Ever stared at a couple of overripe bananas on your counter and thought, “I really don’t want to bake banana bread again”?
That’s where banana bread halwa quietly saves the day.
This dessert is soft, rich, gently spiced, and deeply comforting. No oven. No baking skills. No complicated techniques. Just ripe bananas, leftover bread, ghee, and a little patience at the stove. If you love traditional Indian halwas but want something faster, simpler, and more forgiving, this recipe fits beautifully into everyday cooking.
A Little About This Dessert
Banana-based sweets have always been part of Indian home kitchens. From pazham pori to banana halwa, ripe bananas were never wasted; they were transformed.
Banana bread halwa is a smart, practical evolution of that mindset:
Bread replaces flour or rava
Bananas provide body, sweetness, and moisture
Ghee and butter add richness without heaviness
This is the kind of dessert born in real kitchens, where leftovers turn into something special. That’s exactly why it’s kids-friendly, budget-friendly, and beginner-safe.
Why You’ll Love Banana Bread Halwa
This recipe solves a lot of everyday problems at once:
Too many ripe bananas?
Leftover bread slices?
No oven or baking mood?
Need a quick dessert?
Cooking for kids?
Bananas also bring natural goodness to the table, potassium, fiber, and natural sweetness, so the dessert feels indulgent without feeling heavy.
Ingredient Logic: What Each One Brings to the Halwa
Understanding why each ingredient matters makes this halwa foolproof.
Bread gives structure. When ground coarsely, it absorbs moisture and fat without turning gummy.
Ripe bananas are the soul of the dish. The riper they are, the smoother and sweeter your halwa becomes.
Butter and ghee work in stages; butter builds creaminess early, ghee finishes with aroma and shine.
Jaggery and sugar together create layered sweetness, depth from jaggery, and balance from sugar.
Warm spices like cinnamon and dry ginger prevent the sweetness from feeling flat.
Melon seeds add a gentle crunch, making each bite more interesting.
Vegan Swap🌿: Replace butter and ghee with coconut oil or vegan butter. Use only jaggery and skip white sugar for a fully plant-based version.
How Banana Bread Halwa Comes Together
The process begins with preparing the base. Bread is pulsed just enough to stay coarse, not powdery. This texture is key to getting a halwa that’s soft but structured.
Ripe bananas are blended smoothly and mixed with butter, jaggery, sugar, spices, and vanilla. Even before cooking, the mixture smells comforting, warm, sweet, and familiar.
Once the bread is folded in, everything goes onto the stove. The mixture cooks slowly on medium heat, thickening as the bread absorbs moisture and the bananas caramelize gently. This stage rewards patience.
As the halwa cooks, it deepens in color, turns glossy, and begins pulling away from the pan. Ghee is added toward the end, not at the beginning, so the halwa stays rich but not greasy. Finally, melon seeds are folded in, and the halwa is cooked just until cohesive and shiny.
Pro Tip💡 : Once the halwa thickens, keep the flame medium-low. High heat can cause sticking and uneven texture.
Banana Bread Halwa by Hema Subramanian is a rich, soft dessert made with ripe bananas, bread, jaggery, ghee, and warm spices. A perfect way to use leftover bread.
Ingredients
To make banana bread halwa
6bread(roughly chopped)
5banana(ripe, chopped)
50g unsalted butter
1/2cup jaggery powder
1/2cup sugar
1tsp cinnamon powder
1/4tsp dry ginger powder
1tsp vanilla essence
1/4cup ghee
melon seeds (as needed)
Instructions
Prep Work
1
Prepare bread
Roughly chop bread slices and grind to a coarse powder
2
Prepare bananasPeel and chop ripe bananas
3
Mash bananasBlend bananas into a smooth pulp
4
Measure ingredientsKeep butter, jaggery, sugar and spices ready
Method
5
Grind bread
Grind bread pieces using pulse mode to a coarse texture and set aside
6
Blend bananasBlend chopped bananas into a smooth pulp and transfer to a bowl
7
Mix baseAdd butter, jaggery, sugar, spices and vanilla essence to banana pulp and mix well
8
Add breadMix ground bread into the banana mixture until well combined
9
Cook halwaTransfer mixture to a pan and cook while stirring continuously
10
Add gheeLower flame and add ghee, stirring until absorbed
11
Add seedsAdd melon seeds and mix gently
12
FinishCook until halwa thickens and turns glossy, then turn off heat
Nutrition Facts
Servings 5
Amount Per Serving
Calories320kcal
% Daily Value *
Total Fat18g28%
Saturated Fat10g50%
Cholesterol35mg12%
Sodium220mg10%
Potassium420mg12%
Total Carbohydrate38g13%
Dietary Fiber4g16%
Sugars22g
Protein5g10%
Vitamin C 8 mg
Calcium 60 mg
Iron 1.8 mg
Magnesium 35 mg
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.
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Hema Subramanian
Food and Lifestyle Blogger
I love to cook! And through Home Cooking Show, I hope to make cooking fun, easy, and approachable for everyone.
My way of sharing recipes is all about keeping it simple and delicious—no complicated steps, no fancy ingredients, just real home-cooked food that anyone can make. Cooking should be a joy, not a chore! Whether you’re a beginner or a seasoned cook, you’ll find something here to inspire you. If you love good food made with love, then you’re in the right place!