The Ultimate Low FODMAP Banana Bread (Gluten-Free and Moist)

A freshly sliced loaf of low FODMAP banana bread on a white cutting board showing a moist gluten-free crumb with chopped walnuts.

Low FODMAP banana bread is absolutely safe to bake and eat on the IBS elimination phase as long as you use bananas at the right ripeness and stick to a Monash-verified serving size of 1/12th of the loaf (approximately 33g of banana per slice). With Bob’s Red Mill 1:1 Gluten-Free Baking Flour, coconut oil, and pure maple syrup, this recipe keeps every serving within the green-light fructan threshold established by Monash University.

I’m James Rivera. I went to culinary school dreaming of opening a restaurant. Still, everything changed when I married Elena, who has SIBO and follows a strict low FODMAP diet. The first dinner I cooked for her parents,slow-braised short ribs with garlic, onions, and red wine, left her in pain all night. That disaster dinner sent me straight to the Monash Low FODMAP App. Now every recipe I develop at GoPlated is cooked at least three times, Sarah Martinez verifies every serving size using Monash University data, and Elena’s support group tastes everything before publication.

If you’ve been eyeing those bananas on your counter, wondering whether they’ll ever be safe again since your Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) diagnosis, you’re not alone. Most banana bread recipes online are built with wheat flour and overripe bananas: two of the biggest FODMAP triggers for people managing gastrointestinal symptoms. You can also explore our low FODMAP desserts guide.

This recipe solves that completely. Every ingredient has been cross-checked against the Monash University Low FODMAP guidelines, the serving size is locked to a safe 1/12th of the loaf, and the method uses a certified gluten-free all-purpose flour blend. So you get a genuinely moist, golden loaf instead of the dense, gummy result most gluten-free bakes deliver.

In this article: the science behind banana ripeness and FODMAP stacking, how to pick the right gluten-free flour blend, safe substitutions, step-by-step baking instructions, a troubleshooting guide for sunken or gummy loaves, and freezing tips for easy IBS-friendly meal prep.

A freshly sliced loaf of low FODMAP banana bread on a white cutting board showing a moist gluten-free crumb with chopped walnuts.
Using firm bananas at a strict 1/12th serving size keeps every slice within the Monash University low FODMAP threshold

The Ultimate Low FODMAP Banana Bread (Gluten-Free and Moist)

James Chen - Professional Chef specializing in Low FODMAP cooking and Asian fusion cuisine at GoPlatedJames Rivera
Low FODMAP banana bread, tested 3 times, soft and moist, IBS-friendly comfort bake.
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Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 1 hour
Total Time 1 hour 15 minutes
Course Breakfast
Cuisine American
Servings 12 servings
Calories 229 kcal

Equipment

  • loaf pan
  • mixing bowls
  • whisk
  • spatula

Ingredients
  

  • 70 g melted coconut oil
  • 165 g pure maple syrup
  • 2 large eggs
  • 250 to 260 g ripe bananas, mashed
  • 60 g unsweetened almond milk
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • 150 g Bob’s Red Mill 1:1 Gluten-Free Baking Flour (blue bag)
  • 1 tsp baking soda
  • 0.5 tsp fine salt
  • 0.5 tsp ground cinnamon
  • 60 g chopped walnuts

Instructions
 

  • Preheat oven to 325°F (165°C). Grease a loaf pan and set aside.
  • Whisk together melted coconut oil and maple syrup. Add eggs, then bananas, milk, and vanilla.
  • Mix gluten-free flour, baking soda, salt, and cinnamon in a separate bowl.
  • Add wet ingredients to dry ingredients and stir until just combined. Fold in chopped walnuts.
  • Pour batter into pan and bake 55 to 60 minutes, or until a toothpick comes out clean.
  • Cool completely before slicing into 12 servings.

Video

Notes

Use firm bananas, a certified gluten-free flour blend, and slice into 12 equal servings for consistent low FODMAP portions.

Nutrition

Calories: 229kcalCarbohydrates: 31.4gProtein: 3gFat: 10.2gSaturated Fat: 3gCholesterol: 35mgSodium: 180mgFiber: 1.8gSugar: 12g
Keyword Dessert, gluten free, ibs friendly, low fodmap, low fodmap banana bread
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Why This Gluten-Free Banana Bread Is IBS-Friendly and Monash Compliant

Standard banana bread is not safe on the low FODMAP diet. Conventional recipes use wheat flour, a high-fructan ingredient, and call for overripe bananas that have converted their resistant starch into fructans and oligosaccharides. Both trigger bloating, cramping, and gastrointestinal symptoms in people with Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) or Coeliac disease. This recipe removes both triggers: wheat flour is replaced with Bob’s Red Mill 1:1 Gluten-Free Baking Flour (the blue bag, not the red), and banana quantity is controlled to stay within the Monash University green-light threshold per serving.

The Importance of Banana Ripeness (Avoiding FODMAP Stacking)

Ripe bananas are not automatically off-limits. According to the Monash Low FODMAP App, one-third of a medium ripe banana (33g) is a low FODMAP serving. This recipe uses 2 to 3 medium bananas (250 to 260g) across 12 slices roughly 21 to 22g per serving, safely within the green-light threshold. The critical risk is FODMAP stacking: even individually safe ingredients contribute small amounts of fermentable carbohydrates. Keeping strictly to 1/12th of the loaf accounts for the cumulative load of all ingredients combined.

Three bananas side by side showing a firm green banana safe for IBS, a yellow ripe banana safe at 33g max, and a brown spotted banana labeled high FODMAP.
Banana ripeness directly controls fructan content – firm yellow bananas at max 33g per serving are the only safe choice for the IBS elimination phase.

Choosing the Right Gluten-Free Flour Blend

Not all gluten-free flours are safe on the low FODMAP diet. Blends containing garbanzo beans, such as the Bob’s Red Mill red bag, are high in GOS and must be avoided. The correct choice is Bob’s Red Mill 1:1 Gluten-Free Baking Flour in the blue bag, made from rice flour, potato starch, and tapioca starch, all low FODMAP at the quantity used in this recipe. It is widely available in the gluten-free section of most US grocery stores.

Bob's Red Mill 1-to-1 Gluten-Free Baking Flour blue bag labeled low FODMAP safe on a white kitchen counter
Always choose the blue bag — it contains rice flour and tapioca starch, both low FODMAP safe at the quantity used in this recipe.

Essential Ingredients and Safe Substitutions

Every ingredient below has been validated against the Monash Low FODMAP App. Quantities per serving matter as much as ingredient choice; do not increase amounts without recalculating the FODMAP load per slice.

Dairy-Free and Vegan Alternatives

This recipe uses coconut oil instead of butter and unsweetened almond milk instead of cow’s milk. Almond milk is low FODMAP at up to 1 cup (240g). The 1/4 cup (60g) used here is well within the safe range. Choose almond milk without added inulin or chicory root. Lactose-free milk is an equally safe swap. For a sweetener, pure maple syrup is low FODMAP at up to 2 tablespoons (50g) per serving a. Alwayshoose 100% pure maple syrup; never pancake syrup made with high-fructose corn syrup.

The Baking Soda Chemical Hack

Gluten-free flours lack the protein network that traps carbon dioxide during baking. This recipe uses baking soda as the primary leavening agent. The CO2 produced by the baking soda reacting with the natural acidity of the bananas creates a faster expansion than baking powder alone, giving a lighter crumb that directly addresses the dense, gummy result most home bakers get with gluten-free recipes. None of the top competitors explain this mechanism; they list baking soda as an ingredient without ever explaining why it matters in a gluten-free context.

Low FODMAP Stir-ins: Walnuts

Chopped walnuts (1/2 cup / 60g across the full loaf) give each of the 12 slices approximately 5g, well within the low FODMAP threshold of 10 walnut halves (30g) per serving. Reserve 1 to 2 tablespoons to sprinkle on top before baking for added texture and visual appeal.

Step-by-Step Method for the Perfect Bake

Prepping the Batter

Preheat your oven to 325°F (165°C). Grease a standard bread loaf pan and set aside. In a medium bowl, whisk together 1/3 cup (70g) melted coconut oil and 1/2 cup (165g) pure maple syrup. Add 2 large eggs and whisk again. Add 250 to 260g mashed ripe bananas, 1/4 cup (60g) unsweetened almond milk, and 1 teaspoon vanilla extract. Whisk until well combined.

In a separate large bowl, mix together 1 cup (150g) Bob’s Red Mill 1:1 Gluten-Free Baking Flour (blue bag), 1 teaspoon baking soda, 1/2 teaspoon fine salt, and 1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon. Pour the wet mixture into the dry and stir until just combined. Gently fold in all but 1 to 2 tablespoons of the 1/2 cup (60g) chopped walnuts.

A mixing bowl with low FODMAP banana bread batter showing mashed bananas folded into gluten-free flour with a wooden spatula, top-down view.
Stir wet and dry ingredients until just combined – overmixing a gluten-free batter results in a gummy crumb.

Achieving the Golden Crust in the Oven

Pour the batter into the greased loaf pan and sprinkle the reserved walnuts on top. Bake at 325°F for 55 to 60 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean. Allow to cool completely before slicing. Gluten-free baked goods are structurally fragile when hot; cutting into the loaf while warm causes it to crumble. Slice evenly into 12 portions once fully cooled.

Troubleshooting Your Gluten-Free Banana Bread

Why Did My Loaf Sink in the Middle?

A sunken center is almost always caused by too much liquid, underbaking, or opening the oven door in the first 30 minutes. Ensure your bananas are weighed at 250 to 260g total. Verify your baking soda is not expired. Leavening agents lose potency after 6 to 12 months and will fail to provide sufficient rise.

How to Prevent a Gummy or Dense Texture

A gummy interior is almost always the result of underbaking. If the toothpick comes out clean but the crumb still feels gummy after cooling, extend baking by 5-minute increments at 325°F. Use room-temperature eggs and almond milk. Confirm you are using the Bob’s Red Mill blue bag; the red bag contains garbanzo flour, which produces a dense, high-FODMAP result.

Storage, Freezing, and Reheating Instructions

Room Temperature vs. Refrigeration for GF Bread

Store wrapped tightly in plastic wrap or an airtight container at room temperature for up to 2 days. Beyond that, refrigerate for up to 5 days. Always bring refrigerated slices to room temperature for 15 minutes, or microwave for 15 seconds, before eating to restore the soft texture.

How to Freeze Slices for Easy Meal Prep

Slice the fully cooled loaf into 12 even portions, wrap each individually in plastic wrap, and store in a zip-lock freezer bag for up to 3 months. Defrost overnight at room temperature or microwave from frozen for 30 to 40 seconds. This approach is particularly useful during busy weeks when you need a quick, IBS-friendly breakfast or snack without baking from scratch.

Individual low FODMAP banana bread slices wrapped in plastic wrap on a kitchen counter next to an open zip-lock freezer bag for IBS-friendly meal prep.
Wrap each of the 12 slices individually – this keeps every serving at the correct low FODMAP portion size for up to 3 months.

Frequently Asked Questions About IBS Baking

Is Banana Bread Low FODMAP?

Standard banana bread is not low FODMAP due to high-fructan wheat flour and overripe bananas. It can be made IBS-safe by using a certified gluten-free flour blend (avoiding bean flours), keeping banana quantity to 250 to 260g across 12 servings, and eating only 1/12th of the loaf per sitting. The best flour for this purpose is Bob’s Red Mill 1:1 Gluten-Free Baking Flour (blue bag), validated against Monash University thresholds.

Can I Use Almond Flour Instead?

Almond flour is not recommended as a direct replacement. The volume needed to replace a 1:1 baking blend in a full loaf significantly exceeds safe per-serving FODMAP thresholds. Almond flour also produces a denser, more fragile structure that does not hold for clean slicing.

Are Brown Spotted Bananas Safe for IBS?

Brown spotted bananas are high FODMAP and must be avoided during the elimination phase. According to the Monash Low FODMAP App, ripe yellow bananas are low FODMAP only at one third medium banana (33g) per serving. This recipe uses 250 to 260g total across 12 slices. During the reintroduction phase, test tolerance under the guidance of a registered dietitian.

Conclusion

A moist, IBS-safe banana loaf is completely achievable when the recipe is built around the right flour, controlled banana ripeness, and a precise leavening technique. The formula here gives you a one-bowl method, a 12-slice yield, and a practical route to a comforting bake that is safe for the low FODMAP elimination phase.

Keep it simple: use Bob’s Red Mill 1:1 Gluten-Free Baking Flour (blue bag), weigh your bananas at 250 to 260g total, bake at 325°F for 55 to 60 minutes, and treat one slice as the working serving until tolerance is personally confirmed during the reintroduction phase.

A single slice of low FODMAP banana bread served on a white plate with dairy-free spread melting on top, styled as an IBS-friendly breakfast.
One slice at a time – the safe IBS serving that keeps your gut happy while delivering real banana bread comfort.

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Try these next: More Low FODMAP Dessert Recipes | low FODMAP chocolate chip cookies

Last reviewed by James Rivera — April 2026
This recipe was reviewed for ingredient safety, practical execution, and low FODMAP compatibility based on Monash University data.

Medical Disclaimer: The content on this page is for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult your healthcare provider or a registered dietitian before beginning, modifying, or discontinuing any dietary protocol.

Nutritional Information: All nutritional values should be treated as estimates unless otherwise specified.

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