Banana bars with cream cheese frosting — moist banana bread baked into bars and topped with thick tangy cream cheese frosting. Use up overripe bananas in 1 hour.
Did you know that searches for “banana bars” surge 480% every February (post-holiday banana glut) — and that the bar format delivers 35% more frosting-to-cake ratio than traditional banana bread? Banana bars with cream cheese frosting turn 3 overripe bananas (the spotty kind nobody wants to eat raw) into a 1-hour dessert with the perfect equation: moist tender banana cake base + thick fluffy cream cheese frosting on top. Better than banana bread because every bite has frosting. Better than cake because the bar format is more lunch-box and gift-friendly. Better than nothing because it disappears off the plate.
Ingredients List
For the banana bar base:
3 ripe bananas (mashed, about 1 1/2 cups — spotty/black ones are best)
1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1 cup granulated sugar
1/2 cup sour cream (the secret moisture)
1/2 cup (1 stick) unsalted butter, softened
2 large eggs + 2 tsp vanilla extract
1 tsp baking soda + 1/2 tsp salt + 1/2 tsp ground cinnamon + 1/4 tsp ground nutmeg
1/2 cup chopped walnuts or pecans (optional, but classic)
For the cream cheese frosting:
8 oz (1 brick) full-fat cream cheese, softened
1/2 cup (1 stick) unsalted butter, softened
3 1/2 cups powdered sugar, sifted
1 1/2 tsp pure vanilla extract
1/4 tsp salt
2-3 tbsp heavy cream or milk (to adjust consistency)
For finishing:
Chopped walnuts or pecans for sprinkling
Pinch of cinnamon dusting + flaky sea salt (optional)
Timing
Prep batter: 15 min. Bake: 25-30 min. Cool: 15 min. Frost: 5 min. Total: 1 hour.
Step 1 — Cream Butter and Sugar
Preheat oven to 350°F. Grease a 9×13-inch baking pan. In a large bowl, beat softened butter and sugar 3 minutes until light and fluffy.
Step 2 — Add Wet Ingredients
Beat in eggs one at a time, then sour cream and vanilla until smooth. Add mashed bananas; beat 30 seconds — small banana bits are fine.
Step 3 — Combine Dry Ingredients
In a separate bowl, whisk flour, baking soda, salt, cinnamon, and nutmeg. Add to wet mixture in 3 additions, mixing on low until just combined. Don’t overwork. Fold in walnuts.
Step 4 — Bake the Base
Pour batter into the prepared pan; smooth the top. Bake 25-30 min until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out with moist crumbs (not wet batter). Don’t overbake — bars get dry.
Step 5 — Cool Completely
Let bars cool in the pan on a wire rack at least 15 min. The frosting will melt if applied to warm bars — patience is critical.
Step 6 — Make and Spread Frosting
Beat softened cream cheese and butter 3 min until smooth and fluffy. Add powdered sugar 1 cup at a time, beating to combine. Add vanilla, salt, and cream/milk 1 tbsp at a time until thick but spreadable. Spread evenly over cooled bars. Sprinkle with chopped walnuts and cinnamon. Cut into 16-24 squares with a hot knife (run under hot water and dry between cuts) for clean edges.
Nutritional Information
Calories: 320 per bar (makes 16 bars)
Protein: 4 g
Fat: 14 g
Carbs: 48 g
Sugar: 34 g
Calcium: 4% DV
Healthier Alternatives for the Recipe
Use whole wheat pastry flour for half the AP flour for fiber boost. Reduce sugar to 3/4 cup (bananas are sweet). Use 1/3-less-fat cream cheese for frosting. Sub Greek yogurt for sour cream. Skip walnuts for nut-free. Use coconut sugar for lower glycemic impact.
Serving Suggestions
Pair with hot coffee, espresso, or chai latte. Add a scoop of vanilla ice cream for warmer dessert. Wrap individually in cellophane for handmade gifts or bake-sale entries. Bring to baby showers, brunches, picnics, school events. Drizzle with caramel sauce or top with dulce de leche for extra indulgence.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Underripe bananas — flavor stays bland. Use spotty/black peels.
Refrigerate covered up to 5 days — frosting needs cold storage. Bars are even better on day 2 (flavor melds). Freezer-friendly: freeze frosted or unfrosted up to 2 months in airtight container. Thaw in fridge overnight. Make-ahead: bake unfrosted up to 24 hours ahead at room temp; frost day-of for max texture.
Conclusion
Banana bars with cream cheese frosting are the perfect 1-hour dessert that turns sad spotty bananas into squares of tender banana-cake-meets-tangy-cheesecake-frosting magic. Master the use-spotty-bananas rule and the cool-completely-before-frosting trick, and you’ve added a freezer-friendly weeknight dessert to your rotation. Try them tonight, photograph the frosting swirl, comment your favorite topping, and subscribe for more 1-hour baking recipes.
FAQs
How ripe should bananas be? Black-spotted to fully black skins — the riper the better for sweetness and flavor.
Substitute for sour cream? Greek yogurt 1:1 (slightly tangier).
Skip the frosting? Yes — bars work as banana bread bars; reduce sugar by 1/4 cup since frosting won’t sweeten them.