Sharp cheddar, tender zucchini, and little bursts of jalapeño turn this loaf into the kind of savory quick bread that disappears fast once it hits the board. The crumb stays moist without turning heavy, the top bakes into a salty, cheesy crust, and every slice tastes like it should be right next to soup, eggs, or a thick smear of butter.
What makes this version work is the balance. The zucchini gets squeezed dry so it adds tenderness without flooding the batter, while buttermilk and a little oil keep the loaf soft for days. The jalapeños bring warmth instead of fire, especially when you seed them well, and the honey rounds out the sharp edges from the cheddar.
Below, I’ve noted the two steps that matter most if you want a good rise and a clean slice. There’s also a practical rundown on swaps, storage, and the kind of variation that keeps this loaf useful when you want it a little milder or a little bolder.
The loaf rose beautifully and the cheddar on top baked into this crisp, golden crust. I seeded the jalapeños like you suggested and it had just enough heat without overpowering the zucchini.
Save this cheddar jalapeño zucchini bread for the mornings when you want a savory loaf with a crisp cheesy top and a soft, moist crumb.
The Trick to Keeping Zucchini Bread Tender Instead of Watery
Zucchini brings moisture, but it also brings a lot of hidden water that can sink a loaf if you skip the squeeze. Grate it, then press it firmly in a clean towel until it feels damp instead of wet. That step matters more here than in a sweet zucchini bread because the cheddar adds extra richness, and too much moisture turns the center gummy before the top has a chance to crust.
The other thing that keeps this loaf steady is the way the batter is mixed. Once the dry ingredients go in, stir only until the flour disappears. Overmixing wakes up the gluten and gives you a tight, rubbery loaf instead of one with a soft, even crumb that slices cleanly.
What Each Ingredient Is Doing in This Cheddar Jalapeño Loaf

- Zucchini — This gives the bread moisture and a soft crumb without a strong vegetable flavor. Grating it fine helps it disappear into the loaf, but squeezing it dry is non-negotiable if you want the center to bake through.
- Sharp cheddar — Sharp cheddar carries the flavor here. Mild cheddar melts fine, but it tastes flatter and gets lost once the bread cools. Shredding it yourself usually gives a better melt than pre-shredded cheese, which is coated to keep it from clumping.
- Jalapeños — Seeded jalapeños add a clean, fresh heat. Leave a few seeds in if you want more bite, but don’t use whole slices unless you want pockets that taste hotter than the rest of the loaf.
- Buttermilk — Buttermilk keeps the crumb tender and gives the bread a slight tang that works with cheddar. If you don’t have it, mix regular milk with a little lemon juice or vinegar and let it sit for a few minutes before using.
- Honey — Just a tablespoon softens the sharpness of the cheese and brings the flavors together without turning the bread sweet. It’s subtle, but you’d miss it if it were gone.
- Green onions — These add a mild onion note and a fresh finish. They’re worth keeping because they make the loaf taste more savory and less one-note.
Building the Loaf So the Center Bakes Through
Mix the Dry Ingredients First
Whisk the flour, baking powder, salt, garlic powder, and black pepper together before anything else. That distributes the leavening evenly, which matters in a loaf like this because the zucchini and cheese can weigh the batter down if the rise is uneven. You want the bowl to look uniform before the wet ingredients go in.
Bring the Wet Ingredients Together
Beat the eggs, buttermilk, oil, and honey until the honey disappears and the mixture looks smooth. Then stir in the zucchini, most of the cheddar, the jalapeños, and the green onions. The batter will look thick and a little shaggy at this stage, and that’s right; if it starts looking soupy, the zucchini was not squeezed dry enough.
Fold, Don’t Beat
Add the dry ingredients and fold just until no dry flour remains. A few streaks are better than a fully worked batter, because the loaf finishes mixing as it bakes. Overbeating at this point gives you tunnels and a dense middle, especially with the extra weight of cheese and vegetables in the batter.
Bake Until the Top Is Deep Gold
Pour the batter into the prepared loaf pan and scatter the remaining cheddar over the top. Bake until the loaf is set, the top is golden, and a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean or with only a few moist crumbs. If the cheese on top starts darkening too fast, tent it loosely with foil near the end so the center can finish without burning the crust.
How to Adapt This Loaf Without Losing the Texture
Make it milder for kids or heat-sensitive eaters
Use one jalapeño instead of two or three, and remove every seed and white rib. You’ll still get the fresh pepper flavor without the sharper burn, and the cheddar stays front and center.
Gluten-free version
Swap the all-purpose flour for a 1:1 gluten-free baking blend that includes xanthan gum. The texture will be a little more delicate, but the loaf still holds together well if you let it cool before slicing.
Dairy-free adjustment
Use an unsweetened plant milk mixed with a splash of vinegar instead of buttermilk, then replace the cheddar with a good melty dairy-free shred. The loaf will still bake up tender, though the top won’t get quite the same sharp crust.
Add bacon or swap the herb note
A few tablespoons of cooked crumbled bacon fit right in if you want a breakfast loaf with more savoriness. If you’d rather keep it vegetarian but change the profile, add chopped chives or dill in place of some of the green onions.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store tightly wrapped for up to 4 days. The crumb stays moist, and the cheddar flavor actually deepens a bit by day two.
- Freezer: It freezes well. Wrap the cooled loaf or individual slices tightly, then freeze for up to 2 months. Thaw at room temperature while still wrapped so the surface doesn’t dry out.
- Reheating: Warm slices in a toaster oven or 300°F oven until heated through. Microwaving works in a pinch, but it softens the crust and can make the cheese topping rubbery.
Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Savory Zucchini Bread with Cheddar and Jalapeños
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Preheat the oven to 350°F and grease a 9x5 loaf pan so the loaf releases cleanly.
- Whisk all-purpose flour, baking powder, salt, garlic powder, and black pepper together until evenly combined.
- Beat eggs, buttermilk, vegetable oil, and honey until smooth and fully blended.
- Stir in zucchini, 1 cup sharp cheddar cheese, jalapeños, and green onions until the batter looks speckled throughout.
- Fold the dry ingredients into the wet mixture just until no dry streaks remain, avoiding overmixing for a tender crumb.
- Pour the batter into the loaf pan and top with the remaining 1/2 cup sharp cheddar cheese for a melty, golden crust.
- Bake at 350°F for 50–58 minutes, until the cheese is golden and a toothpick comes out clean.
- Cool the loaf for 15 minutes before slicing so the cheddar pockets set and the slice holds together.


