This freshly milled flour banana bread is made with a 50/50 blend of hard white and soft white wheat, overripe bananas, maple syrup, and sour cream or plain yogurt that keeps every slice moist and tender from crust to center.
The batter comes together in one bowl with a hand mixer, rests ten to fifteen minutes in the pan before baking, and fills the kitchen with bakery-worth aroma.
How to Mill Flour at Home walks through the full milling process if you are just getting started, Best Whole Grains to Mill covers everything you need to know about choosing your wheat berries, and Self-Rising Flour from Freshly Milled Flour is worth bookmarking if you want a shortcut blend to use in future bakes.

Did you know you can convert your recipes to freshly milled flour? I share how to convert your recipes and more at The Cottage Mill.

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Why You’ll Love This Recipe

Ingredients

Variations & Add-Ins
Recipe Tips
Mill on the finest setting and use the flour the same day – hard and soft white wheat milled fine and used within the day produces the most tender crumb. Coarser milling leaves bran particles that feel gritty in the finished loaf and can prevent the center from setting cleanly through the full bake.
The batter rest is not optional for FMF – resting the filled pan for ten to fifteen minutes before baking gives the bran in freshly milled flour time to fully absorb the moisture from the bananas, sour cream, and eggs. This is the step that eliminates the grainy texture most bakers notice the first time they bake with fresh milled flour. The wait is short and the difference is significant.
Use the ripest bananas you have – overripe bananas with darkened peels are sweeter, softer, and mash more evenly into the batter. Frozen bananas that have been fully thawed and drained are often even more flavorful.
Cream the butter and sugars until pale and fluffy – two to three full minutes of creaming before the eggs go in builds the structure that keeps the crumb tender rather than dense. Undermixed butter and sugar produce a heavy, compact loaf that does not rise evenly.
Fold the dry ingredients gently and stop early – once the flour meets the wet batter, fold until the streaks just disappear. Overmixed quick bread batter develops too much gluten and bakes up tight rather than soft and open.
Tent the loaf pan at the 25-35-minute mark – freshly milled flour browns more quickly than all-purpose flour because of the natural sugars in the bran. A loose tent of foil over the pan at 25-35 minutes lets the center finish baking without the top darkening past golden.
Check doneness – the loaf is done when a toothpick inserted in the middle should come out with a few moist crumbs. Some crumbs are expected and fine, wet batter means it needs more time.
Cool completely before slicing – the crumb continues setting as the loaf cools on the wire rack. Transfer to a cutting board and use a serrated knife for the cleanest slices.




Instructions
- Preheat and prepare the pan – set the oven to 350°F and grease a 9 by 5 inch loaf pan generously with butter or line with parchment paper, leaving an overhang on both long sides for easy lifting once the loaf has cooled.
- Whisk the dry ingredients – combine the freshly milled hard white wheat, soft white wheat, baking soda, and salt in a medium bowl and whisk until evenly blended with no streaks.
- Cream the butter and sugars – beat the softened butter with the brown sugar and granulated sugar in a large bowl using a stand mixer or hand beaters for two to three minutes until the mixture is pale, fluffy, and noticeably lighter in color. This step builds the structure that keeps the crumb tender through the full bake.
- Add the eggs – beat in the eggs one at a time, mixing until each is fully incorporated before adding the next.
- Stir in the bananas and maple syrup – add the mashed bananas (if using frozen, drain off excess liquid) and maple syrup to the creamed butter and sugars and stir until fully blended.
- Fold in the sour cream – stir in the sour cream or yogurt until the batter is smooth and evenly combined.
- Add the dry ingredients – add the flour mixture to the wet ingredients and fold gently with a spatula until the streaks just disappear. Stop the moment the batter comes together.
- Fold in the add-ins – if using chocolate chips, roasted pecans, or walnuts, fold them in now with a few gentle strokes.
- Fill the pan and rest the batter – pour the batter into the prepared loaf pan and smooth the top with the back of a spoon or a spatula. Let the filled pan rest at room temperature for ten to fifteen minutes before placing it in the oven. This rest is what prevents a grainy crumb in the finished loaf.
- Bake – place on the center rack of the oven and bake at 350°F for 50 to 60 minutes, tenting loosely with foil at the 25-35-minute mark if the top is browning faster than the center is setting. The loaf is done when a toothpick comes out with a few moist crumbs rather than wet batter.
- Cool and serve – let the loaf rest in the pan for ten minutes before placing onto a wire rack to cool completely. Transfer to a cutting board, slice with a serrated knife, and serve with softened butter or a swipe of cream cheese.

Freezing and Storage
- Room temperature – wrap the fully cooled loaf tightly in beeswax wrap or store in an airtight container for up to three days. The crumb stays soft, and the banana and maple notes deepen overnight.
- Refrigerator – wrap tightly and refrigerate for up to five days. Bring individual slices to room temperature before serving or warm briefly in a 300°F oven or for five minutes.
- Freezer – slice the fully cooled loaf before freezing. Tuck small squares of parchment paper between each slice, transfer to a labeled and dated freezer-safe zip-lock bag, and freeze for up to three months. Thaw at room temperature for 20 to 30 minutes or warm from frozen in a 325°F oven for 10 to 12 minutes.
- Fresh milled flour storage – store any excess freshly milled flour in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 2 to 3 days, in the refrigerator for 4 to 7 days, or in the freezer for up to 6 months. Bring refrigerated or frozen flour to room temperature before baking for the most consistent results.
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Freshly Milled Flour Banana Bread
Equipment
- 1 Large mixing bowl
- 1 Medium Mixing Bowl
- 1 stand mixer or hand beaters
- 1 9×5 inch loaf pan
- 1 Whisk
- 1 Wire Cooling Rack
- 1 Grain Mill
Ingredients
The Dry Ingredients
- 1 cup hard white wheat freshly milled, 120 grams
- 1 cup soft white wheat freshly milled, 120 grams
- 1 teaspoon baking soda 6 grams
- ½ teaspoon salt 3 grams
The Wet Ingredients
- ½ cup salted butter 113 grams (softened)
- ½ cup brown sugar 100 grams (packed)
- ¼ cup granulated sugar 50 grams
- 2 large eggs 100 grams (room temperature)
- 1½ teaspoons vanilla extract 7 milliliters
- 1½ to 2 cups overripe bananas 340 to 450 grams (mashed, about 3 medium bananas)
- ⅓ cup sour cream or plain yogurt 80 grams
- 1 tablespoon maple syrup 15 milliliters (optional)
Optional Add Ins
- ½ cup roasted pecans or walnuts 57 grams (roughly chopped, frozen nuts work fine)
- ½ cup chocolate chips 85 grams
Instructions
- Preheat and prepare the pan – set the oven to 350°F and grease a 9 by 5 inch loaf pan with butter or line with parchment paper.
- Whisk the dry ingredients – combine the freshly milled hard white wheat, soft white wheat, baking soda, and salt in a medium bowl and whisk together.
- Cream the butter and sugars – beat the softened butter with the brown sugar and granulated sugar in a large bowl using a stand mixer or hand beaters for 2 to 3 minutes until pale and fluffy.
- Add the eggs – beat in the eggs one at a time until each is fully incorporated.
- Stir in the bananas and maple syrup – add the mashed bananas (if using frozen, drain off excess liquid) and maple syrup to the creamed butter and sugars and stir until combined.
- Fold in the sour cream – stir in the sour cream or yogurt until the batter is smooth.
- Add the dry ingredients – fold the flour mixture into the wet ingredients gently until just combined. Stop the moment the batter comes together.
- Fold in the add-ins – if using chocolate chips or nuts, fold them in now.
- Fill the pan and rest the batter – pour the batter into the prepared loaf pan and smooth the top. Let the filled pan rest at room temperature for 10 to 15 minutes before baking. This rest is what prevents a grainy crumb.
- Bake – place on the center rack and bake at 350°F for 50 to 60 minutes. Tent loosely with foil at the 35-minute mark to prevent over-browning. The loaf is done when a toothpick comes out with just a few moist crumbs.
- Cool and serve – let the loaf rest in the pan for ten minutes before placing onto a wire rack to cool completely. Transfer to a cutting board, slice with a serrated knife, and serve with softened butter or a swipe of cream cheese.
Notes
Nutrition

Emily Rider
Home miller since 1999 with fresh-milled flour & sourdough experience. Sharing from-scratch recipes and traditional kitchen skills, rooted in the seasons and inspired by everyday cottage living and seasonal rhythms.
