Spiced Zucchini Carrot Bread

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Spiced zucchini carrot bread bakes up into a soft, fragrant loaf with a tender crumb and just enough structure to slice cleanly once it cools. The zucchini melts into the batter, the carrots add sweetness and color, and the cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, and allspice give every slice that carrot-cake feel without turning it into dessert.

What makes this version work is balance. Greek yogurt keeps the loaf moist without making it heavy, brown sugar adds a deeper sweetness than white sugar would, and squeezing the zucchini dry keeps the center from turning gummy. The batter comes together fast, but the order matters: mix the wet ingredients until smooth first, then fold in the dry ingredients only until the flour disappears. That keeps the loaf soft instead of tough.

Below, I’ve included the ingredient swaps that actually matter, plus the small timing detail that keeps this bread from collapsing when you cut it too soon.

The crumb stayed moist for days and the zucchini disappeared into the loaf without making it wet. I added walnuts, and the texture was spot on.

★★★★★— Lauren M.

Save this spiced zucchini carrot bread for a moist, cinnamon-scented loaf with golden crust and tender slices.

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The Reason This Loaf Stays Moist Without Getting Dense

The trap with vegetable quick breads is dumping in extra moisture and hoping the flour sorts it out. It usually doesn’t. Zucchini and carrots both release water as they bake, so the loaf needs enough structure from flour and eggs to hold that moisture without turning gummy in the middle.

Squeezing the zucchini dry is the difference between a clean slice and a damp, heavy loaf. The carrots don’t need the same treatment because their moisture is lower and their fine shreds soften into the crumb instead of puddling it. Brown sugar also helps here; it holds onto moisture and gives the bread a softer bite than white sugar would.

  • All-purpose flour — This gives the loaf enough strength to hold the vegetables without turning cakey or fragile. Bread flour would make it firmer than you want.
  • Greek yogurt — It adds tang and moisture while also helping the crumb stay tender. Plain yogurt works too, but use a thick one if you can.
  • Zucchini — Grate it finely and squeeze it well. If you skip that step, the center can turn wet and the loaf may sink after baking.
  • Carrots — Finely grated carrots melt into the bread and add sweetness plus color. Coarse shreds stay a little firmer, which changes the texture of each slice.

What Each Ingredient Is Doing in the Batter

Spiced Zucchini Carrot Bread warm loaf, colorful crumb
  • Cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, and allspice — This is the spice blend that gives the loaf its carrot-cake feel. Cinnamon leads, while the other three add depth; don’t overdo the nutmeg or it starts to taste muddy.
  • Eggs and oil — The eggs bind everything together, and the oil keeps the crumb soft even after the loaf cools. Butter will work, but it sets up firmer once chilled.
  • Brown sugar — Packed brown sugar adds a subtle caramel note and keeps the loaf moist. If you swap in white sugar, the bread bakes up a little drier and flatter in flavor.
  • Walnuts or raisins — Optional, but useful if you want texture. Walnuts add crunch; raisins add little pockets of sweetness. Don’t add both unless you want a busier loaf.

Mixing the Batter So the Loaf Rises Instead of Toughening

Start With the Dry Ingredients

Whisk the flour, baking soda, baking powder, salt, and spices together until the color looks even. This keeps the spices from clumping in one bite and helps the leavening spread through the batter. If you skip this, you can get uneven pockets of baking soda that taste metallic or a loaf that rises unevenly.

Build the Wet Base Until It Looks Smooth

Beat the brown sugar, eggs, oil, yogurt, and vanilla until the mixture looks glossy and fully combined. You’re not whipping in much air here; you’re dissolving the sugar and emulsifying the fat so the loaf bakes with a fine crumb. Once the zucchini and carrots go in, stir just until they’re coated and evenly distributed.

Fold, Don’t Beat, Once the Flour Goes In

Add the dry ingredients and fold gently with a spatula until no dry flour streaks remain. Stop there. Overmixing activates too much gluten and gives you a tight loaf instead of a tender one, especially in a batter with vegetable shreds already weighing it down.

Watch the Center, Not the Clock

Bake until the top is deep golden and a toothpick comes out clean or with just a few moist crumbs. Ovens vary, so start checking near the 55-minute mark. If the top browns before the center is done, tent the loaf loosely with foil for the remaining bake time.

Make It Nutty or Keep It Smooth

Fold in the walnuts for a little crunch and a more bakery-style slice, or leave them out for a softer, cleaner crumb. If you use raisins, toss them in at the very end so they stay distributed instead of sinking. Raisins make the loaf taste sweeter without changing the base recipe.

Dairy-Free Adjustment

Swap the Greek yogurt for an unsweetened dairy-free yogurt with a thick texture. The loaf still stays moist, but the crumb may be a touch less rich because dairy yogurt adds a little tang and body. Keep the rest of the recipe the same.

Make It a Little Sweeter

If you want a more carrot-cake style loaf, add a simple cream cheese frosting after the bread cools completely. Spread it on a warm loaf and it slides right off, so wait until the crumb is fully set. The bread is flavorful enough to stand on its own, but frosting turns it into a dessert-style breakfast loaf.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store tightly wrapped for up to 5 days. The crumb stays moist, and the spices deepen a little by day two.
  • Freezer: Freeze slices or the whole loaf wrapped well for up to 3 months. Slice first if you want grab-and-go portions.
  • Reheating: Warm slices in a toaster oven or a low oven for the best texture. Microwaving works in a pinch, but it can make the crumb rubbery if you heat it too long.

Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Can I use frozen zucchini in this bread?+

Yes, as long as you thaw it completely and squeeze out the excess water after thawing. Frozen zucchini releases even more liquid than fresh, so skipping that step can make the loaf heavy and underbaked in the center.

How do I keep the bread from getting soggy in the middle?+

Squeeze the zucchini well and don’t underbake the loaf. The center should test clean with a toothpick, and the top should spring back lightly when touched; if it still feels wet or slumps in the middle, give it more time. Cooling for 15 minutes also helps the crumb finish setting.

Can I leave out the nuts or raisins?+

Yes. They’re optional and don’t affect the structure of the loaf. Leave them out for a smoother crumb, or replace them with chocolate chips if you want a sweeter, more dessert-like version.

How do I know when the loaf is fully baked?+

The top should be golden, the loaf should pull slightly from the edges of the pan, and a toothpick inserted into the center should come out clean or with a few moist crumbs. If it comes out with wet batter, it needs more time even if the top already looks done.

Can I make this bread ahead of time?+

Yes, and it actually tastes even better the next day because the spices settle in. Bake it, cool it completely, and wrap it well before storing. If you’re serving it warm, reheat slices gently so the crumb doesn’t dry out.

Spiced Zucchini Carrot Bread

Spiced zucchini carrot bread makes a moist, warmly spiced loaf with orange carrot and green zucchini specks through every slice. This vegetable quick bread bakes until golden and stays tender with a simple grated-and-squeezed prep.
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 1 hour
cooling 15 minutes
Total Time 1 hour 35 minutes
Servings: 10 servings
Course: Breakfast
Cuisine: American
Calories: 300

Ingredients
  

all-purpose flour
  • 1.5 cup all-purpose flour
baking soda
  • 1 tsp baking soda
baking powder
  • 0.5 tsp baking powder
salt
  • 0.5 tsp salt
cinnamon
  • 2 tsp cinnamon
ginger
  • 0.5 tsp ginger
nutmeg
  • 0.25 tsp nutmeg
allspice
  • 0.25 tsp allspice
brown sugar
  • 0.75 cup brown sugar packed
eggs
  • 2 eggs
vegetable oil
  • 0.33 cup vegetable oil
Greek yogurt
  • 0.25 cup Greek yogurt
vanilla extract
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
zucchini
  • 0.75 cup zucchini grated and squeezed dry
carrots
  • 0.75 cup carrots finely grated
walnuts or raisins
  • 0.5 cup walnuts or raisins optional

Equipment

  • 1 sheet pan

Method
 

Prep the loaf pan and oven
  1. Preheat oven to 350°F and grease a 9x5 loaf pan so the bread releases cleanly.
Mix the dry ingredients
  1. Whisk all-purpose flour, baking soda, baking powder, salt, cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, and allspice together until evenly combined.
Mix the wet ingredients
  1. Beat brown sugar, eggs, vegetable oil, Greek yogurt, and vanilla extract until smooth and glossy.
Add zucchini and carrots
  1. Stir zucchini and carrots into the wet mixture so the batter looks speckled throughout.
Combine and add optional mix-ins
  1. Fold dry ingredients into wet until just combined, stopping as soon as no dry streaks remain.
  2. Fold in walnuts or raisins if using, distributing them evenly without overmixing.
Bake
  1. Pour batter into the loaf pan and bake at 350°F for 55–65 minutes until a toothpick comes out clean and the top is golden.
Cool and slice
  1. Cool the loaf for 15 minutes before slicing so it sets and stays moist without crumbling.

Notes

For the best texture, squeeze grated zucchini until fairly dry to prevent a gummy center. Store airtight at room temperature up to 3 days or refrigerate up to 5 days; freeze slices up to 2 months (thaw overnight in the fridge). If you prefer a lighter fat option, replace the vegetable oil with an equal amount of unsweetened applesauce—your loaf will be slightly softer but still spiced and tender.

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