Zucchini Bread with Sesame Seeds

Zucchini bread is so adaptable. Any ingredients that you don’t have at hand can be replaced by other types of flour, sweetener, and add-ins. Learn more at TwiceasTasty.com.
When zucchini plants are putting out fresh squash every day that seem to double in size if you leave them on the vine just one more night, it’s time to make the quick bread recipe I share this week in my Twice as Tasty column for the Flathead Beacon. Almost every cook seems to have a favored recipe for zucchini bread, partly because the bread is so adaptable. I base mine on a quick bread ratio that works for all sorts of flavors.

As I mention in my column, the long list of ingredients in my zucchini bread recipe gives my preferred taste and texture to the loaves—and still uses up plenty of the squash. If you compare it to my Ratio Quick Bread recipe, you’ll see that any ingredients that you don’t have at hand can be replaced by other types of flour, sweetener, and add-ins.
Learn to make Zucchini Bread with Sesame Seeds

Pumpkin Quick Bread

Easier to make than fully from-scratch pumpkin pie and easy to store and transport, two-loaf quick bread recipes let you enjoy one loaf and gift the other. Learn more at TwiceasTasty.com.
While most people of think of pumpkins for pie late in the year—I shared each homemade component over several weeks last year in my Twice as Tasty column for the Flathead Beacon—many of my homegrown sugar pumpkins end up in less labor-intensive dishes, like the quick bread recipe I share this week. I explain in my column how “quick” can be a bit misleading, since it still takes time to put the recipe together and an hour for the bread to bake, but compared with a yeast or sourdough bread or an all-scratch pie, it’s a speedy creation.

Quick breads have lots of advantages over other baked goods: they’re easy to store and transport, and I generally create two-loaf recipes so that I can slice and then freeze one to enjoy later, piece by piece. This time of year, the extra loaf also makes an easy holiday gift.
Learn to make Pumpkin Quick Bread

Cranberry-Orange Quick Bread

Montana life has taught me to favor quick breads: warm frozen slices in the toaster oven and devour them driving up the ski hill. Learn more at TwiceasTasty.com.
After endless hours in coffeeshops, I have a soft spot for muffins and scones, but Montana life has taught me to favor quick breads. It’s their mobility I admire. Where muffins can get squished if they aren’t well packaged and scones can crumble after the first day, quick breads can be sliced once cool and slid into a gallon zip-close bag, where they hold their shape well. Better yet, presliced loaves can be frozen so that I can pull out a couple of slices, warm them in the toaster oven, and devour them as I’m driving up the ski hill.

In my Twice as Tasty column this week for the Flathead Beacon, I share a wintertime quick bread that packs a flavor punch from cranberries and orange. I usually buy at least two bags of cranberries as soon as I see them in stores and immediately freeze one with the berries whole and unwashed, since water causes the skins to blister. I can then make this bread on a whim, chopping still-frozen cranberries in a food processor.
Learn to make Cranberry-Orange Quick Bread