bundt pan?
    Should I double the recipe?

    How long would I bake?
    Thinking at least 45-60 minutes at 350

    1. deb

      Yes to all of that including your estimate. Could end up being 70 minutes depending on the Bundt. Make sure you’re using a 12-cup bundt.

  442. Kate G

    I LOVE this recipe, but when I made it again this week, I measured the flour by weight, and 370g is more than 2 cups. My bread turned out terrible. Then I was measuring out flour by weight with this recipe (https://www.seriouseats.com/classic-blueberry-muffin-recipe), and there 2 1/3 cups flour = 340 grams. In your recipe you are saying that 2 cups flour = 370 grams. I used 370 grams and I had to toss the bread out it was so terrible. Consider adjusting the weight??? Thanks!

    1. deb

      The flour weight is correct. My cups of flour clock in between 130 and 135 grams. I’ve seen measurements online for 120 grams but flour simply has never weighed that in my kitchen.

      1. Sara M

        King Arthur quotes their white (not wheat) flours as 120. (Their wheat is, iirc, 113?) I don’t have any sense what other flours weigh but as I tend to use KA I don’t worry as much. I often just take a recipe’s cup number and convert it for KA flour on the assumption that the recipe was likely written for a heavier flour.

        1. deb

          I mention this because it comes up in the comments a lot but I weigh cups of flour many times a week and they’re never 120 grams. It’s just not what I find to be accurate. 130-135 is. (Fluffed, scooped, leveled.)

  443. Kate

    Hello! Absolutely love your site I use it all the time. I just made this zucchini bread. It came out of the oven looking great. But 20 min later it’s collapsed in the middle. It’s completely concave. The only thing I did was replace some flour with whole wheat flour- but I’ve done that with many recipes before like your banana bread and it’s always been fine. What did I do wrong?

  444. Debra

    I’d be rich if I can $1 for every zucchini bread recipe I’ve tried over the many many years – but this one it THE one. I’ve been waiting since last fall to make it again – not standing the thought of store bought zucchini and feeling like zucs I have not picked myself from my own garden would be doing this recipe an injustice! I doubled the recipe today and have a loaf in the oven, along with 18 muffins – an experiment that based on others comments should work out just fine! I typically top mine with the turbinado sugar and sugar pearls but I couldn’t find mine today. I do highly recommend them though – they’re so pretty and give that already amazing crunchy crust another bam!

  445. Erica Chiarkas

    Made this today. Well yesterday. Per recipe, I let it rest for (almost, lol– I couldn’t wait any longer) 24 hours. Hands down, the moistest most flavorful zucchini bread ever. It has a lot of zucchini in it, which makes me so happy. Next time, I might I even push for more and just wring out like crazy anything over the two cups.

    I would love to make this as a chocolate version as well. Any guidance on that would be much appreciated. I think I’ll give the muffins a shot, too.

  446. KBG

    This, my friends, is truly a keeper. I have made the zucchini and the banana bread recipe a bunch and both are spectacular. Depending on my mood, I have religiously followed the recipe or I’ve also gone rogue and have added coconut, nuts (walnuts/pecans/macadamias), & cardamom to the original recipe and I’ve never had a fail. This is so. dang. good.

  447. Linda Lapos

    I’ve made this twice with (many) zucchini from my garden. Excellent, easy, and delicious. Everyone loved it.
    Maybe add some blueberries?

  448. Jen

    I went grain free a few years back. I made this with Bob’s Red Mill Paleo flour. It turned out perfectly. I highly recommend.

  449. Sharon Fiekowsky

    I usually don’t care for zucchini bread but this was great! I used a zucchini that had gone undiscovered in the garden for a bit too long – still turned out great. Added chopped, toasted walnuts and mini chocolate chips, and topped with sparkling sugar since I didn’t have turbinado handy… Took a bit more than 75 mins to bake in my toaster oven.

  450. Jennifer

    My friend forced me to take a zucchini the size of a small dachshund from her garden. After roasting it, grilling it, chopping it into a salad, I still had a TON of zucchini. Luckily, I remembered this awesome recipe.

    I’ve made this before and really liked it. Made it this time with 2 slight modifications and LOVED it: I sprinkled the top with cinnamon sugar, not turbinado because I didn’t have any, and I stirred in some cinnamon chips – probably half a bag that had been lingering in my pantry.

    Also – I made it in the evening, so we didn’t eat it until the next morning. I swear that’s the difference! Crusty top, soft inside, loads of zucchini.

  451. Joanna

    Loved this! Made it with some small tweaks: we had a lot of courgette to use so I used about 100g more than called for; I also threw in an apple (grated) that needed using; I added a little bit more flour to combat the extra moisture from the extra veg/fruit; I used a small proportion of wholewheat flour just for some flavour; I added some chopped pecans at the end (I love the added flavour and texture of nuts in these things) and I sprinkled some mixed sunflower and pumpkin seeds on top, under the final sprinkling of sugar (if I’m going to have cake masquerading as bread I might as well throw in some extra nutrients ;) ). Also, my choice of oil was light olive oil. It came out very moist, and I like it that way. Delicious!

  452. Peggy

    This gal knows what she is talking about! This is an awesome bread, easy to put together and full of flavor! Wrapping only the cut side is a game changer to keep the crunchy topping from getting moist.

  453. Joan Homer

    I made your Ultimate Zucchini Bread yesterday. It’s perfection. I’ve made many recipes before that were good but this will now be my “go to”recipe. I left it in pan and resisted trying it last night. Now having it with my tea. *****

  454. Adrianne

    Made this morning and came out perfect! Used the thick base portion of a jumbo yellow squash, aside from the very center portion where there were large seeds. Followed all measurements by weight. Added extra 2tbsp flour for altitude baking here in CO. Topped with brown sugar because I ran out of granulated and didn’t have turbinado. Also just used 1tsp baking soda bc I didn’t have baking powder. Awesome one bowl recipe!

  455. Laura Devlin

    Super easy and delicious! I made it with 1 1/2 cups whole wheat and 1/2 c APF, still nice and moist. Added pecans, just because..

  456. Joy Wood

    I’ve made this recipe several times now and it just keeps getting better. I do so appreciate the gram measurements, so much easier than getting out all the measuring cups and what not. My top is never as craggy and tall as the pics but I’m not complaining, The best!

  457. KT

    I made this recipe exactly as written except as muffins (to reduce oven time in my upstairs kitchen in a home with no AC.) They are supremely fluffy! As light as air. Just the right sweetness. Thanks as always for a great recipe.

  458. My friend just gave me some of your Zucchini
    Bread that she made today. It is delicious and
    I asked for the recipe. She gave me your email address and I will pick up some zucchini tomorrow. I can’t wait to make it.

  459. Patricia

    I made this with my 2 year old! It’s the best baking experience we have ever had..and the last time we cooked her birthday cake in June I swore that I never wanted to do that again!! But she did amazing with this recipe bc it’s so easy, one pot and came out so delicious…like best cake ever! Thank you!

  460. H

    I really wanted this to work. It didn’t. It was a dense, wet cake. I made this twice and both times it didn’t rise enough. I followed the recipe exactly both times. After the first time it didn’t rise, I replaced my baking powder and baking soda (and unfortunately I tossed the boxes, even though I thought hmm these aren’t old) and tried again. I use a baking scale so I’m very exact with measurements. Even with fresh boxes, it hardly made a difference. I used up two homegrown zucchini trying to make this.

  461. sarah

    I’ve made this recipe a few times a year ever since Deb published it, and it’s always delicious. This year, I’ve gone for only half the sugar and I can’t taste a difference. Still great.

  462. Raquel

    Phenomenal recipe! I ate a slice after it cooled and the lightly crispy edges and top were just perfection. But I couldn’t leave it completely exposed on my counter overnight, so I covered with a kitchen towel. The next morning the top was soft. So if anyone is wondering if a towel would be ok for a crispy top, probably not. This will still be my go-to from now on though.

  463. Jessica Z

    Added 1/4 cup cocoa powder and 1/4 cup mini semi-sweet chocolate chips and it totally worked! Chocolate Zucchini bread is now a family favorite!

  464. Anita Rayburn

    So amazing! It is huge, delicious, soooooo easy, and can easily handle 2 1/2 cups of zucchini, 1/2 cup less white sugar, and half whole wheat white flour (next time I’ll try it with all www flour). And the keeping it on the counter uncovered tip is just amazing!

  465. Andrea

    I love your complaining. I never wrap my quick breads – banana, pumpkin, and now zucchini – because that crunchy, “knock-able” is the absolute best part. I will have to take your word on it that this is better the next day – I don’t think I can fight off the wolves for that long ;-)

  466. Lauren

    I successfully made this with flax eggs and subbing applesauce for half of the oil. A lower-fat vegan version! I’ve made this recipe as-is more than a few times and am happy to report that the veganized version is just as delicious and moist, and was well-received by everyone!

    Additionally, there was no way my 3 young kids were waiting 24 hours to eat this. I sliced it maybe 30 mins after it came out of the oven and it was perfectly fine. It did, however, hold together much better when slicing the next day.

  467. Luanne Krueger-Andersen

    I’m anxious to try this recipe as my last batch was a disappointment. Any advice on adding dried cranberries to the mix?

    Thanks, Lu

    1. Cheryl Aroosi

      I always add either dried cranberries or chocolate chips with no issue at all. This is my go to zucchini bread after trying so many.
      Good luck

  468. Nicole

    Okay this is the best recipe ever! I know everyone says this is the best, but it really is. And yes you have to wait until the next day because it’s so much better. I’ve tried both ways.

    I do add milk chocolate chips in mine and drizzle a little honey on top along with the sugar and it makes it so crunchy! My oven does take a little longer than the 55-60 min and more like 75-78 min. I have to put tin foil around it and on top so it doesn’t get to brown.

    I don’t know why this recipe doesn’t come up as number 1 or anywhere on google for that matter? I happen to just stumble across this recipe from Pancake Princess on tik tok reviewing zucchini bread recipes and this was number 1! And for a reason! I just made another batch tonight and it just came out of the oven and I literally cannot wait until tomorrow! Haha

  469. Michelle

    Can this be modified for a chocolate zucchini bread? I have a request and I’d love to have a fantastic result. Thanks for the amazing content

  470. Linda Faber

    I’ve been craving the zucchini “muffins” my mom and I used to make in the 70’s. Your recipe is similar to hers but richer, I think. I can’t remember if we used to take out the seeds. Yes? No? And no peeling the skin? And I prefer a loaf cake as well.
    Thanks. Linda in Miami

  471. Allie

    We’ve made this many times, but yesterday was the first time we’ve been patient enough to wait until today to eat it. Let me add to the chorus of voices that says it is TOTALLY worth waiting for. We did as instructed and left it in the pan overnight, and enjoyed it for breakfast this morning. Trust me, it’s the right thing to do!