Banana Zucchini Pudding Cake with Vanilla Browned Butter Glaze

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Glazed Banana Zucchini Cake — With sweet vanilla pudding mix, ripe bananas, and grated zucchini, this cake is fall-apart soft and tender. It’s a snap to make with just a whisk, one bowl, and is ready to be baked in just minutes! 

Banana Zucchini Pudding Cake with Vanilla Browned Butter Glaze

Best Ever Banana and Zucchini Cake

It seems that I either have no ripe bananas on hand or I have more than I know what to do with. 

I made this cake because it was one of those times I could have fed all the monkeys in the zoo because I had so many. I also had a little zucchini in the crisper drawer that needed to be used before it turned into a limp noodle.

I decided using zucchini in cake sounded better than just, you know, slicing it on top of a salad.

The cake turned out to be falling-apart-soft, tender, and moist.

I cannot stand dry cake and between the stick of melted butter, the soft bananas, the high moisture content in zucchini, and the six ounces of Greek yogurt added to the batter, this little cake was as moist as they come.

Banana Zucchini Pudding Cake with Vanilla Browned Butter Glaze

And it is just a little cake, baked in a 9-by-9 inch pan. Although having too much cake laying around isn’t the worst problem in the world, I prefer smaller cakes since they’re eaten and finished up while still at their freshness peak.

Plus, variety is the spice of life and with large cakes, I’m ready for a change long before the cake is anywhere near finished, so I try to bake smaller cakes whenever possible.

I added one packet of dry instant vanilla pudding mix to the batter to turn this cake into a pudding cake. I just love the pudding cakes that are sold in grocery store bakeries and figured I could make my own and this cake turned out to be a close approximation, full of creamy and sweet vanilla pudding notes.

When it comes to banana cake, I prefer denser as opposed to light and airy, and bewteen the mashed bananas, the Greek yogurt, and the pudding, this golden nugget is definitely dense. I wouldn’t call it a lead balloon, but it’s not a fluffy angel food, that’s for sure. It’s a pudding cake.

Banana Zucchini Pudding Cake with Vanilla Browned Butter Glaze

I could have made it lighter by adding baking powder, but purposely did not because I wanted the crumb to remain more compact and wet, as opposed to drier and lighter. I find that as much as baking powder leavens, it also dries out whatever it’s added to and I don’t prefer that result.

Instead, I added just enough baking soda to get the job done, omitted baking powder entirely, and my strategy paid off because I got what I wanted in the form of a melt-in-your-mouth, rich, pudding cake.

The flavor of the cake is definitely one of banana, rather than zucchini. Zucchini is so flavor-neutral, otherwise known as bland, and is masked or takes a backseat to whatever other ingredients and flavors are present.

On the opposite end of the scale, bananas tend to dominate the flavor profile whenever they’re present, and they dominated this cake.

Banana Zucchini Pudding Cake with Vanilla Browned Butter Glaze

Likely due to the stick of melted butter in the batter, as I was shoveling forkfuls of this cake into my mouth, I couldn’t help but think it tasted like a banana-butter cake or a banana-based rendition of a yellow cake-mix cake, with the familiar sponginess and springiness that yellow cake-mix cakes have. 

Sticking with a butter theme, I glazed the cake with a browned butter glaze that complemented the sweet bananas and pudding beautifully. If you’ve never had or cooked with browned butter, you need to board this butter train.

Browned butter adds a depth of flavor, nuttiness, boldness, and an intensity and richness to everything it touches. It brings out everything that’s good and right with butter to begin with. You can do it on the stovetop but I brown butter in the microwave and it’s a piece of cake. Pun intended.

If there’s one way to make fruits and vegetables taste decadent, a browned butter glaze on top of a slice of this cake is how. Just think about all the servings of fruit and vegetables you’ll be working into your diet by way of cake!

Banana Zucchini Pudding Cake with Vanilla Browned Butter Glaze

Banana Zucchini Cake Ingredients 

For this easy zucchini banana cake recipe, you’ll need: 

  • Unsalted butter
  • Granulated sugar
  • Light brown sugar
  • Egg
  • Greek yogurt
  • Vanilla extract 
  • Bananas 
  • Zucchini
  • Instant vanilla pudding mix
  • All-purpose flour
  • Baking soda
  • Mini chocolate chips (optional) 
  • Confectioners’ sugar
  • Cream or milk 

Banana Zucchini Pudding Cake with Vanilla Browned Butter Glaze piece on fork

How to Make Banana Zucchini Cake 

This is such a simple zucchini dessert to make! Here’s a look at how the cake comes together: 

  1. In a large microwave-safe mixing bowl, melt the butter.
  2. To the melted butter, add the sugars, egg, yogurt, vanilla, and whisk to combine.
  3. Add the bananas, zucchini, and stir to incorporate.
  4. Add the dry pudding mix and stir to incorporate.
  5. Add the flour, baking soda, salt, and stir until just combined. Stir in the chocolate chips.
  6. Pour the batter into a foil-lined 9×9-inch pan and bake until the top is set and golden, the center is not jiggly, and edges have pulled away slightly from sides of the pan. 
  7. Allow cake to cool in pan for at least 30 minutes before slicing and serving.
  8. While cake cools, make the glaze. Glaze just before serving! 

Banana Zucchini Pudding Cake with Vanilla Browned Butter Glaze

Can This Recipe Be Doubled? 

Yes! Simply double the ingredients list and bake the cake in a 9×13-inch pan. 

Can I Use Cook and Stir Pudding Mix? 

No! You must use instant vanilla pudding mix. Add it to the batter like a dry ingredient, do NOT actually make pudding with it. 

Banana Zucchini Pudding Cake with Vanilla Browned Butter Glaze

Do I Need to Wring the Excess Moisture from the Zucchini? 

I didn’t wring the shredded zucchini between kitchen towels to remove the excess moisture, but if your zucchini appears to be too wet you can certainly do so. 

Can I Add Different Mix-Ins? 

Of course! I added mini chocolate chips, but a different baking chip, chopped nuts, or dried fruit could all be used instead. 

Banana Zucchini Pudding Cake with Vanilla Browned Butter Glaze

Tips for Making a Banana Zucchini Cake

I added just one-half cup of mini chocolate chips to the cake batter and I used mini chips because they sink less easily to the bottom of the cake than regular sized-chocolate chips do, but regular-sized chocolate chips will work just fine.

I didn’t want to overwhelm the cake with chocolate so kept it at a modest half cup of chocolate chips. I wanted it pudding-laden, buttery, and banana-ey more so than chocolaty. There’s just a enough to chocolate to complement the bananas.

However, you’re welcome to add more chocolate chips if desired. 

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Glazed Banana Zucchini Cake

By Averie Sunshine
With sweet vanilla pudding mix, ripe bananas, and grated zucchini, this cake is fall-apart soft and tender. It's a snap to make with just a whisk, one bowl, and is ready to be baked in just minutes! 
Prep Time: 10 minutes
Cook Time: 35 minutes
Total Time: 45 minutes
Servings: 12
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Ingredients  

Cake

  • ½ cup unsalted butter, melted (one stick)
  • ¾ cup granulated sugar
  • ¼ cup light brown sugar, packed
  • 1 large egg
  • 6 ounces vanilla or plain Greek yogurt (one standard-sized small container, about 3/4 cup; sour cream may be substituted; I use Chobani Vanilla Chocolate Chunk
  • 1 tablespoon vanilla extract
  • 1 to 1 ¼ cups mashed ripe bananas, about 1 1/2 large or 2 small bananas
  • 1 cup coarsely grated zucchini, 1 small zucchini
  • one 3.4-ounce box instant vanilla pudding
  • 1 cup all-purpose flour
  • ¾ teaspoon baking soda
  • ½ teaspoon salt, optional and to taste
  • ½ cup semi-sweet mini chocolate chips, regular-sized chips may be substituted, optional

For the Vanilla Browned Butter Glaze

  • ¼ cup unsalted butter, half of one stick
  • 1 cup+ confectioners’ sugar, sifted
  • 1 tablespoon vanilla extract
  • 1 tablespoons+ cream or milk, optional and to taste

Instructions 

For the Cake:

  • Preheat oven to 350F, line a 9-by-9-inch pan with aluminum foil, spray with cooking spray or grease and flour the pan; set aside.
  • In a large microwave-safe mixing bowl, melt the butter, about 1 minute.
  • To the melted butter, add the sugars, egg, yogurt, vanilla, and whisk to combine.
  • Add the bananas, zucchini, and stir to incorporate.
  • Add the dry pudding mix and stir to incorporate (You are not making pudding; simply add the mix as a dry ingredient).
  • Add the flour, baking soda, salt, and stir until just combined, taking care not to over-mix or cake will be tougher as the gluten will over-develop.
  • Stir in the chocolate chips.
  • Pour batter into prepared pan and bake for about 35 to 38 minutes, or until top is set and golden, the center is not jiggly, and edges have pulled away slightly from sides of the pan. A toothpick inserted in the center will likely not come out completely clean because this is a dense cake and both the gooey bananas and melted chocolate chips may prevent a clean toothpick test.
  • Allow cake to cool in pan for at least 30 minutes before slicing and serving. While cake cools, make the glaze.

For the Vanilla Browned Butter Glaze:

  • Brown the butter in a small saucepan on the stovetop, heating over medium heat. Swirl the pan or stir frequently for about 4 to 7 minutes, or until the sputtering, crackling, and foaming has subsided, the butter has browned and has a nutty aroma. Watch it closely so that it doesn’t go from browned and nutty to burnt and inedible.
  • Or, brown the butter in the microwave in a microwave-safe bowl by heating it on high power, uncovered, for 3 to 5 minutes, until the sputtering, crackling, and foaming has subsided, the butter has browned, and has a nutty aroma as outlined here. The same rules apply in the microwave as on the stovetop; watch it closely and start checking it approximately every 15 seconds starting at about the 3-minute mark, so that it doesn’t go from browned and nutty to burnt and inedible.
  • Transfer hot butter to medium-sized mixing bowl and allow it to cool for about 5 minutes.
  • Add the confectioners’ sugar, vanilla, and whisk to combine.
  • Based on desired glaze consistency and taste preference, add the cream one tablespoon at a time, until desired consistency is reached, playing with sugar and cream ratios as necessary. (I only use butter, sugar, and vanilla in this glaze, no cream).
  • Drizzle glaze over the top of cake before slicing and serving; or slice, serve, and glaze each piece individually. I use the glaze like butter and spread it liberally on the interior surface of a slice.

Notes

Note - Depending on how moist your zucchini is and the moisture content in your bananas, you may need to bake your cake for a longer duration than I did. Bake until your cake is done and cooked through, given your climate and your set of ingredients. Watch your cake, not the clock, when determining how long to bake it; bake until done. This is a very soft and moist cake, and is not like traditional 'bakery cakes' or a typical birthday cake. It is a very soft cake, more like a soft banana bread and it will never become a light, airy, bakery-cake kind of cake, no matter how long you bake it.
Storage: Unglazed cake can be stored in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 5 days, or store glazed cake in the refrigerator for up to 5 days. Unglazed cake can be frozen for up to 3 months.

Nutrition

Serving: 1, Calories: 447kcal, Carbohydrates: 50g, Protein: 5g, Fat: 20g, Saturated Fat: 12g, Polyunsaturated Fat: 6g, Cholesterol: 62mg, Sodium: 209mg, Fiber: 1g, Sugar: 37g

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

More Easy Banana Cake Recipes: 

Soft & Fluffy Strawberry Banana Cake— This cake is so soft, moist, fluffy! It’s packed with creamy bananas and sweet strawberries. It’s such a rich, flavorful cake! 

Six-Banana Banana Chocolate Chip Cake — Yes, 6 bananas in 1 cake means it’s super SOFT, moist, and has robust banana flavor with chocolate chips in EVERY bite!! EASY and one bowl!

Upside-Down Banana Bread Cake — Don’t settle for making another loaf of plain banana bread when you can have caramelized banana slices on top of soft banana cake!! A decadent spin on banana bread!

Caramelized Banana Upside-Down Cake — This upside down cake is super moist thanks to the combination of sour cream, buttermilk, and vegetable oil. It’s so easy to make, and the caramelized banana flavor is impossible to resist! 

Hummingbird Cake — A super SOFT and moist cake with bananas, pineapple, coconut, cream cheese frosting, and pecans!! Makes a huge cake that’ll feed a crowd!

Apple and Banana Bundt Cake – Apple cake meets banana bread with a to-die-for glaze! Best ever!

About the Author

Welcome to AverieCooks! Here you’ll find fast and easy recipes that taste amazing and are geared for real life. Nothing fussy or complicated, just awesome tasting dishes everyone loves!

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Please note: I have only made the recipe as written, and cannot give advice or predict what will happen if you change something. If you have a question regarding changing, altering, or making substitutions to the recipe, please check out the FAQ page for more info.

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Comments

  1. Absolutely can NOT believe it’s taken so long for me to stumble upon your site! So thankful I did! Everything looks so delicious – I want to try it all!! Awesome, thanks for sharing all these yummy recipes!

  2. Hi Averie, what a great way to add zucchini to my kids snuck time. I’ve baked this cake yesterday and it was a big success, even with my picky six year old! Thanks for sharing the recipe.

    1. I am so glad that this cake was met with picky 6 year old approval! YAY! Thanks for making it and for telling me it was a hit! :)

  3. Q for your thoughts Averie: I have a few extra carrots on hand and was thinking of subbing them for the zucchini. Have you ever tried something similar? I haven’t combined banana + carrot before. Obviously baking it is the one way to know for sure, but thought I’d check with you!

    1. I have done something similar in this bread and it’s one of my fave breads of all times!
      https://www.loveveggiesandyoga.com/2012/09/carrot-pineapple-banana-bread-with-browned-butter-cream-cheese-frosting.html

      Carrot + banana is an amazing combo, and in that one I added pineapple and you could also add shredded coconut – you could bake it as a Bundt cake, a flat cake, or as bread – the batter in my bread was quite thick and if I were to re-do it, I’d probably divide the batter in two loaf pans or bake as a Bundt, but it also depends on how many ‘add-in’s’ and fruit you use. LMK what you go with!

  4. Once again, I am drooling over your pictures and fabulous recipes. This looks incredible and I can’t wait to try it!

    I am sure you already know this but thought I would share: A tip to prevent chocolate chips or any add-ins (dried fruit, nuts, etc) from sinking to the bottom is to coat them in the dry ingredients first and then fold them into the batter once it has mixed. :)

  5. I love that you baked this in a 9×9 pan! You are right…who needs a massive cake sitting around? Better to eat it up in one sitting! Well, that’s what happens when there are 2 teenage, athletic boys around! ;-)

    This cake looks so moist. I just love the photo of the bite on the fork. Like, yes, my mouth is open! LOL! I gotta say, too, Averie, that I am really impressed with the professional layout of all your recipes, your explanations, your photos, etc. You are so thorough and clean and organized about the whole process and you have a fantastic way of articulating it all, like it just rolls off your tongue! That is because you are GOOD at what you do! Thanks for all your hard work. I know it is a lot and I, for one, appreciate it! :-)

    1. This comment made my night, Michele. Thank you. There are times I wonder if I’m just being wordy and maybe no one else cares but I figure there are plenty of blogs that talk about their dog, running times, fight with their husband, or what their kid did that day but I’ve made a concerted effort the past 6 mos or so to really just focus on…the food. On my food blog, and all :) Thank you for appreciating it and for the kind words. I do spend more than a few minutes on each post and glad it’s paying off :)

  6. I’m totally with you on the moist cake! Nothing worse than a dry cake. What a sad waste of ingredients, in my opinion. This looks like it fits the bill though!

    1. Sad waste of ingredients if a cake or anything turns out dry – totally agree! And this was the antithesis of dry, thank goodness!

  7. Averie I appreciate your banana dilemma. I often end up with them so over ripe I’m grossed out and cant fathom peeling them for use! I will pass along a trick I learned some time ago when needing ripe bananas: roast them. If you want to know more you find how to do it on my blog but you basically bake them for about 10 minutes, they become ripe but the flavor is also fully and deeper. I’m on the flip side of this having a freezer full of shredded zucchini and lacking inspiration. LOVE this recipe!

    1. Ok here’s a little linkfest for you

      https://www.loveveggiesandyoga.com/2012/09/vegetable-lasagna-casserole.html <--- use the zucchini as the crust ( I love doing this wit it!) https://www.loveveggiesandyoga.com/2012/09/baked-chipotle-sweet-potato-and-zucchini-fritters.html
      https://www.loveveggiesandyoga.com/2012/09/zucchini-banana-bread-with-browned-butter-cream-cheese-frosting.html (also linked this in the current post, but it’s a basic but really good zuke/banana bread, more bread-like less cake-like than current recipe)

      If you have a dehydrator, I use it for my bananas too b/c yes I love the flavor and good point about roasting them…the flavor is so much more intense and yummy!
      https://www.loveveggiesandyoga.com/2011/11/dusted-off.html