Oatmeal Muffins

4.97 from 97 votes
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This delicious healthy oatmeal muffins recipe is soft, moist, fluffy, and easy to make for breakfast or a healthy snack!

Healthy Breakfast Oatmeal Muffins

Award winning oatmeal muffins

The simple muffins are packed with wholesome ingredients and will quickly become a new morning family favorite.

With a five star rating and over two hundred positive reader reviews, this is the best oatmeal muffin recipe you will ever find.

A few years ago, I entered the recipe into a contest held by Health Magazine, and it won their pick for Best On The Go Healthy Breakfast Option.

You might even already have the ingredients in your kitchen pantry to bake up a batch of moist and delicious oat muffins right now!

You may also like these Tiramisu Overnight Oats

Homemade Oatmeal Muffin Ingredients

Ingredients

To make oatmeal muffins from scratch, you need oats, flour, milk of choice, vinegar, sweetener, baking soda, baking powder, salt, optional egg, and optional oil, nut butter, or applesauce.

Oats – The recipe calls for one cup of quick cooking oats.

I use quick oats because they absorb liquid better than rolled oats and yield softer muffins. You may use rolled oats or instant oats if these are all you have on hand. I have not tried steel cut oats.

For gluten free oatmeal muffins, go with certified gluten free oats or an equal amount of rolled quinoa flakes.

Milk – Feel free to use any milk currently in your refrigerator.

For dairy free muffins, I like almond milk, oat milk, or coconut milk. The milk adds creaminess and extra nutrition, so I do not recommend swapping it for water.

Flour – All purpose white flour, whole grain spelt flour, oat flour, or some brands of gluten free baking flour work well.

A version with no flour (made with almond meal) is also included below.

For best results, do not use coconut flour because it will yield dry and crumbly muffins.

If you experiment with whole wheat flour, almond flour, rice flour, or pastry flour, let me know how it goes.

Sugar – Choose regular white sugar, unrefined coconut sugar, or xylitol for added sugar free muffins.

I do not recommend substituting stevia or a liquid sweetener like pure maple syrup or honey because it will change the texture considerably.

Leftover oats? Make homemade Energy Balls

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Healthy oatmeal muffin recipe video

Above, watch the step by step video showing how to make the muffins.

Easy Oatmeal Muffins With Chocolate Chips

Oatmeal breakfast muffin flavors

Oatmeal Raisin: Use the basic recipe below, including the optional cinnamon. Add half a cup of raisins before portioning the batter into the pan.

Or use the same idea with dried cranberries, chopped dates, or figs.

Apple Cinnamon: Add a teaspoon of ground cinnamon with the dry ingredients.

Stir half a cup of diced apples with the liquid ingredients. After the muffins come out of the oven, roll them in cinnamon sugar if desired.

Peanut Butter: Use creamy or crunchy peanut butter in place of the oil.

Or use almond butter, cashew butter, or pecan butter. Stir in a scoop of finely chopped peanuts if you wish.

Oatmeal Banana Muffins: Replace one third cup of milk with ripe mashed banana.

Adding a handful each of diced walnuts and mini chocolate chips yields a fun texture and an oatmeal banana bread taste.

Blueberry: For old fashioned blueberry oatmeal muffins, first stir everything together except the berries to form a muffin batter.

Very gently stir in half a cup of fresh or thawed frozen blueberries until just evenly mixed. Overmixing risks breaking the berries and turning the muffins purple.

Orange: Substitute a third of the milk with orange juice. Omit the vinegar in the recipe.

Stir the zest of one orange in with the liquid ingredients.

Maple Brown Sugar: Swap the white sugar for brown. Add three drops of natural maple extract along with the milk.

These taste like those popular instant Quaker maple and brown sugar oatmeal packets, in the form of a muffin!

Pumpkin pie: Replace a fourth cup of milk with canned pumpkin puree.

Add half a teaspoon of cinnamon and a fourth teaspoon of pumpkin pie spice.

Zucchini: Substitute a fourth cup of the milk with very finely shredded zucchini. Or add carrot for carrot cake oat muffins.

Vegan Oatmeal Muffins In A Muffin Tin

Chocolate Chip Oatmeal Muffins

As a chocolate chip cookie lover, this is my favorite flavor variation.

Add up to three fourths cup of semi sweet or dark chocolate chips to the batter along with the dry ingredients.

For presentation, you can also press a few chocolate chips into the top of each muffin right before cooking.

Sprinkle a few rolled oats or quick oats over everything, then bake in the oven.

Readers also love these Chocolate Baked Oats

Brown Sugar Oat Muffin Batter

How to make vegan oatmeal muffins

Start by combining the oats and milk in a large mixing bowl. Stir well, then let this bowl sit on the counter for about ten minutes.

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit. Line a muffin pan with paper liners or grease each individual tin with oil or spray.

Add all remaining ingredients to the mixing bowl, and whisk just until everything is evenly combined. To avoid dense muffins, do not over stir the mixture.

Portion the oatmeal batter into the prepared muffin tins.

Place the pan on the center rack of the oven, and bake for twenty minutes or until a toothpick inserted into the center of a muffin comes out mostly clean.

Remove the pan, and let it cool on the counter.

Loosely cover any muffins you do not eat right away with a cloth towel, and store either on the counter or in the refrigerator overnight.

These vegan oatmeal muffins taste even better the next day if you can wait that long, and the liners peel off easily after a day as well.

For optimal freshness, it is best to refrigerate leftovers after a day in a covered container. They should stay good for up to four days.

Or you can freeze the recipe in an airtight container for up to three months. Thaw frozen oatmeal muffins and reheat in the microwave or in a pan on the stove top.

Soft Fluffy Oatmeal Muffins

Baking tips and tricks

Soaking the raw oats in milk before mixing them with the other ingredients yields fluffier muffins. This baking trick helps the oats to absorb more moisture.

If you only have old fashioned oats in the cabinet, you can make your own quick oats at home by pulsing them in a food processor or blender for about five pulses.

As mentioned above, the liners will peel off easily if you let the recipe sit overnight. Or if you prefer not to wait, skip the liners completely and grease the pan well or use a nonstick silicon muffin pan.

For those who want oil free muffins, swap out the vegetable or coconut oil for almond or peanut butter heated until easy to stir. Applesauce, Greek yogurt, canned pumpkin puree, or mashed banana also work.

The lightly sweet and wholesome muffins are also a great served alongside savory recipes for lunch or dinner. Try them instead of cornbread with Vegan Chili.

Oat muffins health benefits

These muffins offer similar nutrition benefits to those in a bowl of oatmeal, and they are one of my family’s favorite healthy breakfast recipes.

Just one oatmeal muffin a day gives you nine percent of the recommended daily allowance for fiber and close to four grams of protein. If you want even more protein, simply add the optional nut butter.

The muffins are low in sugar, with just eight grams per muffin (under a tablespoon) even if you use real sugar.

They can also be low calorie, coming in at under 100 calories each.

Finally, the recipe includes nondairy, egg free, nut free, kid friendly, gluten free, low fat, no sugar added, and plant based vegan options for those on special diets.

Healthy Snack Oatmeal Chocolate Chip Muffins
4.97 from 97 votes

Oatmeal Muffins Recipe

This delicious healthy oatmeal muffins recipe is soft, fluffy, and easy to make for breakfast or a healthy snack!
Prep Time: 10 minutes
Cook Time: 20 minutes
Total Time: 30 minutes
Yield: 12 muffins
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Get this sent to your inbox, plus get new recipes from us every week!

Ingredients

  • 1 cup quick oats
  • 1 cup milk of choice
  • 1 egg or additional 1/4 cup milk of choice
  • 2 tsp white vinegar or apple cider vinegar
  • 2 tbsp oil or nut butter, or applesauce or mashed banana for fat free
  • 2 tsp baking powder
  • 1/2 cup sugar or coconut sugar or xylitol for sugar free
  • 1 cup flour (for flourless, make these Keto Muffins)
  • 1/2 tsp baking soda
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1/2 cup chocolate chips (optional)
  • 1/2 tsp cinnamon (optional)

Instructions 

  • The recipe works well with white flour, oat flour, or whole grain spelt flour.
    Combine the oats and milk in a large mixing bowl. Stir, then let sit for about ten minutes. Preheat the oven to 350 F, and line a muffin pan with paper liners. Add all remaining ingredients to the mixing bowl, and whisk until just evenly stirred. Portion into the prepared tins. Bake for twenty minutes or until a toothpick inserted into the center of a muffin comes out mostly clean. Let cool. Loosely cover leftover muffins with a cloth towel, and store either on the counter or in the refrigerator overnight. If you can wait, they taste even better the next day and the liners peel off easily after a day as well. After a day, refrigerated leftovers in a covered container for up to four days or freeze for up to three months.
     View Nutrition Facts

Video

Notes

Also be sure to try these Healthy Blueberry Muffins.
And if you are a visual person like I am, check out the video above to watch how to make the oatmeal muffins.
 
Like this recipe? Leave a comment below!

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Meet Katie

Chocolate Covered Katie is one of the top 25 food websites in America, and Katie has been featured on The Today Show, CNN, Fox, The Huffington Post, and ABC’s 5 O’clock News. Her favorite food is chocolate, and she believes in eating dessert every single day.

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Recipe Rating




186 Comments

  1. Jolene says:

    5 stars
    Oooh these look so yummy especially with the healthy frosting! I have a little toddler who hates every type of food except cupcakes (He is so picky!), I think these little muffins will trick him into thinking it’s a cupcake and still be healthy hehe!

  2. karlena says:

    5 stars
    hi love your recipes katie…any chance i could use oat flour instead of spelt?

    1. Chocolate Covered Katie says:

      I have not tried it, but be sure to report back if you do!

  3. catherine says:

    5 stars
    I forgot the milk and these were still great. I also used 1/2 light brown sugar & 1/2 maple syrup for the sugar, and dark 80% cacao for my chips. Excellente!

  4. Stephanie Toomey says:

    5 stars
    Love your recipes, i use to weigh 487 lbs. You have wonderful ideas! Ty

  5. Carine says:

    5 stars
    Just wondering-my husband isn’t one for pancakes, but he loves waffles (he loves the baked oatmeals of yours I’ve tried), have you ever tried using your pancake or muffin recipes in the iron? If so, did it work at all? He likes them crisp on the outside/soft on the in.

  6. Helen says:

    Really really hoping you can help me on this occasion.
    I’ve made very a similar query a number of times but no answer or comment has been returned, so I’ve abandoned the idea of trying the recipe.

    I’m concerned at the use of buttermilk (acid and milk) in conjunction with baking powder as opposed to baking soda which I would have expected to see.

    I’m wondering if US baking powder is the same as ours, here in the UK, which is a balanced combination of acid plus baking soda and which would not react with a buttermilk mixture. Normally, here, we’d use buttermilk with baking soda, unless we wanted a strong leftover buttermilk taste to the recipe (in which case we might use baking powder for leavening instead.)
    Can you please clarify that you really are using the buttermilk for a reason other than leavening, or whether US baking powder is quite different to ours and needs buttermilk to activate?

    Would so appreciate an answer and sorry for making this comment multiple times

    Helen

    1. A H says:

      I’ve made this recipe as called for, and it came out fine. And I’m not sure what you mean about buttermilk, as that’s not in the recipe ingredients.

      1. Helen says:

        Thank you.
        Sorry for the misleading terminology (I’m English!). By saying ‘buttermilk I’m referring to the vinegar and milk combination. The vinegar sours the milk and makes a vegan version of sour milk or buttermilk. It is often used in combination with baking soda to give a leavening effect.
        X

      2. Helen says:

        I’m sorry I used the word buttermilk. I’m just referring to the vinegar and milk combination. We often refer to that here as a vegan buttermilk as it is such a good imitation of the real thing.
        I hope you don’t think I’m criticising this recipe, or others. I’m just trying to check the reasons behind the various ingredients, mainly because I am concerned that uk baking powder might be different to yours, and that the recipe (and other recipes) might not work for me.
        I can see the recipe works beautifully for you in the US else Katie would not have written it and you would not have so many positive comments.
        I’m sorry I’m not explains my questions properly, maybe because I used the term buttermilk instead of vinegar/milk.
        Normally this kind of vinegar/milk combo is used with baking soda to induce leavening. Baking soda is a ‘base’ and veinegar is acid, and they react together cause gas bubbles and make cakes rise when used together. They neutralise each other so the taste of baking soda and the taste of vinegar disappear.
        Here I see you use acid with baking powder, and there is no baking soda in the recipe. I’ve not seen this combination before. When I realised there was no baking soda in the recipe (only baking powder) I began scratching my head and the questions arose……
        Here in the UK our baking powder is a ready-made combination of acid plus baking soda and requires no acid to activate. If vinegar is used with baking powder, the vinegar in the recipe remains unused as it is not neutralised and the taste wil linger. I am wondering if this was the intention. Some people like the leftover taste of the vinegar/milk as it mimics buttermilk.
        I am a professional scientist working in food chemistry development and all my questions come out of pure interest and a desire to understand and learn. I was interested in your work.
        Pleases don’t think I’m criticising.
        I am sorry I have been explaining all my many questions so badly. Normally I communicate well. I write papers and give lectures.
        I’ll go back into hibernation and not bother you any more if you wish.
        I thought you might be also interested, but clearly not.

  7. Kim says:

    Would love too receive your recipes..Need to follow a high fiber diet..Came down with divertricous..yikes…yet wanting too stay low fat as well.yikes.

  8. Justine says:

    Hi Katie!

    I made a SAVORY version of these oatmeal cupcakes, and it turned out really good!
    I used finely grated zucchini instead of the banana, eliminated the sweetener, added
    A slew of spices (pepper, garlic, red pepper flakes, oregano, curry powder, rosemary, nutritional yeast, etc.),
    And popped a cherry tomato in the middle of each muffin.
    It turned out tasty, and I think you would like it!

  9. Merryn says:

    Hi ?
    Do you think these would keep in the freezer?
    Thanks!

    1. Jason Sanford says:

      Yes!

  10. Michelle says:

    I find these work better withOUT muffin liners – just grease the muffin tin and then they are good to eat right out of the oven (our preferred method!) My kids call them “cinnamon roll muffins” when served with your Greek yogurt cream cheese frosting or “banana nut muffins” when I sub walnuts for the chocolate chips. Using a mini muffin tin yields a nice size muffin to dip in the Greek yogurt frosting for a healthy snack-I baked them for 10 min. Thank you for this delicious, healthy recipe!