Cheddar zucchini bread bakes up with a tender, savory crumb and a sharp, golden cheese crust that makes it hard to stop at one slice. The zucchini keeps the loaf moist without tasting watery, while the cheddar melts into pockets through the middle and gives the top that salty, crisp finish that makes this kind of quick bread worth repeating.
What makes this version work is the balance. The zucchini has to be squeezed dry so the loaf stays light instead of dense, and the cheddar gets split between the batter and the top so you get flavor in every bite plus that browned crust. A little garlic powder, black pepper, and green onion turn it from plain quick bread into something that works for breakfast, lunch, or alongside soup.
Below you’ll find the exact texture cues I watch for, plus the swaps that still keep the loaf sturdy and savory. If your last zucchini bread turned gummy in the center or bland at the edges, this one fixes both problems.
The loaf came out moist but not soggy, and the cheddar on top formed the best crust. I followed the squeeze-the-zucchini tip and the middle baked through perfectly.
Save this cheddar zucchini bread for the days when you want a savory loaf with a crisp cheddar top and a soft, sturdy crumb.
The Reason This Loaf Stays Tender Instead of Heavy
Quick breads with vegetables usually go wrong in one of two ways: the batter turns wet and gummy, or it bakes up dry because the cook overcompensates with flour. This loaf avoids both by treating the zucchini like an ingredient that carries moisture, not one that gets to dominate the batter. Once you squeeze it dry, it behaves like any other add-in and bakes into a light, sliceable crumb.
The other thing that matters here is restraint. Once the dry ingredients go in, the batter should look a little rough and thick, with no streaks of dry flour but plenty of texture left. Overmixing develops gluten and tightens the crumb, which is the fastest way to lose that soft, tender middle that makes a savory quick bread worth baking.
- Zucchini — Grate it on the large holes and squeeze it in a clean towel until it feels damp, not wet. If you skip that step, the loaf can collapse or turn custardy in the center.
- Sharp cheddar — Use a cheese with real bite here. Mild cheddar melts fine, but sharp cheddar gives the loaf the savory edge that keeps it from tasting flat.
- Honey or sugar — Just a tablespoon, and it’s there to round out the salt and cheese rather than make the bread sweet. Honey adds a little depth; sugar keeps the flavor cleaner.
- Vegetable oil or melted butter — Oil gives the most consistently tender crumb and stays soft the next day. Butter adds a richer flavor, but it can make the loaf feel a little firmer once cooled.
Building the Batter Without Crushing the Crumb

- Flour — All-purpose flour gives enough structure to hold the zucchini and cheese without making the loaf tough. Bread flour would push it toward chewier than it should be.
- Baking powder — This is the lift. Because the batter is heavy with cheese and vegetables, the full tablespoon matters if you want a proper dome instead of a squat loaf.
- Eggs, milk, and oil — Beat these together before adding the zucchini so the batter starts smooth and emulsified. That helps the loaf bake evenly and keeps the crumb from separating.
- Green onions — Optional, but worth using if you want a little fresh sharpness. They cut through the richness and make the loaf taste more complete, especially warm from the oven.
The Mixing and Baking Window That Matters Most
Whisk the Dry Base First
Start by whisking the flour, baking powder, salt, garlic powder, and black pepper until they’re evenly combined. That keeps the seasoning from clumping in one bite and helps the baking powder distribute through the batter. If the dry mix looks streaky, keep whisking; uneven leavening shows up later as a lop-sided rise.
Bring the Wet Ingredients Together
Beat the eggs, milk, oil, and honey in a separate bowl until the mixture looks smooth and slightly glossy. Stir in the squeezed zucchini and one cup of the cheddar next. The batter will look thick and speckled, which is exactly what you want; if it looks loose or watery, the zucchini wasn’t squeezed enough.
Fold, Don’t Beat
Add the dry ingredients to the wet and fold just until the flour disappears. Stop the moment you no longer see dry pockets at the bottom of the bowl. Overmixing here makes the bread dense and can create tunnels through the crumb, while a light hand gives you the soft, even slice you’re after.
Finish With the Cheddar Top
Spoon the batter into the greased loaf pan and scatter the remaining cheddar over the top. As it bakes, that cheese melts, bubbles, and browns into the crust that makes this loaf stand out. Bake until the top is deeply golden and a toothpick comes out clean or with just a few moist crumbs, then let it cool for 15 minutes so the center sets before slicing.
Three Ways to Work This Loaf Into Your Week
Make it gluten-free with a 1:1 baking blend
A cup-for-cup gluten-free flour blend works here if it includes xanthan gum. The texture will be a little more delicate and less springy than the original, but the loaf still slices well once fully cooled.
Swap the cheddar for a sharper, saltier cheese
Aged white cheddar, Gruyère, or pepper jack all work if you want a different direction. Gruyère leans nuttier, pepper jack adds heat, and any extra-sharp cheese gives the loaf a stronger savory edge.
Use butter instead of oil for a richer finish
Melted butter brings more flavor and a slightly more bread-like crumb. Oil keeps the loaf softer for longer, so butter is the better choice when you want richer flavor right away and don’t mind a firmer texture the next day.
Add bacon or chopped jalapeño for a brunch version
Fold in cooked crumbled bacon or minced jalapeño with the zucchini and cheddar. Bacon adds salt and a smoky note, while jalapeño brings heat without changing the structure of the loaf.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store covered for up to 4 days. The crumb stays moist, but the cheddar top softens a little after the first day.
- Freezer: This loaf freezes well. Wrap slices tightly and freeze for up to 2 months, then thaw at room temperature or toast straight from frozen.
- Reheating: Warm slices in a 300°F oven or toaster oven until the cheese loosens and the edges crisp again. The common mistake is microwaving too long, which makes the bread rubbery and the cheese greasy.
Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Cheddar Zucchini Bread
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Preheat oven to 350°F and grease a 9x5 loaf pan with a light coating so the loaf releases cleanly.
- Whisk all-purpose flour, baking powder, salt, garlic powder, and black pepper together until evenly combined.
- Beat eggs, whole milk, vegetable oil or melted butter, and honey or sugar together until smooth and uniform.
- Stir in grated squeezed zucchini and 1 cup shredded sharp cheddar until the batter looks evenly speckled.
- Fold the dry ingredients into the wet mixture just until combined, stopping as soon as no dry streaks remain to avoid a tough loaf.
- Pour the batter into the greased loaf pan and sprinkle the remaining 1/2 cup shredded sharp cheddar on top for a golden crust.
- Bake at 350°F for 50–58 minutes, until the top cheese is golden and a toothpick comes out clean.
- Cool the loaf for 15 minutes before slicing so the melted cheddar sets and the interior holds together.


