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Home Breakfast

Breakfast Cookies (Healthy!)

By Nagi Maehashi
352 Comments
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Published4 Apr '19 Updated27 Jun '25
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Recipe

These Breakfast Cookies are like a bowl of homemade granola in cookie form! They’re healthy oatmeal cookies that taste like your favourite oatmeal raisin cookies – but they’re refined sugar free, gluten free, and will keep you full for ages.

Copycat of the popular Muesli Cookies sold in cafes across Australia, these are a terrific make ahead breakfast. Fill a jar with to grab ‘n run!

Stack of Healthy Oatmeal Cookies (Breakfast Cookies!)

Breakfast Cookies

The only 2 ingredients in these Healthy Oatmeal Cookies that I don’t put in homemade granola are almond meal and egg. So I’m not exaggerating when I say these are like a bowl of granola in cookie form!

These are a copycat of muesli breakfast cookies I’ve been eyeing at my local coffee shop for years, wanting to make a version that was actually acceptable to have for breakfast. I’ve tried multiple times and they’ve always been meh – the main problem being too dry and hard to swallow.

Finally, the penny dropped when I was smushing soaked dates for Sticky Date Pudding. MASHED DATES!!!! Thoroughly unappetising and sludge-like as it looks, this is the secret to sweetness, moisture, colour and terrific texture for healthy sugar-free cookies!!!

Close up of hand holding Healthy Oatmeal Cookies broken in half to show the chewy inside

Customisable!

These Healthy Oatmeal Cookies are great for customising. It’s actually a very forgiving recipe – thanks to the mashed dates that makes a solid batter base. These are the ingredients you can customise:

  • Flavourings: I’ve used cinnamon and vanilla. Try: orange blossom, almond essence, all spice, cloves – whatever takes your fancy!

  • Add Ins: I’ve used coconut, almonds and raisins. Use any combination of coconut, nuts and dried fruit that you want… or CHOC CHIPS!!!

  • Sweet: I use maple syrup or honey. Agave or any other liquid form of sweetness should work fine here. Sweetness can also be controlled – from a range of 1 to 4 tablespoons;

  • Oil: In the spirit of keeping this healthy, I use coconut oil (most of the time). Any oil will be fine here – or melted butter or margarine;

  • Almond Meal: Can be substituted with hazelnut meal / flour. I use these two interchangeably. Do not sub with normal flour – it makes the cookies dry and cardboardy.

Ingredients for Healthy Oatmeal Breakfast Cookie

A HEALTHY BREAKFAST THAT KEEPS YOU FULLER FOR LONGER! One cookie is like having one of those quick oatmeal sachets topped with dried fruit. Rolled oats have a low GI so they keep your fuller for longer, the nuts provide protein and the dried fruit provides fibre and natural sweetness. No added sugar, natural gluten free and just 376 calories.

Quick and easy

Breakfast cookies are so simple to make, you can make them today for a grab ‘n run breakfast tomorrow!! Soak dates, mash (strangely satisfying, despite how unattractive date sludge looks), mix with remaining ingredients, form cookies and bake.

No food processor, no beater – terrifically simple.

How to make healthy oatmeal breakfast cookies

Go big or go home!

I’ve made these breakfast cookies hefty instead of wimpy little cookies because they are intended to be a breakfast. I made the mistake of having two of them when I took these photos and I was full for hours. So full for so long, I didn’t even have a full dinner that night.

Self control is a trait I admire from afar. – Nagi x

PS I don’t recommend making them normal cookie size/thickness. They are soft-chewy and lack the crispy edges you find in classic Oatmeal Raisin Cookies, I wasn’t thrilled with the texture. Best chunky and “meaty” – appropriate for breakfast!


More Make Ahead Breakfast – Grab ‘n Go!

  • Homemade Sausage and Egg McMuffin

  • Healthy Egg Muffins

  • No Washing Up Ham Egg Cheese Pockets

  • No Washing Up Ham Egg Cheese Bowls

  • Bacon and Egg Muffins

And more cookie / cracker copycats

Other recipes I’ve created in the past for the same reason as these Byron Bay cookie copycat recipe (ie because I love ’em but they’re expensive!)

  • Byron Bay Cookies Copycat White Chocolate Macadamia Nut Cookies – big, thick, buttery cookies loaded with white chocolate and macadamia nuts. Crisp with a tender melt-in-your-mouth texture, just like Byron Bay Cookies!

  • Gourmet Fruit & Nut Crackers for Cheese – homemade version of the rather expensive fruit and nut crackers to serve with cheese! Homemade is incredible – the flavour is so much better than the store bought. Plus it’s way WAY cheaper!

Overhead photo of Healthy Oatmeal Cookies (Breakfast Cookies!)

Breakfast Cookies
WATCH HOW TO MAKE IT

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Stack of Healthy Oatmeal Cookies (Breakfast Cookies!)

Healthy Oatmeal Breakfast Cookies

Author: Nagi
Prep: 15 minutes mins
Cook: 20 minutes mins
Total: 35 minutes mins
Breakfast, Sweet
4.94 from 130 votes
Servings6 big chunky cookies
Tap or hover to scale
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Recipe video above. Like homemade granola – in cookie form! A satisfying grab ‘n run breakfast that tastes like your favourite Oatmeal Raisin Cookies. Same chewy and moist inside (thanks to the mashed dates!), but not as crispy. And these happen to be healthy! Customisable – see notes.

Ingredients

Wet Ingredients:

  • 100 g / 3.5 oz pitted dates (1 heaped packed cup)
  • 1/3 cup / 85 ml boiling water
  • 1 egg
  • 3 tbsp maple syrup or honey (Note 1)
  • 3 tbsp coconut oil , melted, or other plain oil (Note 2)
  • 1 tsp vanilla essence (Note 5)

Dry Ingredients:

  • 1 1/4 cups rolled oats
  • 1/2 cup flaked almonds (Note 3)
  • 1/4 cups desiccated coconut (Note 3)
  • 1/2 cup raisins or sultanas (Note 3)
  • 3/4 cup almond meal (almond flour) (Note 4)
  • 1/2 tsp baking powder
  • 1/2 tsp cinnamon (Note 5)
Prevent screen from sleeping

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 180C/350F (standard) or 160C/320F (fan/convection). Line a tray with parchment/baking paper.
  • Roughly chop dates. Place in bowl, pour over water. Cover and leave to soak for 10 minutes+.
  • Mash with potato masher or fork until it becomes a paste.
  • Add remaining Wet ingredients. Mix well with wooden spoon.
  • Add Dry ingredients. Mix until all flour is incorporated – should be a thick batter (see video).
  • Measure out just shy of 1/2 cup (6 cookies) or 1/3 cup flat (8 cookies).  Flatten to 1.7cm / 2/3″ thick rounds. (Note 9) Bake 20 minutes until golden.
  • Remove from oven, leave to cool on the tray.

Recipe Notes:

1. Sweetness: Can use anything sweet in liquid form eg agave, golden syrup. 3 tbsp makes these cookies a bit sweet but not like normal cookies. Use 4 tbsp if you have a sweet tooth or reduce to 1 tbsp if you don’t have a sweet tooth (still get sweet from the dried fruits)
2. Oil: Can use any oil, use a flavourless or neutral one. Or melted butter or margarine.
3. Add Ins: Use 1 1/4 cups in total of your choice of flaked or chopped nuts, desiccated coconut and chopped dried fruit (or small fruit like raisins, cranberries, blueberries) – or CHOC CHIPS!! If you skip the coconut, use at least 1/4 of fairly finely chopped nuts (to ensure cookie holds together properly).
4. Almond meal: aka Almond Flour. Can also use hazelnut meal/flour. Do not sub with normal flour – makes cookie cardboardy.
5. Flavourings: Use whatever you like. For spice: all spice, nutmeg, cardamom, mixed spice. Essence: orange blossom, lemon, caramel, coconut, almond.
6. GLUTEN FREE option – ensure the oats are gluten free.
7. STORAGE: good for 5 days in a super airtight container, though the outside of the cookies do soften, like any homemade cookie. Haven’t tried freezing yet – would love to know if anyone does!
8. Nutrition per cookie (6 big chunky cookies): 

Nutrition Information:

Calories: 376cal (19%)Carbohydrates: 45g (15%)Protein: 8g (16%)Fat: 20g (31%)Saturated Fat: 7g (44%)Cholesterol: 27mg (9%)Sodium: 17mg (1%)Potassium: 408mg (12%)Fiber: 6g (25%)Sugar: 17g (19%)Vitamin A: 40IU (1%)Vitamin C: 0.7mg (1%)Calcium: 107mg (11%)Iron: 2.2mg (12%)
Keywords: Breakfast Cookies, Healthy Oatmeal Cookies
Did you make this recipe?I love hearing how you went with my recipes! Tag me on Instagram at @recipe_tin.

Originally published December 2018, updated for housekeeping matters April 2019. No change to recipe!

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352 Comments

  1. Susan says

    September 8, 2018 at 1:52 am

    I like the idea of breakfast cookies, but I wish they had more protein. I would not stay full on 8 grams of protein, even with all the fiber. I’m thinking I could have a smoothie with it if I reduced the amount of honey or maple syrup to 1 tbsp. (I’m concerned about calorie levels, too.)

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      September 10, 2018 at 5:01 pm

      I hear you Susan, but in all honesty, I have pretty big breakfasts (it’s how I was brought up) and even for me these keeping me full. They’re solid! A glass of milk on the side and that cookie swells up inside you! 😂

      Reply
    • Wynn says

      September 8, 2018 at 5:42 am

      My husband requires a considerably higher ratio of protein, too. I’d also been thinking a protein smoothie might do the trick as an accompaniment, or maybe crumbling a half or whole cookie into a plain or vanilla Greek yoghurt for a breakfast parfait, instead, perhaps.

      I don’t know if replacing the fat/oil with peanut butter would quite work well with the other flavors to raise the protein level higher (although a tablespoon of PB in maple oatmeal is a big combo favorite of mine) or if the PB addition would be enough of a protein boost, but I would think cashew butter might blend in nicely as a higher protein fat. Almond butter might work too, and might be very nice in conjunction with dried Bing/dark cherries as a fruit addition?

      Reply
      • Teresa says

        September 28, 2018 at 3:06 am

        What about just spreading some peanut butter or almond butter on the cookie after it’s baked for some extra protein?

        Reply
        • Wynn says

          September 28, 2018 at 2:29 pm

          Great idea!

          Reply
      • Margot says

        September 8, 2018 at 7:24 am

        You could add a whey or vegan protein powder to the mix for the added proteinn ladies 🙂

        Reply
        • Wynn says

          September 8, 2018 at 2:13 pm

          Do you know of one that would not significantly affect texture or have a negative impact on taste? I haven’t had much luck with using protein powders in baking.

          Reply
          • Nagi says

            September 10, 2018 at 4:56 pm

            I haven’t tried I’m afraid Wynn 🙂 N x

  2. Dahn says

    September 8, 2018 at 1:07 am

    5 stars
    oh these look like the kind of breakfast cookie that I eat after a long run or bike ride. Who doesn’t love a good excuse to eat cookies for breakfast?

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      September 10, 2018 at 5:01 pm

      I feel like someone needs to invent a BACON cookie next…. YES!

      Reply
    • Eha says

      September 8, 2018 at 11:23 am

      5 stars
      Huh? My breakfast is herring and eel and spiced anchovies and cottage cheese and raw onion and sour milk and black bread and . . . . .not a cookie in sight EVER!! But they DO look awfully nice . . . .

      Reply
      • Nagi says

        September 10, 2018 at 4:56 pm

        Mmmm now that sounds like my kind of breakfast! Used to eating fish for breakfast coming from a Japanese background! N x

        Reply
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