Cranberry Pumpkin Spice Bread

It there’s a woman who knows her baking, it’s Veronica. I know I’ve raved about her before, but she’s worth raving about. From her Buttery Beer Bread to her Brown Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies to this lovely Cranberry Pumpkin Spice Bread, her recipes are tried-and-true. So this morning we’re going to make two fabulous, moist, nutty, sweet-but-not-too-sweet loaves of bread (original recipe here).

Ingredients

(Makes 2 loaves)

1 cup dried cranberries
¾ cup orange juice
1 cup chopped walnuts
4 eggs
2 (15 oz) cans pumpkin puree
3 cups granulated sugar
1 cup vegetable oil
1 TBS vanilla bean paste or extract
3 ½ cups all-purpose flour
2 tsp cinnamon
2 tsp baking soda
1 tsp baking powder
1 tsp salt
1 tsp nutmeg
½ tsp ground cloves
½ tsp allspice

Roughly chop the dried cranberries and put them in a small bowl.

Soak them in the orange juice for 1 hour.

Now! If you have big walnut pieces, give ’em a little crush-crush with the heel of your hand, just to break them up a little.

After you’ve exerted yourself in this fashion, please take a little drink of red wine. You’ve earned it. Unless you’re making this in the a.m., in which case stick to the coffee.

Spread the walnuts on a microwave-safe plate . . .

. . . and microwave them in 30 second increments (for about 2 minutes total), stirring them with your fingers in between bursts, until they’re toasted and fragrant.

I dearly hope no one’s allergic to these babies, because they add such a fabulous dimension to the bread.

Preheat the oven to 350 F. Butter (or spray with baking spray) two 9×5 loaf pans.

Drain the orange juice from the cranberries into the bowl of a stand mixer–but keep the cranberries aside for now.

Add the eggs to the juice, and whisk ’em until they’re well beaten.

Add the pumpkin puree, sugar, vegetable oil, and vanilla to the eggs/OJ.

Beat until well mixed, scraping down the bowl with a spatula if needed.

Combine the flour and remaining ingredients (all dry stuff) in a bowl.

Stir it all around until it’s combined. I like to use my fingers to feel for any clumps and break them up.

Add the flour mixture to the pumpkin mixture little by little, beating until smooth.

Gorgeous! Now stir the cranberries and walnuts into the batter.

That’s what I’m talkin’ about.

Divide the batter between the two pans . . .

. . . and bake for 65-80 minutes or until a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean.

At this point, I had severely miscalculated how long this would take to make (I kinda forgot about the hour-long cranberry soaking) so I was in bed, waiting for the sound of the timer to get my butt back outta bed and remove the loaves from the oven.

And of course, for some mysterious reason my loaves kept coming up raw and batter-a-licious in the middle.

They had to go for more like 85 minutes. Maybe even 90–I was too sleepy to keep track.

Cool the loaves for 10-15 minutes, then remove them from the pans. Let them finish cooling on a wire rack.

Around 11:30 pm my loaves were finally cooling on the rack. Of course, then I started worrying that if I left them out all night, they would dry out and go stale on me before their time.

So I decided to trust my habit of waking up to pee in the middle of the night, at which point I decided I’d scurry out to the kitcen to wrap the fully cooled loaves in aluminum foil for safe storage.

And that’s exactly what happened. It was a midnight baking adventure. 

The next day I got around to taking pictures of the loaves, buttering a piece, and (last but not least) taking a bite . . . and oh man.

Pumpkin cranberry walnutty bliss!

Click here for printer-friendly version: Cranberry Pumpkin Spice Bread

17 thoughts on “Cranberry Pumpkin Spice Bread

  1. Kay

    Oh, Jenna! I wish I lived next door and mooch some of this wonderful bread! I have several ladies coming for tea this morning and this would be just lovely! I really want to make this for Christmas morning brunch! 🙂 Have a wonderful week. Stay warm!

  2. Kimby

    Jenna, that was sheer baking dedication and the buttered slice with a bite out of it looked like a fitting reward! 🙂 Hope you got some sleep during the night shift!

  3. Suzie

    I had made this to take to Thanksgiving dinner. Well, I had to try a piece and then another piece and then another…you get the point. Thankfully, I had made your Chile Con Queso too (which made plenty!) so I was still able to contribute something…ha! 😉

    1. Veronica Miller

      Suzie, I’m stunned! Flabbergasted! Schnookified! (Couldn’t think of another word that expressed my surprise. Oh yeah, floored!) What? You didn’t tell me you made this, and you don’t eat sweets! Wait, is this Suzie or her evil twin?

      1. Suzie

        I forgot to mention it but, I also figured you’d be over here! 🙂 It wasn’t too sweet for me but, I did only added 2 c. of sugar. I don’t bake, so I was sweatin’ bullets hoping it would turn out and it did! Woot!

  4. Veronica Miller

    Aw, you’re so sweet! I’ve had a few midnight baking adventures myself just like this. Thankfully they’re usually worth it! Your pictures are fantabulous, woman, and I’m glad you liked the bread despite the length of the process. I noticed the batter filled your pans a lot higher than mine–what size are they? That might account for the longer baking time.

  5. Skippymom

    I am laughing because I have done the exact same “trusting myself to get up in the middle of the night to pee will cover them then” thing when I had to wait forever for “quick” breads like this to cook through. Sigh…so glad to know I am not the only one. heehee

    That looks so good. I was debating on which make & send to our daughter at college for her exams and it looks like I just found a winner. Thanks Jenna.

    But I am going to start at 10 am. Just in case. With coffee. 😀

  6. Twinky

    Oooooo!! Looks like a great “tasty treat” to take to the building crew next week!

    Years ago I did a cranberry bread recipe that calls for halved FRESH cranberries…. I wonder if I should be bold and try this delightful recipe with such a modification?!

  7. Joanne

    I came here this morning not knowing that the only thing I really want to eat all day is pumpkin bread. But apparently, that is so. Gotta get on it.

  8. Tracy

    Mmm this is my kind of bread…and I love that the recipe makes two loaves. Also I laughed out loud about your midnight baking adventure, hehe!

  9. Dawn

    OH MY…that looks so totally wonderful. If I make it I will eat it. No no no no no no….but it looks so totally wonderful……

  10. My Italian Smörgåsbord

    so jealous when I see a recipe calling for pumpkin puree. they don’t sell it here and it is a royal pain to peel pumpkin. this sweet bread looks delicious and your pictures and writing are always brilliant.

    1. Jenna Post author

      No pumpkin puree???? You poor thing! It would be waaaay too much trouble (for me) to roast and puree a pumpkin myself, so I feel your pain.

  11. Sophie

    Georgous Christmas breads & I used home – made pumpkin purée & it was the best!
    They were ooh so fllavourfull!
    Here in Belgium, they don’t sell pumpkin puree in a can. Pumpkins are only used into a soup!

    Really! 🙂

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