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As promised, dear readers, I come bearing cake. Not just any cake, mind you, but the best banana cake the world has ever seen, if you will allow me some superlatives. This is not banana bread, in case you're wondering; it's nothing rustic and it's not remotely acceptable for breakfast. This is cake, rich and tender as all get-out and sporting a gorgeous cap of creamy-sour frosting.

To tell the truth, I made the cake for you. Because yesterday this blog turned six years old. Six. Six! If this blog was a child, it would be in first grade! It would be reading. And telling jokes! If this blog was a dog, it'd be middle-aged! I think that calls for some celebration. And what, pray tell, is a celebration without cake?

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Six years is a long time. And it's a preposterously long time for a blog whose originator speculated it would barely last a year. The fact that it's still around and kicking and featuring unbelievably delicious cake is really, in no small part, due to all of you coming here and reading and cooking and commenting and all the rest of what you do. So I made you all a cake. You have no idea how much I wish I could have shared this actual cake with you, slice by slice.

When the book is published, do you know what I'm looking forward to the most? The book tour, is what. Because then I'll finally be able to meet some of you in person instead of just sort of vaguely knowing that you're out there. In fact, when the going gets rough, that's what I think about, I really do. It peps me right up. Puts a spring in my step.

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But back to the cake. Hoooo, people. The cake. It is so good. It's super-tender and amazingly not-too-sweet and fragrant with bananas and velvety and moist and the frosting (which I changed a little from the original recipe, to make it a little less sweet) is the perfect foil for it, though I suppose if you left off this frosting and topped it with, say, something dark and glossy like this, I wouldn't kick it out of bed either. My friend Suzy, who I consider to have terrifyingly high standards when it comes to food, gave it high praise. As in, halfway through her first slice, she stopped eating, put her fork down and fixed me with a serious look. Then she said, "This is really good." Then she went home with a doggie bag and ate another piece after dinner which, according to her, never happens. Never ever.

The recipe comes from Los Angeles's Clementine Bakery and is, really, the holy grail of banana cakes, as far as I'm concerned. It even keeps well for a day or two, though it beats me how on earth you'd manage to keep it hanging around for more than a day, unless you were the kind of nut who bakes cakes for her blog and then has to run around the city delivering leftovers for friends lest she eat the entire thing all by herself. And best of all, it is so easy to make – no layers, no complicated mixing techniques. Just a bowl, some ripe bananas, a mixer and you.

I lessened the amounts of cream cheese, butter and sugar in the frosting, but then I added a little extra crème fraîche instead of sour cream, because I think that deeply creamy, sour flavor would be nice to underline. Plus it gave the frosting a little sensuous floppiness, instead of leaving it a stiff spackle. Which I think is sort of crucial when it comes to simple cakes like this one.

Now go forth and bake! And thank you for being here. And happy blog birthday to, uh, me!

Clementine Bakery's Banana Cake
Makes one 10-inch round cake plus a few extra cupcakes, or one 9 x 13-inch rectangular cake
The original recipe is here.

Cake:
2 2/3 cups pastry flour or 2 2/3 cups all-purpose flour minus 2.5 tablespoons
2 2/3 cups sugar
3/4 teaspoon baking powder
1 1/2 teaspoons baking soda
1 teaspoon kosher salt
3 large or 4 small very ripe bananas
3 eggs
1/2 cup buttermilk
3/4 cup canola oil
1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract

1. Heat the oven to 350 degrees. Into a large bowl sift together the flour, sugar, baking powder, baking soda and salt.

2. In the bowl of a stand mixer, or in a large bowl with a hand mixer, mash the bananas with an electric beater until smooth. Mix in the eggs, one at a time, until each is completely incorporated, then mix in the buttermilk, oil and vanilla. Finally, mix the dry ingredients into the batter just until thoroughly combined.

3. Pour into a 9-by-13-inch greased pan or a 10-inch round cake pan (you might have enough batter leftover for a few spare cupcakes). Bake for 35 to 40 minutes, until golden-brown on top, a toothpick inserted comes out clean and the cake springs back when lightly touched. Cool on a rack.

Frosting:
6 ounces cream cheese, at room temperature
2 ounces butter, room temperature
1/3 cup powdered sugar
3 tablespoons crème fraîche

In the bowl of a stand mixer, or in a medium bowl with a hand mixer, beat the cream cheese until smooth and there are no lumps. Add the butter and whip until incorporated, then add the powdered sugar and the sour cream. Beat until the frosting is very smooth and lump-free. Frost the top of the cooled cake, then slice and serve.

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70 responses to “Clementine Bakery’s Banana Cake”

  1. Eileen Avatar
    Eileen

    And how could I have forgotten to say Happy Blog Birthday! It is a beautiful gift to the world and definitely worthy of a celebration with Cake!

    Like

  2. Olive Avatar
    Olive

    Happy happy 6th! And thank you for saving the rapidly browning bananas sitting on our counter, 😉

    Like

  3. Tori (@eat-tori)v Avatar

    I’m so thrilled I’ve found your beautiful blog on this auspicious occasion. And so thrilled to have spent the last hour and a half reading back through the archives with a glass of red wine. Can’t think of a better night. And I can’t wait to read your book. You write so beautifully.

    Like

  4. Kasey Avatar

    Congratulations, Luisa! Your writing is beautiful and your photos have an incredible realness to them. I hope to meet you on your book tour! xoxo Kasey

    Like

  5. Deb Avatar
    Deb

    Cake looks lovely but I can’t eat bananas. Please make me some other kind of cake to show your appreciation of my appreciation?! ;-D

    Like

  6. Neil Butterfield Avatar

    You should become a food critic, you really have a way with words that makes one just want to dive into this cake. The picture looks awesome.

    Like

  7. Jen @ keepitsimplefoods Avatar

    Gorgeous cake, beautifully executed.

    Like

  8. Jen @ keepitsimplefoods Avatar

    And happy birthday to your blog! Hooray!

    Like

  9. Jane Avatar

    Dear Luisa,
    Happy birthday to your first grader blog! I must say, spotting a new entry on your blog is always a highlight to my day and The Wednesday Chef iscertainly one of my favorite blogs 🙂 Thanks for sharing.

    Like

  10. Stacy Marie Avatar

    Happy (belated) birthday, blog! To many more lovely posts and gorgeous pictures and thoughtful reflections. Also–this cake looks delicious. I have tucked it away to bake at a later date, when I’m less enamored with the fruits flooding the market (:

    Like

  11. Vanessa Kimbell Avatar

    Absolute congratulations ! I’ve been following your blog for such a long time and it’s such a great achievement !
    You are inspiring and now I am off to make your cake!
    Vanessa

    Like

  12. Liza in Ann Arbor Avatar

    I. Must. Try. This. I’ve been looking for an easy banana cake recipe ever since I had a slice (with Nutella frosting!) from my local market. They had the whole cake sitting invitingly at the check-out, for sale by the slice. Now you’ve given me reason to make it myself!

    Like

  13. Liza Avatar
    Liza

    I can attest, works for breakfast as well as for desert! Lovely cake, Alles Gute zum Geburtstag!

    Like

  14. Katie@Cozydelicious Avatar

    I love that this frosting uses creme fraiche! I have to try it ASAP. And banana cake, yum! Happy blog birthday!

    Like

  15. Diane Monteiro Avatar
    Diane Monteiro

    In celebration of reading my first foodie blog, I made the banana cake.. Will test it out on all my co-workers tomorrow..

    Like

  16. Stonehead Avatar

    All the best for your sixth. You’re at the point where blogging turns into a compulsive habit, so I look forward to reading your 10th anniversary recipe. Actually, I suppose I should dig something special out to mark my blogging anniversary, too. I started back in August ’94 so it should be something monumental—perhaps a chocolate gateau of some sort.
    Look what you’ve started!

    Like

  17. Janna Avatar

    The pictures alone speak volumes about this cake…I was really glad to read this is “not banana bread” as that tends to bring up memories of heavy, fake banana flavored slices from Starbucks…(unless it’s homemade.)

    Like

  18. Culinary School: Three Semesters of Life, Learning, and Loss of Blood Avatar

    How lovely (and who doesn’t adore banana cake, I ask you?!). When I was at culinary school, I had a chef who insisted we ate with our eyes. Yes, I think we has right!

    Like

  19. oeufsmayonnaise Avatar

    this sounds irresistible – i’m making it tomorrow. how long do the cupcakes take to bake?

    Like

  20. Luisa Avatar

    Thank you, sweet people, thank you!!!!
    DC, Paris, Vancouver, Detroit, I’ll do my best to go wherever you all are. Promise!
    Lindsay – yes, I’ll be sure to post all the details of my tour when the time comes, it’s still a ways off. 🙂
    Eileen – you can’t substitute whole wheat flour one to one for all-purpose without your cake coming out tough and flat. WW flour absorbs more liquid than AP flour and the ratio gets all out of whack. I’d stick with the original all-purpose flour if you want to make this cake and use your whole wheat flour for recipes specifically developed for whole wheat flour. (Kim Boyce’s Good to the Grain is a great resource!)
    oeufsmayonnaise – The cupcakes take about 20-25 minutes.

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