This delicious chocolate brownie baked oatmeal recipe is ultra rich, gooey, fudgy, easy to make, super filling, and secretly healthy at the same time!

Table of Contents
- Healthy chocolate breakfast oatmeal
- Recipe flavor variations
- Brownie oatmeal recipe video
- Ingredients for brownie baked oatmeal
- How to make brownie baked oats
- Brownie baked oatmeal with no banana
- Chocolate brownie baked oatmeal toppings
- Recipe tips and tricks
- Health benefits of brownie baked oats
- More Brownie Recipes
- Brownie Baked Oatmeal Recipe

Healthy chocolate breakfast oatmeal
Cook just once, and you get an indulgent, healthy breakfast for the entire week!
The recipe can easily be prepared the night before, giving you an instant morning meal any time you are craving a sweet and chocolatey breakfast.
It’s perfect for taking on the go and yields a large number of servings. So it’s a great option for feeding a large family or serving to overnight guests.
And leftovers freeze well too!
Also try this popular Protein Banana Bread

Recipe flavor variations
Mocha baked oats: Substitute half the water or milk of choice with brewed coffee or espresso. Alternatively, you can stir a teaspoon of instant coffee (regular or decaf) in with the dry ingredients.
Protein brownie oatmeal: Swap the cocoa powder with your favorite chocolate protein powder. Use peanut butter or another high protein nut butter.
Mint chocolate chip: Add half a teaspoon of pure peppermint extract and a handful of mini chocolate chips. Garnish with fresh mint leaves if you wish.
Chocolate coconut: Stir in half a cup of shredded coconut. Use canned coconut milk as your milk of choice in the recipe.
You may also add in a handful of peanut butter chips, chia seeds or hemp seeds, raisins, dried dates, chopped walnuts, pecans, or almonds, or a sprinkle of cinnamon.
Still craving brownies? Make Sweet Potato Brownies
Brownie oatmeal recipe video
Above, watch the step by step video showing how to make the recipe

Ingredients for brownie baked oatmeal
The chocolate peanut butter baked oatmeal can be low fat, low calorie, gluten free, soy free, egg free, refined sugar free, nondairy, and vegan, with just eight ingredients.
Here’s everything you need to make it:
Gather together rolled oats, unsweetened cocoa powder, milk of choice or water, peanut butter (or your favorite nut or seed butter), pure vanilla extract, liquid sweetener of choice, salt, banana, and optional chocolate chips.
There is also a version without banana included below.
If you prefer to use quick oats instead of rolled oats, that is perfectly fine. Spelt flakes, kamut flakes, or quinoa flakes work as well. I do not recommend using steel cut oats here and have not tried oat flour.
Liquid sweetener options include pure maple syrup, honey, agave, date syrup, or sugar free maple syrup. Using granulated sugar will result in a more crumbly texture.
I like to use half unsweetened cocoa powder and half Dutch cocoa powder. Feel free to substitute raw cacao powder, hot chocolate powder, chocolate protein powder, or sweetened cocoa powder for the unsweetened cocoa if desired.
If using peanut butter, the recipe will taste like a Reese’s peanut butter cup, with a strong peanut butter flavor. Almond butter, cashew butter, Coconut Butter, pecan butter, or sunflower butter are all great alternatives to peanut butter if you prefer a more neutral flavor.
Frozen bananas or roasted sweet potato or kabocha squash puree can be substituted in an equal amount for the ripe bananas.

How to make brownie baked oats
Preheat your oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit.
Line the bottom of a nine by thirteen inch baking dish with parchment paper, or grease the bottom and sides of the pan with oil spray or oil.
In a large mixing bowl, combine the peanut butter, milk of choice, pure vanilla extract, mashed overripe bananas, and sweetener. Whisk until well mixed.
Stir in the rolled oats, cocoa powder, salt, and any optional add ins.
Smooth the oatmeal brownie batter into the prepared pan with a spoon or spatula.
Place the baking pan on the oven’s center rack, and bake for thirty five minutes without ever opening the oven door.
Once time is up, remove the pan from the oven using pot holders. Let the baked oatmeal cool on the counter before slicing and serving.
To serve, garnish with additional peanut butter, maple syrup or pancake syrup, and chocolate chips if desired. Serve hot or cold.
If you can wait, I like to very loosely cover the cooled pan with a towel and refrigerate overnight, because the flavors develop and the rich chocolate taste becomes more pronounced by the next morning!
Leftovers should keep in the refrigerator for up to a week. They can also be sliced and frozen for up to three months. Thaw frozen brownie baked oatmeal in the microwave or on the stovetop or a warm oven before serving.

Brownie baked oatmeal with no banana
Whether you do not like banana or simply do not want a banana flavor in your brownie baked oats, the following recipe without banana is just as tasty as the original!
In a large bowl, whisk together half a cup of peanut butter, two cups of plain or Greek yogurt (dairy free yogurt works too), one cup milk of choice, half a cup of pure maple syrup, and two and a half teaspoons of pure vanilla extract.
Add three cups of rolled oats, half a cup of cocoa powder, a teaspoon of salt, and a generous handful of chocolate chips.
Follow the same preparation and baking instructions as the instructions for the banana brownie baked oatmeal version in the recipe box below.

Chocolate brownie baked oatmeal toppings
The baked oats are wonderful on their own or topped with sliced strawberries or raspberries, bananas, and Coconut Whipped Cream.
My favorite way to top the recipe is with a swirl of melted peanut butter and sprinkle of chocolate chips. Chocolate peanut butter brownie baked oatmeal for the win.
Or slice and serve the bars with Coconut Butter or Homemade Nutella.
Other topping ideas include fresh or frozen blueberries, sliced apples, roasted hazelnuts, blackberries, cacao nibs, granola, mini marshmallows…
Have fun creating your perfect chocolate oatmeal breakfast. The sky is the limit!

Recipe tips and tricks
If you’d like to use a food scale, here are the amounts to measure:
80 grams peanut butter, 360 grams mashed banana, 270 grams rolled oats, 40 grams cocoa powder, 240 grams milk of choice, 60 grams pure maple syrup, 10 grams pure vanilla extract, 6 grams salt, and there’s no need to measure the chocolate chips.
If you are making the banana version of the recipe, make sure your bananas are ripe. The peels should be at least partially brown and spotted before peeling.
The recipe can easily be made dairy free. For vegan brownie baked oatmeal, simply use your favorite nondairy milk (such as almond milk, soy milk, or coconut milk). Choose plant based chocolate chips if you will be adding those. And go with pure maple syrup or agave instead of honey.
To save time in the morning, you may either bake the recipe the night before or prepare the batter and spread it into the pan, then refrigerate overnight and bake in the morning so the chocolate brownie oats are hot for breakfast.

Health benefits of brownie baked oats
The healthy recipe is packed with protein, iron, fiber, and potassium.
It is naturally sweetened and low in sugar and saturated fat, with no eggs, no cholesterol, and no dairy required.
And at just 100 calories per square, the baked oats are great for Weight Watcher’s or a weight loss diet. Or the low calorie base can be bulked up with extra chocolate chips, shredded coconut, and additional toppings for those who are not counting calories.

More Brownie Recipes

The recipe was inspired by my Chocolate Baked Oats and Chocolate Overnight Oats.

Brownie Baked Oatmeal
Ingredients
- 1/3 cup peanut butter or allergy friendly sub
- 3 cups mashed banana (there's a banana free version above!)
- 1 cup milk of choice or water
- 1/4 cup pure maple syrup or honey or agave
- 2 tsp pure vanilla extract
- 3 cups rolled oats
- 1/2 cup cocoa powder or chocolate protein powder
- 1 tsp salt
- 1/2 cup chocolate chips (optional)
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 350 F. Line or grease a 9×13 inch pan. Whisk all ingredients in a large bowl to form a batter. Smooth into the pan, and bake for 35 minutes. Let cool, then serve hot or cold. If you can wait, the flavor is even richer the next day!View Nutrition Facts
Video
Notes
Healthy Breakfast Recipes With Chocolate
























My gosh, they can be eaten as a luscious-looking bar, OR in a bowl full of milk?!?! You’ve sold me!
You could honestly pick any holiday, at some point in time 🙁 I’ve always forgotten something and had to make a mad dash to the store. Pretty sure milk wasn’t the only thing I forgot lol. Love your recipes though, it’s honestly going to take me a long time to try it all.
This looks SOOO DELICIOUS!!!! Plus I think it’s brilliant to keep a container of almond milk in the cabinet for emergencies. I’d never bought the non-refrigerated ones because the cold ones are cheaper but I never thought about the fact that then you’d have one on hand if you run out during baking, which has happened to me before. Hopefully I win, but if not then I’m still going to buy an “emergency” almond milk any way 🙂
I ran out of plain, unsweetened almond milk in the middle of making mac and cheese and had to substitute vanilla almond milk…I though I might have gotten away with it but the result was not good. Vanilla mac and cheese is a no go!
Ha…I’ve done the same thing and my family was like this mac n cheeze is sweeter than normal…..I had to check the container in the fridge because I wasn’t aware I did it myself….but we still ate it!
Can’t get over how delicious these look!! And I love how it makes a large batch; perfect for meal-prep to have on hand for the week! The time that sticks out the most about running out of milk was last summer when I was making homemade roasted tomato creamy soup with tons of tomatoes from my garden. I have brought the shelf-stable Almond Breeze milks before on camping trips…so handy!
I’m thinking of going vegan (thanks mostly to your blog), and milk is one of the last things I haven’t given up yet. I’ve never bought almond milk yet so I’ll have to look for this one next time I’m at the store. If I win the almond milk, that would just be the perfect incentive to go vegan!
My only suggestion would be to buy the UNSWEETENED and if you don’t like one brand, then try another. For instance, we love soy milk (yes, it’s good for you) and when we buy the UNSWEETENED one at Tesco, it tastes great, but when we buy a major brand like Alpo is it? (Sorry, can’t remember the exact name), then it tastes awful…it says unsweetened, but they’re putting something in it that tastes awful. You can also make your own almond milk, soy milk, oat milk…and very easily…just with a blender, a bit of a sweetener and a pinch of salt. You can search this site – I believe she has come recipes for it.♥️
Just yesterday I ran out of almond milk mid-smoothie making. I thought there was a little more left in the carton than there was. Needless to say, I had a verrry thick smoothie!!
Haha Katie I already buy Almond Breeze Almondmilk because of you! Would love to win!
That looks delish…. I need to make those.
As for a time we ran out of milk.. All 4 boys poured a bowl of cereal and then got to the fridge and was like woah, now what do we do?
I ran out of milk one morning and didn’t notice until I’d already poured my bowl of muesli and had let the last 2 TBSP of milk trickle over it! 🙁 No going back at that point. I had 0 options and time so….I added a bit of water and tried to pretend it was milk. Shelf stable almond milk is a brilliant solution!!! Making that happen on my next grocery run!