Pumpkin Zucchini Bread

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Deeply spiced pumpkin zucchini bread bakes up with a crackly sugared top, a moist crumb, and just enough warmth from cinnamon and pumpkin pie spice to make each slice taste like it belongs on the table with coffee. The zucchini doesn’t shout for attention; it quietly keeps the loaf tender while the pumpkin brings that soft orange color and familiar autumn richness. What you get is a quick bread that stays soft for days instead of drying out by the next morning.

The trick here is treating the zucchini like hidden moisture, not a visible vegetable. Once it’s grated, it needs to be squeezed dry so it doesn’t water down the batter and leave the center gummy. The other thing that matters is mixing the wet ingredients until smooth before the flour goes in, then stopping as soon as the batter comes together. That keeps the crumb from turning dense and tough.

Below, I’ve added the small details that make this loaf turn out the same way every time, plus a few smart variations if you want to add nuts, chocolate, or make it fit what you’ve got in the kitchen.

The loaf came out incredibly moist and the zucchini disappeared into the crumb, but I could still see those little green flecks. The turbinado sugar on top gave it the best crackly finish.

★★★★★— Megan T.

Save this pumpkin zucchini bread for the kind of morning when you want a soft, spiced loaf with a crackly sugar top and plenty of moisture.

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The Part That Keeps This Loaf From Turning Gummy

Pumpkin zucchini bread sounds like it should be foolproof, but the most common mistake is loading the batter with too much hidden moisture. Zucchini holds a lot of water, and pumpkin puree adds even more, so the loaf needs enough structure from the flour and eggs to set cleanly in the middle. If the zucchini goes in wet, the bread can bake up heavy, wet, and a little sunken in the center even when the top looks finished.

That’s why squeezing the zucchini dry matters more than people think. You’re not trying to remove every drop of moisture; you’re just preventing the batter from becoming loose. The other thing that helps is baking until a toothpick comes out clean from the deepest part of the loaf, not just from the top crack. The center needs those extra minutes to set, especially in a loaf pan where heat moves slowly through the middle.

What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Loaf

Pumpkin zucchini bread spiced moist loaf
  • Pumpkin puree — This is what gives the loaf its soft, dense-tender crumb and that deep orange color. Canned pumpkin works best because it’s consistent and thick; pumpkin pie filling won’t work here because it already contains sugar and spices.
  • Zucchini — Grated zucchini melts into the bread and keeps it moist without adding much flavor of its own. Squeeze it dry after grating so it doesn’t water down the batter.
  • Brown sugar and granulated sugar — The white sugar helps the loaf bake up with a lighter crumb, while the brown sugar adds a little molasses depth and keeps the texture soft. Using both gives better balance than either one alone.
  • Vegetable oil — Oil keeps quick bread tender for longer than butter does, which is why this loaf stays soft the next day. Melted butter can be used, but the crumb will be a little tighter and less plush.
  • Turbinado sugar — This is what gives the top that crackled, bakery-style finish. If you skip it, the loaf will still taste great, but you’ll lose that crisp, lightly caramelized top.
  • Pecans or chocolate chips — Both work, but they change the mood of the loaf. Pecans add crunch and a nutty finish; chocolate chips make it closer to dessert bread. Fold them in at the very end so the batter stays evenly mixed.

Building the Batter Without Beating the Crumb Down

Mix the dry ingredients first

Whisk the flour, baking soda, baking powder, salt, pumpkin pie spice, and cinnamon together until the color looks even. This keeps the leavening and spices from clumping in one spot, which is what causes uneven rising and little bitter pockets of spice. A quick whisk here is worth it.

Whip the wet ingredients until smooth

Beat the sugars, eggs, oil, pumpkin puree, and vanilla until the mixture looks glossy and fully combined. You’re looking for a thick, smooth batter base with no streaks of egg or dry sugar at the bottom of the bowl. If it looks separated, keep mixing a bit longer before the flour goes in.

Fold in the zucchini and stop early

Add the squeezed zucchini and stir just until it disappears into the batter. Then add the dry ingredients and fold only until you stop seeing pockets of flour. If you keep going after that, the gluten in the flour tightens up and the bread turns chewy instead of tender.

Bake until the center sets, not just the top

Pour the batter into the pan, add the turbinado sugar, and bake until the loaf is puffed, deeply golden, and a toothpick from the center comes out clean or with a few moist crumbs. The crack on top is normal; the center should feel set, not jiggly. If the top browns too fast before the middle is done, lay a piece of foil loosely over it for the last 15 minutes.

Chocolate Chip Pumpkin Zucchini Bread

Swap the pecans for chocolate chips, or use both if you want a sweeter loaf with little pockets of melted chocolate. The bread becomes more dessert-like, and the warm spices play nicely with the chocolate without needing any extra sugar.

Gluten-Free Version

Use a good 1:1 gluten-free baking blend in place of the all-purpose flour. The loaf will still be moist, but it may be a touch more delicate, so let it cool fully before slicing or the center can crumble.

Dairy-Free and Naturally Egg-Friendly

This loaf already skips dairy, so it’s an easy one to serve to dairy-free eaters as written. If you need an egg-free loaf, use a tested egg replacer designed for baking rather than extra pumpkin alone, since the eggs are helping the bread rise and hold together.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store in an airtight container for up to 5 days. The crumb stays moist, though the top will soften after day one.
  • Freezer: This loaf freezes well. Wrap individual slices or the whole cooled loaf tightly in plastic and freeze for up to 3 months.
  • Reheating: Warm slices in the microwave for 10 to 15 seconds or toast lightly from thawed. Don’t overheat it, or the bread dries out and the sugar top loses its texture.

Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Can I use frozen zucchini in this bread?+

Yes, as long as it’s thawed and squeezed dry first. Frozen zucchini holds even more water than fresh, so the squeezing step matters even more here.

How do I know when pumpkin zucchini bread is done?+

The top should be deeply golden and feel set, and a toothpick inserted into the center should come out clean or with a few moist crumbs. If the toothpick pulls out wet batter, it needs more time even if the edges look baked.

Can I leave out the zucchini?+

You can, but the loaf will be a little less tender and won’t have the same moisture balance. If you leave it out, the bread still works, but it becomes more like a standard pumpkin loaf and may bake a little drier.

How do I stop the middle from sinking?+

Use the right amount of zucchini, squeeze it dry, and don’t pull the loaf out too early. A sunken middle usually means too much moisture or an underbaked center, not a problem with the oven temperature alone.

Can I make pumpkin zucchini bread ahead of time?+

Yes, and it tastes even better the next day once the spices settle in. Bake it, cool it completely, then wrap it well so it stays moist instead of drying out on the counter.

Pumpkin Zucchini Bread

Pumpkin zucchini bread that bakes into a deeply spiced loaf with a golden, crackled top and a tender orange-brown interior flecked with zucchini. This fall quick bread is easy to mix, then sliced to show the vibrant crumb with green specks.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 1 hour 5 minutes
cooling 15 minutes
Total Time 1 hour 35 minutes
Servings: 10 servings
Course: Breakfast
Cuisine: American
Calories: 280

Ingredients
  

Dry ingredients
  • 2 cup all-purpose flour
  • 1 tsp baking soda
  • 0.5 tsp baking powder
  • 0.5 tsp salt
  • 2 tsp pumpkin pie spice
  • 1 tsp cinnamon
Wet ingredients
  • 1 cup granulated sugar
  • 0.5 cup brown sugar
  • 2 eggs
  • 0.5 cup vegetable oil
  • 1 cup canned pumpkin puree
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • 1 cup zucchini, grated and squeezed dry
Optional mix-ins and topping
  • 0.5 cup chopped pecans or chocolate chips optional
  • Turbinado sugar for top for sprinkling

Equipment

  • 1 sheet pan

Method
 

Prep and preheat
  1. Preheat oven to 350°F and grease a 9x5 loaf pan.
  2. Set aside while you prepare the batter so the oven comes up to temperature evenly.
Mix dry ingredients
  1. Whisk all-purpose flour, baking soda, baking powder, salt, pumpkin pie spice, and cinnamon together until evenly combined.
Mix wet ingredients
  1. Beat granulated sugar, brown sugar, eggs, vegetable oil, canned pumpkin puree, and vanilla extract until smooth.
Add zucchini
  1. Stir in grated squeezed zucchini until the batter looks evenly speckled.
Combine and add mix-ins
  1. Fold dry ingredients into the wet just until combined, stopping as soon as no dry streaks remain.
  2. Fold in chopped pecans or chocolate chips if using.
Bake
  1. Pour batter into the loaf pan, sprinkle turbinado sugar over the top, and bake for 60–70 minutes until a toothpick comes out clean.
Cool and slice
  1. Cool the loaf for 15 minutes before slicing so the orange-brown crumb sets and doesn’t crumble.

Notes

Pro tip: squeeze the grated zucchini very dry so the loaf stays tender and the interior doesn’t get gummy. Store sliced or whole in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 2 days or refrigerate up to 5 days; freeze up to 2 months (wrap well). For a lighter option, replace some of the vegetable oil with unsweetened applesauce (use the same total fat/volume) though the loaf may bake slightly softer.

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