Banana Cupcakes with Vanilla Pastry Cream

Since I have embraced summer in January this week, inspired by the S’more Nut Bars, I thought I would follow up with these banana cupcakes. As I have mentioned pretty much every single time I make a cupcake recipe, I am a huge, huge, HUGE frosting fan. Adore frosting. Eat it by the spoonful when I make it (shhh!). Given my infatuation with it, I was immediately intrigued when I came across this recipe for cupcakes that did NOT have frosting on them. No frosting, but instead, pastry cream. Simply genius. Pure genius. I might love pastry cream just about as much as frosting.

This combination really is one of the freshest takes I’ve found on cupcakes in quite some time. The pastry cream is such a natural pairing with the banana flavor and it keeps the whole thing feeling light and not weighed down by frosting. Eating the cupcake is actually quite reminiscent of a banana cream pie. Only without the fuss of pie crust!
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The book gives a few different options for topping these babies – piping the pastry cream with a decorating bag and tip, using an ice cream or cookie scoop to drop a dollop on top, or using a spatula to slather the cupcakes with the cream. Although I have pastry bags and tips, I really liked the idea of the scoop on top and that’s what I did. Feel free to be creative and decorate at will!
And then dig in :)

Three years ago: Perfection Pound Cake

Banana Cupcakes with Vanilla Pastry Cream
Ingredients
For the Banana Cupcakes:
- 2¾ cups (343.75 g) all-purpose flour
- 1¼ teaspoons (1.25 teaspoons) baking powder
- 1 teaspoon baking soda
- ½ teaspoon (0.5 teaspoon) salt
- ½ cup (113.5 g) unsalted butter, at room temperature, (4 ounces)
- ¼ cup (51.25 g) vegetable shortening, at room temperature
- 1¾ cups (350 g) granulated sugar
- 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
- 2 eggs
- 1½ cups (225 g) mashed very ripe bananas, about 4 bananas
- ½ cup (120 ml) buttermilk
For the Vanilla Pastry Cream:
- 3 cups (709.76 ml) half-and-half
- 6 large egg yolks
- ½ cup (100 g) granulated sugar
- 3 tablespoons cornstarch
- ¼ teaspoon (0.25 teaspoon) salt
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Instructions
- To Make the Banana Cupcakes:
- 1. Preheat the oven to 325 degrees F. Line two 12-cup cupcake pans with paper liners.
- 2. Whisk together the flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt together into a large bowl and set aside.
- 3. In the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, beat the butter and shortening together on medium speed until creamy, 3 to 4 minutes. Add the sugar and vanilla and beat on medium speed until fluffy, about 3 minutes. Scrape down the bowl, add the eggs, and beat until just combined. Scrape down the bowl again and add the bananas. Beat until just combined. Turn the mixer to low. Add the flour mixture, alternating with the buttermilk, in three additions, beginning and ending with the flour mixture. Scrape down the bowl, then mix on low speed for a few more seconds.
- 4. Fill the cupcake liners about three-quarters full. Bake for 20 to 25 minutes, rotating the pans halfway through the baking time, until a toothpick inserted in the center of a cupcake comes out clean. Transfer the pans to a wire rack and let cool for 20 minutes. Remove the cupcakes from the pans and place them on the rack to cool completely.
- To Make the Vanilla Pastry Cream:
- 1. Set a fine-mesh sieve over a medium bowl.
- 2. In a medium saucepan, bring the half-and-half to a simmer and keep warm.
- 3. In a medium bowl, whisk the egg yolks, sugar, cornstarch, and salt together until the mixture is pale, about 1 minute. Whisk half of the warm half-and-half into the egg yolk mixture, then pour that mixture into the remaining half-and-half in the saucepan and cook over medium heat, whisking constantly, until thickened, about 6 minutes. Remove from the heat and whisk in the vanilla. Strain the pastry cream through the sieve and press a piece of plastic wrap directly onto the surface of the cream to prevent a skin from forming. Put in the refrigerator for about 1 hour, or until chilled.
- To Assemble the Cupcakes:
- If you have a pastry bag, fit the bag with a large tip, fill the bag with the pastry cream, and pipe out enough pastry cream to cover each cupcake.
- If you do not have a pastry bag, use an ice cream scoop with a release mechanism to scoop the pastry cream and dispense it onto the top of the cupcake.
- You can also use an offset spatula to frost the cupcakes. Top with a single slice of fresh banana or a dried banana chip.
- To Serve: You can either top these with the pastry cream and refrigerate until ready to serve; or keep the cupcakes at room temperature and top with the pastry cream right before serving.
Did you make this recipe?
Leave a review below, then snap a picture and tag @thebrowneyedbaker on Instagram so I can see it!



Do you think adding chocolate chips will be ok? And if yes, do I use semi-sweet or can I use a dark chocolate chip?
Thanx as always! Love your recipes!
Hi Liz, Sure, you could add chocolate chips. Either one would work, but I’m partial to dark chocolate.
Oh my goodness! These look divine! I love the Vanilla Pastry Cream and toasted banan on top! I had featured u in the post of Top 7 Yummy & Savory Pie Recipes for Mother’s Day on AllFreshRecipes. Except ur more recipes!
Just wondering if you used the scoop-and-sweep method or the spoon-and-sweep method to measure the flour.
Thanks!!!!
Hi Kristina, Actually neither, I always weigh my flour.
Thanks so much for getting back to me Michelle! Sorry to trouble you again, but could you possibly give me the # of grams/cup that you use? I have found so many varying measurements online. So very much appreciated!!
Hi Kristiina, I always use this King Arthur Flour weight chart for reference: http://www.kingarthurflour.com/recipe/master-weight-chart.html. Since it says that 1 cup of all-purpose flour is 4.25 ounces and this recipe calls for 2.75 cups, that equates to 11.6875 ounces. I used Google to convert to grams, which is 331.335 grams.
thanks for this!! I look forward to baking many many of your recipes :) All the best!
Hi, I love the sound of these cupcakes and I was wondering, how many grams/ounces does 1 cup hold because all I have are weighing scales.
Thank you
Hi Melissa, It all depends on what ingredient you use. Every ingredient has a different volume, which means 1 cup of flour will be a different weight than 1 cup of sugar. I recommend checking out this page, and clicking over to the King Arthur Flour resource listed on that page: https://www.browneyedbaker.com/conversions/
It is perfect banana cake. I cooked it two times and everybody liked it.
Do you think your chocolate buttercream frosting recipe would go well on these cupcakes or would it overpower the taste of the banana? I am trying to make cupcakes that look like monkeys for my son’s birthday party so obviously chocolate frosting would look much better than the pastry cream.
Hi Rose, While the pastry cream probably allows the banana flavor to come through more than chocolate would, I think the banana/chocolate combination would be delicious!
Hi,., this is will be my first time to bake cupcakes, I just want to ask about one of the ingredients in vanilla pastry cream which is half-and-half.. May I know what it is?
Thank u
Hi Marie, Half and half is a common dairy product in the U.S. – it is essentially half heavy cream and half whole milk. You can make that substitution if necessary.
Hi! How many days will these cupcakes last? I mean its freshness. Thanks!:)
I would say about 3 days for the freshest tasting cupcakes.
Am so in with banana and glad to come across ur blog. Am in Noigeria and the milk readily available for consumption are evaporated milk, powdered milk, fresh cowmilk can any of the above be used for pastry cream? Thanks
You would want to use cow’s milk.
Hi
Thanks for sharing the recipe! The banana cupcake was really soft and wonderful, though I couldn’t find any Half-and-Half where I live. So, I tried substituting it for a mixture of milk and butter. Turns out that the cream tasted and felt more like custard – not sure if this is how it’s supposed to taste?
Ahh, the best substitute for half-and-half is half whole milk and and half heavy cream.
Hi, Can I substitute the vegetable shortening with buttercream?
Hi Sameera, I recommend using the vegetable shortening in the cupcake recipe; if you can’t find any you could substitute butter, but I can’t say for sure how it would affect the texture of the cupcake, as I have not made that substitution myself.
what is half-to-half? haha I saw it in the pastry thingy sorry
Hi Trixia, Half-and-half is sold in the United States and is essentially half whole milk and half heavy cream.
How much would 1 cup be equivalent in grams.
Hi Sakina, It all depends on what you’re measuring; there is no hard and fast equivalent for volume. 1 cup of what?
I made these cupcakes yesterday. DIVINE! I made the pastry cream yesterday. FANTASTIC! One problem…the pastry cream is very runny. Your seems to be stiffer. Do you have any idea why it could turn out runny? Also…any idea if it’s fixable? I hate to toss it…it’s sooooo good!
Hi Eliana, Did you let the pastry cream chill in the refrigerator? It definitely firms up as it chills. If so and it’s still runny, unfortunately it may not have been cooked long enough to the point of cohesion and if that’s the case, it cannot be fixed after the fact.
Hi, I’m new to your website! I tried these out last night and they were very, very nice. Easy to make and delicious! I’ve posted a link to this on our blog too :-) Will definitley be trying out more recipes soon!
I’ve been using this blog constantly over the summer and this is one of my favorite recipes! I just made these cupcakes tonight. Next time I might make them with frosting but the pastry cream was really awesome and made the cupcakes taste a little lighter.
can i subststute 1/4 cup of butter for the shortening which i think takes away from the cupcake.
when i use shortening the cupcake seems oily not buttery light.
in other cupcake receipes can i use butter instead of oil and is it oz for oz?
THANKS A GREAT SITE
I usually don’t substitute butter/shortening for the other because they each have specific properties. But if you do give it a try, let me know how it turned out!
Instead of making these into cupcakes, which I loved them like that, could I use the same cupcake batter for 2 round cake pans? Is there anything I should do differently?
Hi Kelli, Yes you could use the same batter for two round cake pans. The only thing you’d do differently is alter the baking time slightly. You’ll want to bake them longer, I’d start checking them around 28 minutes.
Thank you for the tip:)
These cupcakes are delicious. I have made them twice, and all I can say is WOW. They are the most perfect density ever….not to airy, not too dense, but you definitely get a bang for your cupcake. I however did not make the pastry cream, but have made the cakes with honey frosting. It was so yummy. This time I have made them with chocolate peanut butter frosting (yes, both together) and they are just so tasty. Frosting is also much simpler than pastry cream.
Allie
Enjoy!
Made these for my sons 2nd birthday, but had to go with a traditional cream cheese frosting. Best cupcake ever. Beating out my favorite from a local NYC bakery. So glad I can now make my own. PS my two year old thanks you too!
help! i am new to baking, been cooking forever… but i cooked the custard/pastry cream for a good 8 minutes over medium heat and the cream is still way too runny to be considered icing. it tastes delicious running all over the side, but what could I have done wrong? any suggestions for firmer cream? should i have just kept cooking it? i was afraid that i might turn it into scrambled eggs. thanks!
Hi Sarah, A good test to know when pastry cream is done is that the foam on top with subside, it will bubble up a few times and get a very smooth, glossy look and will almost instantly become thicker. This is when I take it off the stove. That being said, pastry cream definitely will not be as firm as icing, and especially not after it’s first cooked, which is why it requires time in the refrigerator to set up and become firmer.
That cupcake looks so delicious and yummy….. great pics and thanks for share.
farida
http://kitchensuperfood.com
WOW. Made these today and they are out of this world good. I cut back just a little on the baking soda based on someone else’s comment (3/4 tsp instead of 1 tsp) that they were too airy. I don’t think it made that much of a difference really. Doesn’t matter either, because these cupcakes are A.M.A.Z.I.N.G.
Instead of putting the pastry cream on top, I used it as a filling inside the cupcake. I then made a chocolate swiss meringue buttercream frosting for the tops of the cupcakes. These are a triple threat… moist cupcake, creamy devine pastry filling, and light chocolately frosting on top.
Hands down the best cupcakes I’ve made in a long time (and I make a LOT of cupcakes).
THANK YOU THANK YOU!
I just made a half batch of the cupcakes because I had extra cream cheese frosting to use and some super ripe bananas, these are so moist and delicious without being dense like banana bread! I used white whole wheat flour and they were still fluffy! Thanks for the perfect banana cake recipe!
Just made these- they are wonderful! I did not make the pastry cream (yet) but the cupcakes alone are great- just like a piece of delicious banana cake! And each cupcake is generously sized- perfect for company :-)
Oops, just re-read the direction for the 3rd time and saw where you add the bananas. Sorry :)
I made these today and they were WONDERFUL! Your directions were very easy to follow, but for those who are not “bakers” and follow directions religiously, I noticed you left our when to add the mashed bananas. I don’t know that it’s important, but just wanted to let you know :) Thanks for all of the wonderful recipes you share!
Hi I was wondering what I could use instead of half and half? I live in England and they don’t have half n half.
Hi Kay, You can use equal parts whole milk and heavy cream to substitute for the half-and-half.
Hi, yr one of my go to inspirations and I was wondering if you had a recipe for a banana split cake? My daughter has got it into her head to make this cake for her Girl Scout Auction “Me and My Gal”. I suppose its no different then a banana split cupcake so I could always break it down in that form. I was just asking.
Thank you.
Hi Jackie, I don’t have one but it’s something I’ve been wanting to make for awhile. Now I’m motivated to make one soon! Stay tuned! :)
Sounds so decadent, and yet so homey! I want some now!