Whole-Wheat Chocolate Chip Bread
Updated April 24, 2025

- Total Time
- 1 hour 10 minutes, plus cooling
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- ¼cup/56 grams unsalted butter, melted, plus more for the pan
- 2large eggs
- ¾cup/150 grams light brown sugar
- 1cup/235 grams sour cream
- ¼cup/60 milliliters neutral oil
- 1teaspoon vanilla extract
- ¾teaspoon kosher salt (Diamond Crystal) or ½ teaspoon fine salt, plus more for sprinkling
- 1½teaspoons baking powder
- ½teaspoon baking soda
- 1cup/128 grams all-purpose flour
- ½cup/64 grams whole-wheat flour
- 1cup/170 grams semisweet chocolate chips
- 1teaspoon turbinado sugar or granulated sugar, to finish
Preparation
- Step 1
Heat oven to 350 degrees and butter a light-colored metal 9-by-5-by-3-inch loaf pan. Line the pan with a strip of parchment paper that hangs over the two long sides.
- Step 2
In a large bowl, vigorously whisk eggs and brown sugar until light and smooth, about 30 seconds.
- Step 3
Add the sour cream, melted butter, oil, vanilla extract and salt, and whisk until smooth. Whisk in the baking powder and baking soda.
- Step 4
Add both flours and all but one 1 heaping tablespoon of the chocolate chips. Stir with a rubber spatula until combined and no streaks of flour remain.
- Step 5
Spoon the batter into the prepared pan, smooth the top, and sprinkle with the reserved chocolate chips, 1 teaspoon of granulated or turbinado sugar and a sprinkle of salt. Bake until golden and puffed, and a tester inserted into the center comes out clean or with a bit of melted chocolate, 50 to 60 minutes.
- Step 6
Carefully run a thin knife or offset spatula around the edges of the pan not protected by the parchment paper. Set the pan on a rack to cool for about 15 minutes. Then, use the parchment paper to lift the cake out of the pan and set it back on the rack to cool completely. Keep leftovers loosely covered at room temperature for up to 3 days.
Private Notes
Comments
You can reduce the sugar here, but eliminating it will be a structural problem since the egg and sugar form a gel or syrup that holds onto air bubbles. Reduce the sugar by more than about a quarter and you'll start to see less rise and a rubbery texture; remove it entirely and you'll have a flat and very untender cake.
I can confirm that subbing Greek yogurt for the sour cream works nicely. Also added a mushy banana and coconut flakes. V moist.
Gees! did anyone actually make this recipe as stated? My head is spinning from all the substitutions and deletions.
Experienced baker says this recipe is great just as is (except for using dark brown sugar instead of light as that is what I had--we love the richer taste of it).
Loved this!!! used almond flour instead of whole wheat and with almost every receipe, cut sugar in half. So delish, so moist.
Cooked per the recipe. Okay but nothing special. Ours turned out a little dry.
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