Banana Bars

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Put your overripe bananas to work in a big pan of Banana Bars, one of the most spectacular banana desserts ever. The bars are soft and cake-like with a thick layer of cream cheese frosting. And for some crazy reason, I think they taste best served cold.

A pile of frosted banana bars.


 

This is one of my all-time favorite desserts. The bar base is a super-soft, moist Banana Cake with serious banana flavor, but you make it in a jelly roll pan so the bars are short and squat. Then, you slather the whole pan in a thick layer of cream cheese frosting, and the ratio of cake-to-frosting is bordering on 1:1. It’s ideal!

For whatever reason, and maybe it’s the cream cheese frosting, I think these bars are best served cold. You have to store them in the refrigerator anyway, for food safety reasons, so it works out.

Try these easy Banana Bars for a scrumptious afternoon snack, for a potluck, or for your next bake sale. In my opinion, this is the best recipe out there!

Recipe ingredients

Labeled ingredients for banana bars.

At a Glance: Here is a quick snapshot of what ingredients are in this recipe.
Please see the recipe card below for specific quantities.

Equipment and ingredient notes

  • Jelly roll pan: To get the ideal cake-to-frosting ratio, bake this cake in a 10-inch by 15-inch jelly roll pan (I love this one by OXO).
  • Mashed ripe bananas: If frozen, thaw on the counter while you prep the other ingredients. To ripen bananas in real time, preheat the oven to 300 degrees and line a baking sheet with foil. Arrange the unpeeled bananas on the baking sheet. Bake until banana skins are completely black all over, about 15 to 20 minutes. Cool. Scoop the banana pulp from the peel, then mash.
3 ripe bananas on a baking sheet.

Step-by-step instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Coat a 15” x 10” x 1” pan (jelly roll pan) with nonstick cooking spray. In a medium bowl, whisk together flour, baking soda, and salt. Set aside. In a large mixing bowl of an stand mixer fit with the paddle attachment, or with an electric hand mixer, cream butter and sugar until pale and fluffy, about 2 minutes.
Butter and sugar creamed together in a mixing bowl.
  1. Add eggs to the large bowl with the creamed mixture and beat until incorporated. Beat in mashed banana and vanilla until incorporated. Gradually add dry ingredients to the wet ingredients and mix until uniformly combined.
Banana bar batter in a silver mixing bowl.
  1. Pour batter into prepared baking dish (in this case, the jelly roll pan) and smooth the top.
A pan of unbaked banana bars.
  1. Bake until a toothpick inserted comes out clean with a few crumbs attached, about 20 to 25 minutes. Cool completely, at least 30 minutes.
A pan of baked banana bars.
  1. To make the cream cheese frosting, in a standing mixer fit with the paddle attachment, or with an electric hand mixer, beat cream cheese and butter until smooth. Gradually add the 4 cups confectioners’ sugar and vanilla and beat well.
Cream cheese frosting in a silver mixing bowl.
  1. Spread evenly over cooled bars and cut to serve.
A board full of cut up banana bars.

Recipe tips and variations

  • Yield: This recipe makes 24 squares, 2 1/2-inch by 2 1/2-inch each, cut in a 4×6 configuration. Obviously you can cut the bars however you want!
  • Storage: Refrigerate any uneaten bars within 2 hours and store covered in the refrigerator for up to 4 days. You can bring them to room temperature before serving or eat them cold (I personally love cold cream cheese frosting).
  • Freezer: Tightly cover unfrosted or frosted bars and freeze them up to 2 months. Thaw overnight in the refrigerator.
  • Cool completely before frosting: Frosting spreads most easily on cooled bars. If the bars are still warm, you might end up lifting part of the cake off as you spread, making holes in the top and mixing cake with frosting.
  • Travel: To bring frosted banana bars to a party, cut them at home but keep them in the pan. Stick toothpicks at regular intervals into the top of the frosting, then drape plastic wrap lightly over the toothpicks to prevent the plastic from sticking to the frosting.
  • More mix-ins: Stir in toasted walnuts, toasted pecans, or mini chocolate chips before baking.
  • More banana recipes:Try Banana Bread, Chocolate Chip Banana Bread, Banana Pancakes, Banana Pudding, Banana Split Recipe, Banana Nutella Croissants, or Bananas Foster.
  • More dessert recipes: Try these delicious Pumpkin Cookies with brown butter frosting, Cheesecake Bars made with tangy sour cream, and Lemon Yogurt Cake made with plain Greek yogurt.
A board full of cut up banana bars.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do you ripen bananas in the oven?

Preheat the oven to 300 degrees and line a baking sheet with foil or parchment paper. Arrange the unpeeled bananas on the prepared baking sheet. Bake until banana skins are completely black all over, about 15 to 20 minutes. Cool. Scoop the banana pulp from the peel, then mash.

How do you ripen bananas in a paper bag?

If you have a few days to spare, put bananas in a brown paper bag and fold over the top. If you have other ripe, ethylene-producing fruit, like avocados or apples, add them to the bag with the bananas. The ethylene gas will circulate and should ripen your fruit in about 24 to 36 hours

What can overripe bananas be used for?

Overripe bananas are excellent (ideal, even!) for baking banana-flavored desserts and treats like muffins, cakes, bars, and of course banana bread. You can also blend them into smoothies. Take care that your bananas are just dark and spotted, though, and not moldy. Once mold shows up on a banana, it’s time to toss it.

How do you freeze overripe bananas?

That bunch of dark bananas on your counter is perfect for the freezer! Carefully peel each banana and add them to a freezer-safe plastic bag (you can leave them whole, cut them in half, or chop them). Label, date, and freeze up to 3 months. For baked goods, thaw frozen bananas at room temperature for mashing. For smoothies, add directly to the blender still frozen. Some smoothies rely on frozen bananas for that icy texture and temperature.

More frosted sweets

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A pile of banana bars on a piece of parchment paper.

Banana Bars

Put your overripe bananas to work in a big pan of Banana Bars, one of the most spectacular banana desserts ever. The bars are soft and cake-like with a thick layer of cream cheese frosting.
Prep Time 5 minutes
Cook Time 1 hour 5 minutes
Total Time 1 hour 10 minutes
Servings 24 servings
Course Dessert
Cuisine American
Calories 267
5 from 38 votes

Equipment

Ingredients 

For the bars:

For the frosting:

Instructions 

To make the bars:

  • Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Coat a 15” x 10” x 1” pan (jelly roll pan) with nonstick cooking spray. In a medium bowl, whisk together flour, baking soda, and salt. Set aside.
  • In an electric mixer fit with the paddle attachment, or with an electric hand mixer, beat butter and sugar until pale and fluffy, about 2 minutes.
  • Add eggs and beat until incorporated. Beat in banana and vanilla until incorporated. Gradually add flour mixture and mix until uniformly combined. Spread into prepared pan.
  • Bake until a toothpick inserted comes out clean with a few crumbs attached, about 20 to 25 minutes. Cool completely, at least 30 minutes.

To make the frosting:

  • In a standing mixer fit with the paddle attachment, or with an electric hand mixer, beat cream cheese and butter until smooth.
  • Gradually add powdered sugar and vanilla and beat well. Spread evenly over cooled bars.

Recipe Video

Notes

  1. Jelly roll pan: To get the ideal cake-to-frosting ratio, bake this cake in a 10-inch by 15-inch jelly roll pan (I love this one by OXO).
  2. Mashed ripe bananas: If frozen, thaw on the counter while you prep the other ingredients. To ripen bananas in real time, preheat the oven to 300 degrees and line a baking sheet with foil. Arrange the unpeeled bananas on the baking sheet. Bake until banana skins are completely black all over, about 15 to 20 minutes. Cool. Scoop the banana pulp from the peel, then mash.
  3. Yield: This recipe makes 24 squares, 2 1/2-inch by 2 1/2-inch each, cut in a 4×6 configuration. Obviously you can cut the bars however you want!
  4. Storage: Refrigerate any uneaten bars within 2 hours and store covered in the refrigerator for up to 4 days. You can bring them to room temperature before serving or eat them cold (I personally love cold cream cheese frosting).

Nutrition

Serving: 1 barCalories: 267kcalCarbohydrates: 47gProtein: 2gFat: 8gSaturated Fat: 5gPolyunsaturated Fat: 1gMonounsaturated Fat: 2gTrans Fat: 1gCholesterol: 44mgSodium: 135mgPotassium: 57mgFiber: 1gSugar: 37gVitamin A: 277IUVitamin C: 1mgCalcium: 8mgIron: 1mg
Did you make this recipe?Tag @culinaryhill on Instagram so we can admire your masterpiece! #culinaryhill
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Meggan Hill is a classically-trained chef and professional writer. Her meticulously-tested recipes and detailed tutorials bring confidence and success to home cooks everywhere. Meggan has been featured on NPR, HuffPost, FoxNews, LA Times, and more.

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Comments

  1. 20 stars. 5 From me and 15 from the neighbors I made them for who loved them. After starting, I realized I only had 2 eggs, so I subbed 1/4 cup of vanilla yogurt for the 3rd egg and they turned out great. Everyone loved them, even the little kids. SUCH a hit. Thanks Meghan!!5 stars

    1. Hi Mary, I haven’t tried this myself, but I think you could increase it by a couple servings. The half sheet has a volume of 12 cups, while the jelly roll pan has a volume of 10 cups. Adding additional batter to a taller pan may result in a longer cooking time, so I would keep an eye on it. I don’t want you to have ruined banana bars, though. I hope this helps! Take care! – Meggan

  2. Bake time says 1 hour and 5 minutes? Is this correct for a 15 x 10 x 1? One of the comments suggested 50 minutes in a 9 x 13.

    1. Hi Bonnie, thanks for the question! It is a little confusing, so I hope I can help. The total time to actively cook this recipe is 1 hour and 5 minutes, in step #4 the cake is baked until set, about 20 to 25 minutes, and then needs to cool down at least 30 minutes. The rest of the cooking time is to make the frosting. The actual baking time though is 20 to 25 minutes. I did test it in a 9 x 13-inch pan and it took 50 minutes baking time for the center to set, since a reader asked. I hope this helps clear it up, sorry about that. Take care! – Meggan

  3. This recipe was very easy to make. My 3 year old grandson helped me make it. It came out delicious. Thank you, Nancy5 stars

  4. Hi, these banana bars are fantastic just thought that I’d let you know that when you are covering the bars with plastic wrap and toothpicks, put miniature marshmallows on the tip of the toothpicks to stop the toothpicks from poking through the plastic wrap. That’s a little trick that my Grandmother taught me.

  5. This looks delicious! Should salted or unsalted butter be used? Thank you – can’t wait to try it.

    1. Hi Irene! Technically you should probably use unsalted butter for everything because salt content varies by brand of butter. However, my mom (and all my friends and relatives in Wisconsin) don’t buy unsalted butter, ever. I’ve made it with both, it’s delicious with both. I honestly can’t tell the difference. There is a pinch of salt in the recipe, but it’s not going to taste salty if you use salted butter. I hope that helps! It’s a great question. Thank you. :)

  6. Ha! I LOVE that you can (probably) eat more than me, Meggan. Next time I out-eat everyone at the table, I’ll think of you!!
    The banana cake it stunning. Stunningly simple, too. I have a bit of a battle on my hands to get to the browning bananas before my husband throws them away (!!) but this is a great idea if ever i do have some bananas needing immediate usage!5 stars

    1. Ha ha ha! Thanks. :) Yeah that Mitch Hedberg quote is one of my favorites and I’ve just been WAITING to pull it out. Photography – thank you! I try very hard, the struggle is real, it doesn’t come naturally, all of that. It’s a lot of practice, I take several hundred photos per week and eventually I get better, very slowly! Always room for improvement! Thanks again. :)

  7. 1. I love banana bread! 2. I could eat cream cheese frosting out of the bowl. 3. I’ve never had the two together, but it sounds like the perfect pairing! 5 stars

    1. Hi Valerie, yes. I have made it that way. But, I think I had to bake it longer, and I do not recall exactly what that bake time was. I will test it again though and post my results. You won’t have the 50/50 cake/frosting ratio though… for better or for worse! ;)

    2. Hi Valerie, I made this cake in a 9″ x 13″ pan today. It worked out great! I ended up baking it 50 minutes total at 350 degrees. The thing you have to watch for is making sure the center is set. I know that probably sounds obvious, but there were multiple times where I thought the cake was done but the center wasn’t. The top gets browned, but it tastes perfect. I actually left the frosting off today too, and it’s like a giant pan of really great banana bread! I’ll update the recipe to reflect this info. Thanks for the question!

  8. What a great idea! Mine usually wait out until I get the urge to make banana bread, but this looks even better! Great recipe.

  9. Great use for bananas….plus it’s frosted….I would be one happy camper with a plate of these in front of me. ;)

  10. Love the idea of banana bars! Nice that there are not a lot of other flavors in there, just banana. Sometimes bananas are just what I crave. Saved this recipe-yum!5 stars