Chocolate Oatmeal Breakfast Cookie

Featured in: Breakfast Boosts

This cake-like morning treat combines rolled oats, mashed bananas, and cocoa for a rich yet wholesome flavor. Sweetened naturally with maple syrup or honey, the mix includes melted coconut oil and vanilla for added depth. Dark chocolate chips and optional nuts provide texture and a hint of indulgence. Baked until just firm, it offers a tasty, easy-to-make start to your day or a convenient snack.

For a dairy-free option, swap butter with coconut oil and choose vegan-friendly chocolate chips. Adding chia or flaxseed boosts fiber content. Serve warm or cooled with milk or coffee to enjoy a balanced, energizing bite on the go.

Updated on Fri, 26 Dec 2025 09:33:00 GMT
Warm, freshly baked chocolate oatmeal breakfast cookies, the perfect healthy morning treat. Save
Warm, freshly baked chocolate oatmeal breakfast cookies, the perfect healthy morning treat. | tastybattle.com

The morning my daughter refused to eat anything except cookies, I stood in the kitchen wondering if I'd somehow failed at breakfast entirely. Then it hit me—what if I made her a cookie that actually belonged on the breakfast table? I started mashing the brownest bananas I had, swirled in some cocoa powder, and baked up these thick, cakey rounds that tasted like someone had turned chocolate cake into something you could eat with your hands before 7 AM. She devoured three. I've been making them ever since, usually while the coffee brews, knowing I'm sneaking actual nutrition into what feels like pure indulgence.

Last Tuesday I brought a batch to my neighbor's house after her surgery, and she cried a little—not because of the cookies themselves, but because they meant someone had remembered she couldn't digest much. These cookies sat gentle in her stomach while other foods wouldn't. That's when I realized how powerful a simple, honest breakfast cookie could be, how it bridges the gap between what we want to eat and what our bodies actually need.

Ingredients

  • Rolled oats: Use old-fashioned oats, not quick oats—they give the cookie that substantial, slightly chewy texture rather than mushy.
  • Unsweetened cocoa powder: The real deal matters here; Dutch-processed cocoa makes them deeper and richer.
  • Mashed banana: Wait until they're almost too brown, when the sweetness concentrates and the banana flavor becomes almost creamy.
  • Maple syrup or honey: Either works, but maple adds an earthy undertone that chocolate loves.
  • Melted coconut oil or butter: This keeps them from drying out; coconut oil makes them vegan, butter makes them taste a bit more indulgent.
  • Dark chocolate chips: Don't skimp—seventy percent cacao or higher so the chocolate flavor stays bold.

Instructions

Heat the oven and prep:
Set your oven to 350°F and line your baking sheet with parchment paper. This temperature is gentle enough that the cookies bake through without the edges hardening.
Build the dry base:
Whisk together the oats, cocoa powder, baking powder, cinnamon, and salt in a large bowl. You're creating the framework that holds everything together.
Mash and mix the wet ingredients:
Mash the bananas until they're almost smooth—a few tiny lumps are fine, they'll disappear into the dough. Stir in the maple syrup, melted coconut oil, and vanilla, mixing until it smells like a chocolate cake batter.
Bring it together:
Pour the wet ingredients into the dry mix and stir until just combined. Overworking makes them tough; you want them just unified. Gently fold in the chocolate chips and nuts.
Scoop and shape:
Use a heaping tablespoon or small cookie scoop to portion the dough onto your baking sheet, leaving about an inch between each one. Press them down slightly with the back of a spoon—they won't spread much, so this helps them bake evenly.
Bake until set:
Slide them into the oven for 16 to 18 minutes. You're looking for that moment when they feel barely firm to the touch but still have a tiny bit of give in the center. This is what keeps them cake-like instead of cakey-hard.
Cool with patience:
Let them rest on the baking sheet for five minutes—this helps them firm up without breaking apart. Then transfer to a wire rack, where they'll cool completely and develop their final texture.
Golden-brown chocolate oatmeal breakfast cookies, speckled with chocolate chips, ready to eat. Save
Golden-brown chocolate oatmeal breakfast cookies, speckled with chocolate chips, ready to eat. | tastybattle.com

I learned something watching my kid carefully peel back the parchment paper from each still-warm cookie, how something this simple could transform a rushed morning into a real moment. These cookies became the reason she'd actually sit down at the table instead of eating standing up at the counter.

Why These Taste Like They Shouldn't Work

The magic here is that bananas and cocoa powder are old friends—the fruit brings natural sweetness and moisture while the cocoa adds depth and an almost savory earthiness that makes the whole thing taste more sophisticated than it has any right to be. Oats ground up slightly during mixing release their starch, which binds everything into a surprisingly sturdy texture that doesn't crumble. There's no butter creamed with sugar, no eggs to bind, just honest ingredients doing exactly what they're supposed to do.

How to Store Them (They'll Last)

Keep them in an airtight container at room temperature for three days, or stack them with parchment between layers and freeze for up to a month. A five-second microwave warm-up brings back that soft, almost doughy center that makes them irresistible. Some mornings I grab one straight from the freezer and eat it as it thaws, which is its own strange kind of perfect.

Variations That Actually Work

Once you understand how these cookies work, you can play with them without breaking the formula. Swap the dark chocolate for white chocolate and add dried cranberries, or skip the chocolate entirely and stir in pumpkin puree and extra spice for a fall version. I've made them with almond butter stirred into the wet ingredients, creating an almost protein-bar texture. The oats and banana are the non-negotiables; everything else bends to what you're in the mood for.

  • Peanut butter swirled in makes them taste almost dessert-like while staying wholesome.
  • A pinch of espresso powder deepens the chocolate flavor so much you'd swear there's more cocoa in there.
  • Chopped dried figs add chewiness and natural sweetness that plays beautifully with the banana.
Close-up of a stack of moist chocolate oatmeal breakfast cookies, ideal for a quick, delicious snack. Save
Close-up of a stack of moist chocolate oatmeal breakfast cookies, ideal for a quick, delicious snack. | tastybattle.com

These cookies have become the reason mornings feel a little less rushed, a little more intentional. There's something grounding about a breakfast that tastes like it was made with care, not convenience.

Recipe Questions

What makes this breakfast cookie moist?

The mashed bananas and melted coconut oil help keep the texture moist and tender.

Can I substitute the sweetener used?

Yes, maple syrup or honey can be used interchangeably based on preference or dietary needs.

Is it possible to add extra fiber to the mix?

Adding chia seeds or ground flaxseed is a great way to boost fiber and nutritional value.

What temperature is best for baking these treats?

Baking at 350°F (175°C) ensures they cook evenly and develop a cake-like texture.

How can I make a dairy-free version?

Replace butter with melted coconut oil and use dairy-free chocolate chips or chopped chocolate.

Are nuts necessary in the mixture?

Nuts are optional and add crunch; you can omit them if preferred or due to allergies.

Chocolate Oatmeal Breakfast Cookie

A wholesome blend of oats, banana, and chocolate for a nutritious morning treat.

Prep duration
10 min
Cook duration
18 min
Complete duration
28 min
Created by Alex Ramirez


Skill level Easy

Heritage American

Output 8 Portions

Nutritional specifications Meat-free, No dairy

Components

Dry Ingredients

01 1 cup rolled oats
02 2 tablespoons unsweetened cocoa powder
03 1/2 teaspoon baking powder
04 1/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon
05 Pinch of salt

Wet Ingredients

01 2 large ripe bananas, mashed
02 2 tablespoons maple syrup or honey
03 1 tablespoon melted coconut oil or unsalted butter
04 1 teaspoon vanilla extract

Add-ins

01 1/4 cup dark chocolate chips or chopped chocolate
02 2 tablespoons chopped nuts (optional)

Directions

Phase 01

Preheat Oven: Preheat the oven to 350°F and line a baking sheet with parchment paper.

Phase 02

Combine Dry Ingredients: In a large bowl, mix rolled oats, cocoa powder, baking powder, cinnamon, and salt until evenly distributed.

Phase 03

Prepare Wet Mixture: In a separate bowl, mash bananas until smooth, then stir in maple syrup or honey, melted coconut oil or butter, and vanilla extract.

Phase 04

Mix Wet and Dry Ingredients: Add wet ingredients to the dry mixture and stir gently until just combined. Fold in chocolate chips and nuts if desired.

Phase 05

Form Cookies: Spoon heaping tablespoons of dough onto the prepared baking sheet, flattening each slightly with the back of a spoon.

Phase 06

Bake: Bake for 16 to 18 minutes until cookies are set and slightly firm to the touch.

Phase 07

Cool: Let cookies cool on the baking sheet for 5 minutes before transferring to a wire rack to cool completely.

Necessary tools

  • Mixing bowls
  • Fork or potato masher
  • Measuring cups and spoons
  • Baking sheet
  • Parchment paper
  • Spoon or cookie scoop

Allergy details

Review each component for potential allergens and seek professional healthcare advice if uncertain.
  • Contains oats (verify gluten-free status if needed), tree nuts if using, and chocolate which may contain traces of milk or soy.

Nutrient breakdown (each portion)

These values are estimates only and shouldn't replace professional medical guidance.
  • Energy: 115
  • Fats: 4 g
  • Carbohydrates: 20 g
  • Proteins: 2 g