The 15 best recipes to bake in September (2024)

It’s finally shoulder season, when summer begins to give way to fall. At the farmers markets there are the last tomatoes and the first apples, cool mornings turn into warm afternoons, and there’s a sort of anticipatory energy in the air. And, as always, there are things to bake and reasons to bake them, from a simple bread that will keep lunchboxes full to an apple pie-inspired babka that will sweeten up any weekend (or new year).

Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Liz Neily

1) Apple Fritter Cake

In this recipe, the beloved apple fritter is reimagined as a sliceable, snackable bake. The moist, sturdy cake, made using the reverse creaming method, supports a huge heap of diced cinnamon-scented apples. The vanilla glaze on top gives this homemade cake doughnut shop appeal. 

Get the recipe: Apple Fritter Cake

Shop the recipe: Vietnamese Cinnamon and Pure Vanilla Extract

Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne

2) Pretzel Focaccia

This pretzel-focaccia mashup gives you the malty flavor and mahogany crust without the rolling, twisting, and boiling. It's way easier to make, and a sprinkling of pretzel salt is the key finishing touch.  Bonus: It’s a great addition to a lunchbox.

Get the recipe: Pretzel Focaccia

Shop the recipe: Instant Yeast, Unbleached Bread Flour

Photography by Kristin Teig; food styling by Liz Neily

3) Apple Pie Babka

When you’re craving apple pie, but also want a breakfast treat, what’s a baker to do? Make this babka, which is also a fitting bake if you’re celebrating Rosh Hashanah. The enriched dough is twisted around a spiced filling of brown sugar, apples, and walnuts; boiled cider (in both the dough and the filling) gives the bread big apple fragrance and flavor.

Get the recipe: Apple Pie Babka

Shop the recipe: Apple Pie Spice, Boiled Cider, and SAF Gold Instant Yeast

Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne

4) Tahini Poppy Seed Pound Cake

It’s nutty, it’s seedy, it’s an excellent candidate for all-day snacking: This pound cake, loaded with tahini, has it all. 

Get the recipe: Tahini Poppy Seed Pound Cake

Shop the recipe: Unbleached All-Purpose Flour and Pure Vanilla Extract

Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne

5) Caramel Peach Upside-Down Cake

Labor Day may be looming, but summer isn’t over yet — just ask the peaches. Before their season ends, make Fatima Khamise’s recipe for upside-down cake, which showcases the sliced fruit atop an angel food-like sponge cake. Eat a slice plain, or gild the lily with a big spoonful of whipped cream.

Get the recipe: Caramel Peach Upside-Down Cake

Shop the recipe: Cake Pan and Offset Spatula

Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne

6) Taiwanese Breakfast Bao

We’re not suggesting that anyone hop out of bed on a weekday morning and make these steamed buns for breakfast. But we are suggesting that you make a batch, keep them in the freezer, and thaw them in the microwave for an extraordinary breakfast at a moment’s notice. Recipe developer Joy Huang fills her bao with scallion omelets, soy paste, and pork floss, but you could substitute scrambled eggs and bacon if you prefer.

Get the recipe: Taiwanese Breakfast Bao

Shop the recipe: Parchment Squares and Instant Yeast

Photography by Danielle Sykes; food styling by Liz Neily

7) Glazed Espresso Coffee Cake

For a weekend pick-me-up, make this zebra-striped chocolate-and-vanilla coffee cake, the latest iteration of our Recipe of the Year. It features coffee in two forms (espresso powder and brewed), a generous layer of fudgy crumbs, and a robust coffee frosting.

Get the recipe: Glazed Espresso Coffee Cake

Shop the recipe: Espresso Powder and Black Cocoa

Photography and food styling by Liz Neily

8) Old-Fashioned Oatmeal Bread

If you’re back on the school lunch beat, you may want to commit this simple oatmeal pan bread recipe to memory. Sweetened with molasses and packed with rolled oats, it’s an easy loaf that makes excellent toast — and is perfect for a sandwich, too.

Get the recipe: Old-Fashioned Oatmeal Bread

Shop the recipe: Baker’s Special Dry Milk and Whole Grain Bread Improver

Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne

9) Ultimate Brown-Butter Rice Krispies Treats

Regular Rice Krispies treats are good. But this version, made with nutty browned butter and toasted milk powder, is truly ultimate. Soft yet chewy, a pan of these lasts less than a day in our house. Watch us make them on YouTube!

Get the recipe: Ultimate Brown Butter Rice Krispies Treats

Shop the recipe: Milk Powder

Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne

10) Tomato Pie with Parmesan and Basil

Before we bid summer adieu, make this stunning tomato pie. Featuring sliced tomatoes set in a cheesy, creamy custard and a flaky, buttery crust, it’s a showstopping way to say farewell to the season.

Get the recipe: Tomato Pie with Parmesan and Basil

Shop the recipe: Pie Pan

11) Classic Challah

If you’re celebrating Rosh Hashanah, observing Shabbat, or simply want to make the best French Toast you’ve ever had, try your hand at challah. The golden bread is enriched with eggs, sweetened with honey, and easier to make than you might think.

Get the recipe: Classic Challah

Shop the recipe: Dough Rising Bucket and Parchment Paper

Photography and food styling by Liz Neily

12) No-Bake Oatmeal Cookies

If your kids come home from school hungry for a snack and looking for a project, set them up with this recipe for No-Bake Oatmeal Cookies. Sweetened with maple syrup, loaded with oats, nuts, and chocolate, and bound with almond butter, they’re quick and intensely satisfying.

Get the recipe: No-Bake Oatmeal Cookies

Shop the recipe: Double Dark Cocoa Blend and Semisweet Chocolate Chips

Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne

13) The Most Pumpkin Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Bread

Is it too early for pumpkin? Yes. Do we crave pumpkin bread all year round? Also yes! This tender loaf uses a full can of pumpkin purée, is spiced with cinnamon and ginger, and has an ample amount of chocolate chips throughout. Give it a try and add a review!

Get the recipe: The Most Pumpkin Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Bread

Shop the recipe: Vietnamese Cinnamon, Ginger, Semisweet Chocolate Chips, and Sparkling Sugar

Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne

14) Semolina Pasta

Making pasta from scratch is a satisfying weekend project. Bust out your pasta machine and prepare a batch of this dough, which uses both semolina and '00' pizza flour and is made in a food processor. Cut it into noodles, or use it to make cheese-filled ravioli.

Get the recipe: Semolina Pasta

Shop the recipe: Semolina Flour and ‘00’ Pizza Flour

Photography and food styling by Liz Neily

15) Crispy Cheesy Pan Pizza

Back-to-school time means the return of Friday night pizza nights! Celebrate the start of the weekend (and the start of the school year) with this beloved, crowd-pleasing recipe, which yields a plush pizza with delightfully crispy edges.

Get the recipe: Crispy Cheesy Pan Pizza

Shop the recipe: Bowl Scraper and Unbleached All-Purpose Flour

Cover photography (Caramel Peach Upside-Down Cake) by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne.

Additional contributions from Tatiana Bautista

The 15 best recipes to bake in September (2024)

FAQs

What is the number one rule of baking? ›

#1 Read through the recipe

Make sure to quickly skim the recipe before you start baking to understand the general flow and key steps. You can even make notes on the recipe or highlight key points to help you along.

What is the most popular thing to bake? ›

What are the most popular baked goods? Some of the most popular baked goods are apple pie, chocolate chip cookies, cornbread, and banana bread.

What sells the best at bake sales? ›

What sells best at bake sales? Cupcakes, brownies, and cookies are always winners, but any small, portable baked items are good bake sale ideas. Note that bake sale cookies, cupcakes, brownies, and muffins are easier to package and sell by the piece than are cakes and pies.

What are 3 common baking mistakes? ›

Here is a rundown of the 11 most common baking mistakes people make and how you can avoid them as best as possible.
  • You Forget To Add A Key Ingredient. ...
  • You Don't Measure Your Ingredients. ...
  • You Open The Oven Far Too Often. ...
  • You Use The Ingredients At The Wrong Temperature. ...
  • You Don't Sift Your Dry Ingredients.

What is the first golden rule of cooking? ›

1. Read the recipe. Of all the important advice out there about cooking, this by far has to be the number 1 rule of cooking: read your recipe completely before getting started. This may seem like a mundane task (especially when you're excited dive in!), but you'll be so thankful you took the time to do it!

What is a good baking secret? ›

10 Baking Secrets You Need to Know
  • Have the right butter consistency. ...
  • Read the whole recipe beforehand. ...
  • Prep all the ingredients ahead of time. ...
  • Use an oven thermometer. ...
  • Keep that oven closed! ...
  • Don't skip chilling. ...
  • Try storing your cookies with bread. ...
  • Don't over mix the ingredients.
Sep 1, 2023

What is the most common baked item? ›

Bread, cookie, muffin, and cake are the most common baked goods. The major components responsible for the texture, flavor, and visual appearance of most bakery items are flour, water, and leavening agents.

What bakery item makes the most money? ›

5 most profitable bakery foods
  • Artisan bread: The aroma of freshly baked bread is irresistible. ...
  • Cupcakes: Cupcakes are the perfect canvas for creativity. ...
  • Croissants: The flaky, buttery goodness of croissants is a bakery favorite. ...
  • Custom cakes: Custom cakes for special occasions can be highly profitable.

What's trending in baking? ›

Sugar Swaps

Coconut sugar, dark muscovado, date sugar, etc. People are realizing that sugar can carry flavors other than simple sweetness," says Tamarkin. Experiment with alternative sugars yourself to see how they can impart new flavors in your baked goods, for example, coconut sugar imparts lovely toffee notes.

What do bakeries sell most of? ›

While sweet treats and savoury delights are always tempting, bread loaves and bread rolls are some of the best-selling bakery products.

What is the most important thing in baking? ›

Flour. There are no more Essential Ingredients for baking than Flour. Without it - and the gluten it creates - your baked goods won't get the right structure: it is the ingredient that binds everything together.

What is the most important principle in baking and why? ›

There are 6 main principles of baking: wet ingredients, dry ingredients, leavening agents, flavoring, heat, and different mixing methods. When combined correctly, they create a delicious and perfectly baked dish every time.

What is the first thing you should do when baking? ›

10 Things To Keep In Mind While Baking For The First Time
  1. 1: Let All the Ingredients Come to Room Temperature.
  2. 2: Don't Skip Steps in the Recipe.
  3. 3: Gather Your Ingredients and Prep Your Kitchen.
  4. 4: Move Your Oven Rack to the Centre Position.
  5. 7: Scoop Dry Ingredients.
  6. 10: Let It Cool.
Jul 29, 2022

What is the key to baking? ›

Measure Accurately

When baking, there's nothing more important than getting your measurements right. Sweet success for recipes like our Classic Sugar Cookies often comes down to whether you have a firm grasp on proper measuring techniques.

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