This Persimmon Bread Recipe is a keeper (in a make again and again sort of way)! Soft, moist, and every slice is studded with walnuts and raisins | natashaskitchen.com

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My parents in Idaho and my in-laws in California both have persimmon trees (even though according to every tree expert, persimmon trees don’t grow in Idaho, but Mom babied her two trees and this year there are probably 100 beautiful persimmons on their branches).

We love persimmons but up until this persimmon bread recipe, we were just eating them fresh. Have you tried them yet? They kind of taste like sweet pumpkins/apples – super delicious! It’s no wonder many Russian and Ukrainian people are smitten with them. The are also delicious in our Persimmon Pomegranate Salad.

One of my readers, Janna A., generously shared this recipe with me last year but we didn’t have any persimmons at that point so I held on to the recipe until persimmons were back in season. I love this recipe as much as Vadim’s very popular banana bread.

The verdict: this one’s a keeper (in a make again and again sort of way)! It’s soft and moist, and every slice is studded with walnuts and raisins.Thank you Janna for this treasure of a recipe!

This Persimmon Bread Recipe is a keeper (in a make again and again sort of way)! Soft, moist, and every slice is studded with walnuts and raisins | natashaskitchen.com

Ingredients for Persimmon Bread:

2 large eggs, room temperature
1 cup granulated sugar
1 Tbsp real vanilla extract
3 cups fuyu persimmon pureed (a little over 1 1/2 lbs) (DO NOT USE Hachiya persimmons)
10 Tbsp unsalted butter, melted
2 tsp baking soda, sifted to make there aren’t lumps
1/4 tsp (generous pinch) of salt
2 tsp cinnamon
3 cups all-purpose flour *measured correctly
1 1/2 cups walnut pieces, toasted
1 cup raisins

*To measure flour, scoop into the measuring cup with a spoon & scrape off the top

*Watch our easy video tutorial on how to measure correctly

This Persimmon Bread Recipe is a keeper (in a make again and again sort of way)! Soft, moist, and every slice is studded with walnuts and raisins | natashaskitchen.com

How to Make Persimmon Bread:

Prep: Preheat oven to 350˚F. Butter two bread loaf pans. Toast walnut pieces on a dry skillet until aromatic and lightly golden then cool to room temp.

Persimmon Bread-2

1. Remove tops of persimmon with a butter knife (I’ve broken the tip off a good knife doing this before, so I only use a butter knife now). Cut into quarters and puree (I use this blendtec to do it super fast). I love pureeing stuff in my blender because there aren’t as many parts to wash as with a food processor and it’s super fast resulting in a perfect puree).

Persimmon Bread-3

Persimmon Bread-12

2. In a large mixing bowl, whisk together 2 eggs, 1 cup sugar and 1 Tbsp vanilla. Mix in 3 cups persimmon puree and the melted butter (p.s. I did this in my mixer but you can totally whisk by hand).

This Persimmon Bread Recipe is a keeper (in a make again and again sort of way)! Soft, moist, and every slice is studded with walnuts and raisins | natashaskitchen.com

3. Add 2 tsp of sifted baking soda, 1/4 tsp salt and 2 tsp cinnamon and whisk to combine. Whisk in 3 cups flour until blended.

This Persimmon Bread Recipe is a keeper (in a make again and again sort of way)! Soft, moist, and every slice is studded with walnuts and raisins | natashaskitchen.com

4. Fold in 1 1/2 cups walnuts and 1 cup raisins until evenly dispersed and divide the batter between buttered loaf pans. Bake for 45 – 50 min or until a wooden toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean. Cool in pans 10 min then turn out onto wire rack to cool to room temp.

This Persimmon Bread Recipe is a keeper (in a make again and again sort of way)! Soft, moist, and every slice is studded with walnuts and raisins | natashaskitchen.com

This Persimmon Bread Recipe is a keeper (in a make again and again sort of way)! Soft, moist, and every slice is studded with walnuts and raisins | natashaskitchen.com

So moist, soft and yummy. It’s a perfect breakfast or anytime bread! If you can’t make it right now, make sure to pin this recipe for later. You’ll thank me later ;),

Persimmon Bread Recipe

4.91 from 166 votes
This Persimmon Bread Recipe is a keeper (in a make again and again sort of way)! Soft, moist, and every slice is studded with walnuts and raisins | natashaskitchen.com
This persimmon bread is soft and moist, and every slice is studded with walnuts and raisins.
Prep Time: 10 minutes
Cook Time: 50 minutes
Total Time: 1 hour

Ingredients 

Servings: 2 loaves

Instructions

Prep: Preheat oven to 350˚F. Butter two bread loaf pans. Toast walnut pieces on a dry skillet until aromatic and lightly golden.

  • Remove tops of persimmon with a butterknife (I've broken the tip off a good knife doing this before, so I only use a butter knife now). Cut into quarters and puree in a blender.
  • In a large mixing bowl, whisk together 2 eggs, 1 cup sugar and 1 Tbsp vanilla. Mix in persimmon puree and the melted butter.
  • Add 2 tsp of sifted baking soda, 1/4 tsp salt and 2 tsp cinnamon and whisk to combine. Add Whisk in 3 cups flour until blended.
  • Fold in 1 1/2 cups walnuts and 1 cup raisins until evenly dispersed and divide the batter between prepared loaf pans. Bake for 45 - 50 min or until a wooden toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean. Cool in pans 10 min then turn out onto wire rack to cool to room temp.

Notes

To measure flour, scoop into the measuring cup with a spoon & scrape off the top
*DO NOT USE Hachiya persimmons - the texture is completely different from fuyu, and it won't bake up properly.
Course: Breakfast
Cuisine: American
Keyword: Persimmon Bread, persimmon recipes
Skill Level: Easy
Cost to Make: $
Natasha's Kitchen Cookbook

If you make this recipe, I’d love to see pics of your creations on Instagram, Facebook and Twitter! Hashtag them #natashaskitchen

This Persimmon Bread Recipe is a keeper (in a make again and again sort of way)! Soft, moist, and every slice is studded with walnuts and raisins | natashaskitchen.com
4.91 from 166 votes (104 ratings without comment)

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Recipe Rating




Comments

  • Pam
    December 13, 2020

    You don’t mention the seeds. The fuyus I pick have very large seeds that need to be removed.

    Reply

    • Natasha's Kitchen
      December 14, 2020

      Hi Pam, if you see any large seeds when you cut them into pieces, remove those. Not all persimmon have seeds, but when they do, they are usually large and black so they are easy to spot.

      Reply

  • Julia
    December 12, 2020

    When I ate my first slice of this bread I felt like it needed something. Thirty minutes later I had another slice and felt it was good just the way it was. I don’t like overly sweet things and feel like the sweetness was just right for me. I substituted the eggs with an egg replacer and craisins instead of raisins (I do not like raisins). Instead of all walnuts I made it a mixture of pecans and walnuts. I will be making this again, I have plenty of persimmons to puree from my tree.

    I don’t know what size pans you used but both of mine are different sizes and did not cook in the 40-50 time periods. For anyone that has that issue it’s ok just put it back in the oven and check on it every couple of minutes until the toothpick or knife come out clean. I started checking on the loafa at 40 minutes and kept checking on them every 10 minutes. One dark metal pan took 60 minutes to bake, the other was a larger glass pan that took 1 hr 10 mins. I also weighed the batter in the pans so I could try to get them as even as I could but the glass one had about 130g more of batter so of course it took longer to bake.

    Reply

    • Natasha's Kitchen
      December 13, 2020

      Hi Julia, thanks for sharing your experience making this recipe, you shared some great tips with us, we appreciate it!

      Reply

  • Ruby
    December 9, 2020

    I made it last night. Was a total flop. Don’t know what happened !! I’m eating a piece now. The middle is like pudding. Looks nothing like your picture.

    Reply

    • Natasha
      December 10, 2020

      Hi Ruby, double-check that your leavening is active. Also, did you do the toothpick test to check for doneness? Using a different sized pan could have caused that and also some ovens run low and just need a little longer baking time in the oven. I hope that helps.

      Reply

  • Michelle
    December 7, 2020

    Hi, has anyone tried almond or coconut flour, rather than all purpose? I’ve read a few other substitutions, but none about changing up the flours (so far). Thanks!!
    Looking fwd to trying this ASAP before all the persimmons are gone from the store.

    Reply

    • Natashas Kitchen
      December 7, 2020

      Hi Michelle, I have not tried that substitution but here is what one of our readers wrote: “I hadn’t read the reviews. I just made it, and tried to follow the recipe. I had to substitute maple syrup for the vanilla because I was out. I also but 2 1/4 cup of flour and 3/4 cup of coconut flour because I ran out. Anyway way, it turned out great. I had no problems. I was so happy my persimmons were used. By the way, I used 9 persimmons.””

      Reply

  • Gail
    December 4, 2020

    I’m so glad I tried your recipe. My first attempt at persimmon bread and I’m thrilled. I found the persimmons at Costco. I used half for a salad, and the other half (6) for your bread after a few more days of ripening. I used four mini-loaves, and one regular loaf pan and the batter was perfect for filling them all. Off they go for little Christmas presents for my neighbors!

    Reply

    • Natashas Kitchen
      December 4, 2020

      Thank you for sharing that awesome review with me, Gail! I’m so happy you enjoyed it & I bet your neighbors will appreciate the gesture!

      Reply

  • Gail
    December 4, 2020

    My first attempt at persimmon bread and I’m thrilled. I found the persimmons at Costco. I used half for a salad, and the other half (6) for your bread after a few more days of ripening. I used four mini-loaves, and one regular loaf pan and the batter was perfect for filling them all. Off they go for little Christmas presents for my neighbors!

    Reply

    • Natashas Kitchen
      December 4, 2020

      That sounds like the perfect holiday treat for you and your neighbors!

      Reply

  • Kim
    December 2, 2020

    Do you leave the skin on them ?

    Reply

    • Natashas Kitchen
      December 3, 2020

      Hi Kim, With fuyu, you can leave the skin on, the entire thing is sweet and useable for puree. If you test the other kind of persimmon, let me know how it goes. Again, without testing it myself, I can’t say exactly how it will work out.

      Reply

  • Alicia
    December 2, 2020

    I never baked with persimmons before but I live in Italy and this is the season and I have a crate of them. So, I tried your recipe first and now I will hoard all the persimmons I can get and then freeze the bread. It was the perfect texture and taste and I would give it 6 stars if possible. It needed a longer baking time because I made it in a plumcake pan which is longer than a loaf pan but it is to die for. Thanks so much for making my first persimmon experience a success.

    Reply

    • Natasha's Kitchen
      December 2, 2020

      I am so happy to hear that you loved this recipe! Thank you so much for sharing your experience with us, Alicia.

      Reply

  • Julie K
    December 1, 2020

    Hi, I just want to make one loaf instead of 2 (Its just me&my husband). How much of everything would I need? Can you do the recipe for 1 loaf?

    Reply

    • Natashas Kitchen
      December 1, 2020

      Hi Julie! You can halve the recipe!

      Reply

  • Deeanne
    December 1, 2020

    I assume the Fuyu persimmons should be quite ripe? Do they get pretty soft? I was just gifted a bunch but they are light orange and very hard; I have them ripening in a bag with bananas.

    Reply

    • Natasha
      December 1, 2020

      Hi Deanne, they should be ripe and at least somewhat soft. If they are very hard, they would need time to ripen and soften.

      Reply

      • Deeanne Edwards
        December 11, 2020

        Made a single loaf (cut your ingredients in half), used half whole wheat flour and pecans. Delicious. I did need to cook it at least 10-15 mins longer than the recipe said, even though my toothpick came out clean. I’d like to try this as muffins.

        Reply

        • Natasha's Kitchen
          December 11, 2020

          Nice one! Thanks for sharing that with us, please let us know how it goes if you try to make this as muffins!

          Reply

  • Melinda Muyargas
    November 26, 2020

    This was very good, thanks! I substituted some of the sugar for applesauce and some honey, I fully substituted the butter for Greek yogurt, and I did half of the flour as whole wheat. The result was great!

    Reply

    • Natasha
      November 26, 2020

      I am so happy to hear you loved the persimmon bread recipe and thank you for sharing your healthy substitutions. Did you substitute equal amounts of sugar for applesauce?

      Reply

  • Laura
    November 23, 2020

    Does that mean 3 cups puréed persimmons? It’s ending up to be 8 small persimmons

    Reply

    • Natasha
      November 23, 2020

      Hi Laura, we used about 5 medium/large persimmons or 1 1/2 pounds of persimmons which resulted in 3 cups of puree.

      Reply

  • Ann Moore
    November 21, 2020

    Tasty, but baked it 20 minutes longer than recommended and it still wasn’t cooked all the way through.

    (And I am also from Idaho. Pocatello!)

    Reply

    • Natasha
      November 23, 2020

      Hi Ann, if using a different sized pan, it could affect the bake time. I’m glad you enjoyed the flavor.

      Reply

  • Tiff from LA
    November 7, 2020

    I am saving this recipe! Made this for my family today and they couldn’t get enough- fortunately, the recipe made two loaves. I did make some changes- replaced 1 and 1/2 cup of AP flour with whole wheat flour and swapped out 1/2 cup of dried cranberries for raisins. I also sprinkled in chopped almonds and cashews. MmmmmMmm…YUM!! Thank you Natasha!

    Reply

    • Natashas Kitchen
      November 7, 2020

      You’re welcome Tiff! I’m happy you enjoyed that!

      Reply

  • Sandra
    November 2, 2020

    I made persimmon bread today with this recipe and followed it to the T! The bread looks beautiful but it taste kinda bland. The texture is nice but it taste like it has too much flour or something. Regardless of the sugar added it didn’t taste sweet. I don’t like sweet so when I say it wasn’t sweet it wasn’t at all… I’ve never had persimmon bread so I was expecting like a zucchini bread kinda flavor?!?! I don’t know what I could to make the bread tastier??

    Reply

  • Katy
    November 1, 2020

    Out of this word delicious! Didn’t have raisins so used dried cherries. Thank you for the recipe!

    Reply

    • Natasha's Kitchen
      November 1, 2020

      Short but sweet! Thanks for your great feedback, Katy.

      Reply

  • Steph
    October 27, 2020

    Persimmons arrived in my ugly veg delivery and I had no clue what to do with them. This. Definitely this. Thanks. I replaced the butter with vegetable oil ala a carrot cake.

    Reply

    • Natashas Kitchen
      October 27, 2020

      The perfect recipe to use up persimmons! I hope you love this recipe!

      Reply

  • Anne
    October 18, 2020

    Is there a healthier version you would recommend for this recipe?Can I replace the sugar with coco sugar and the all purpose flour with whole wheat flour? Can I use coconut oil or olive oil instead of butter?

    Reply

    • Natasha's Kitchen
      October 18, 2020

      Hello Anne, I haven’t really tried making this using those substitutes that you mentioned but you might want to check out the comments section as others usually share the substitute ingredients that they use.

      Reply

  • Lolita W.
    August 23, 2020

    Your bread roll’s are the best. Thank you again, And sorry about my first comment I forgot to put are the best.

    Reply

    • Natasha's Kitchen
      August 23, 2020

      Hey Lolita, no worries. You are the best too! Thanks for your great feedback.

      Reply

  • Lolita W.
    August 23, 2020

    Hello,Natasha I’m teling you. All your recipe’s are Best thank you.

    Reply

    • Natasha's Kitchen
      August 23, 2020

      That is the sweetest, thank you!

      Reply

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