Chocolate Chip Healthy Oatmeal Cookies โ These are without a doubt the healthiest cookies I’ve ever made. And some of the fastest and easiest. And they taste SO GOOD, making them the most miraculous.
Healthy Oatmeal Cookie Recipe
Why are these healthy oatmeal cookies miraculous? Allow me to rattle off the selling points:
- Vegan oatmeal cookies โ No Eggs and No Butter
- No Oil
- No Flour
- No White or Brown Sugar Added
- No Added Salt
- Gluten-Free and Soy-Free
- No Mixer Required โ Stir Together in One Bowl in 5 Minutes
- Soft, Chewy, Not Cakey, Loaded with Texture
- High Fiber
- Dense, Rich, and Satisfying
- Modest Batch Size (about 15 small cookies)
- They taste good โ I don’t care how healthy something is, if it doesn’t taste good, why bother.
Pretty close to a miracle if you ask me.
I’d been wanting to make healthy oatmeal cookies for ages, but the last time I tried by baking bananas into my cookies rather than using butter, oil, or eggs, they were cakey, baked flat and thin, and the taste of bananas overpowered everything.
So I put that idea on the shelf for years, literally. Finally, I decided to try again, and this time with success.
These healthy oatmeal chocolate chip cookies are such easy, stir-together cookies. Mash a banana, add liquid sweetener and peanut butter, stir in the dry ingredients, and add-ins. In case you’re not a huge fan of bananas, there’s just a very subtle banana taste.
The dry ingredients consist of quick-cooking oats and crispy rice cereal. I add crispy rice cereal to no-bake bars like Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Granola Bars and Snickerdoodle Cookie Granola Bars because it adds texture and it soaks up moisture in the batter. You can’t really taste it and it’s more of a stealth operator.
These healthy oatmeal cookies are dense, hearty, thick, exceedingly chewy, and loaded with texture. Between the oats, crispy rice cereal, chocolate chips, and raisins, here’s a real texture party going on.
They’re also soft and moist, and not at all cakey, dry, or crumbly. They remind me a bit of a granola bar, in cookie form, but softer and not as hearty. The peanut butter adds richness and nuttiness and the combo of peanut butter, bananas, and chocolate is always a win for me.
They aren’t too sweet since just a banana and a bit of liquid sweetener is used, but the raisins and chocolate chips help boost the sweetness level.
Before people write saying the suggested liquid sweetener options are a form of sugar; yes, they are. But I’d think brown rice syrup, agave, or honey are healthier alternatives than white or brown sugar. Whenever I post any ‘claims’ related to sugar, I get oodles of passionate comments โ to each her own.
It’s hard to believe that something without eggs, butter, oil, flour, or added sugar can still taste like a cookie. But I assure you, they do. I’m just doing my part to try to help you get ready for swimsuit season. Considering these cookies are so healthy and miraculous, it’s okay to have seconds. Or thirds.
What’s in Healthy Oatmeal Cookies?
To make this healthy oatmeal cookie recipe, you’ll need:
- Mashed banana
- Creamy peanut butter
- Liquid sweetener of choice (such as honey)
- Vanilla extract
- Quick cook oats
- Crispy rice cereal
- Cinnamon
- Baking soda
- Semi-sweet chocolate chips
- Raisins
How to Make Healthy Oatmeal Cookies
These healthy oatmeal chocolate chip cookies are as easy to make as regular cookies! Simply stir together the wet ingredients, then add in the dry. Fold in the chocolate chips and raisins before scooping out the cookie dough.
You’ll need to chill the cookie dough balls for 2 hours before baking them off.
Once chilled, bake the cookies until the edges have set and tops are just beginning to show signs of very pale golden color. Allow cookies to cool on the baking sheet for 5 minutes before removing and transferring to a rack to finish cooling.
How to Store Healthy Oatmeal Cookies
Store cookies airtight at room temperature for up to 1 week, or in the freezer for up to 3 months.
Alternatively, unbaked cookie dough can be stored airtight in the refrigerator for up to 5 days, so consider baking only as many cookies as desired and save the remaining dough to be baked in the future when desired.
What Type of Peanut Butter Should I Use?
I recommend using a conventional peanut butter like Jif or Skippy because they’re thick. I don’t recommend natural or homemade peanut butter since they’re often runny and too oily.
Can I Use a Nut Butter Alternative?
No, I don’t recommend using almond or sunflower seed butter or another peanut butter alternative because they’re much thinner and likely too runny to sufficiently bind this egg-less, flour-less, gluten-less dough.
Tips for Making Healthy Oatmeal Cookies
You must use quick cook oats โ not rolled oats or old-fashioned oats โ because quick oats are smaller and behave more like flour. Since no actual flour is used, finer ground oats are necessary. Turn your old-fashioned whole-rolled oats into quick oats in 10 seconds in a food processor or Vita-Mix.
Make sure to chill the dough so the healthy oatmeal cookies bake up nice and thick. There are no eggs or gluten to give the cookies structure, and therefore, chilling the dough is essential. That said, after being properly chilled, the cookies spread very little while baking, so flatten the dough mounds so the cookies cook through evenly.
For the add-ins, I used chocolate chips and a raisin medley, but feel free to use craisins, dried cranberries, apricots, another dried fruit, sliced nuts, white chocolate, butterscotch, or peanut butter chips.
Pin This Recipe
Enjoy AverieCooks.com Without Ads! ๐
Go Ad Free
Healthy Oatmeal Chocolate Chip Miracle Cookie
Ingredients
- about 1/2 cup ripe mashed banana, 1 medium/large
- โ cup creamy peanut butter, like Jif or Skippy; donโ use natural or homemade PB. I suspect almond or sunflower seed butter are too thin and runny
- โ cup liquid sweetener, agave, light-colored corn syrup, brown rice syrup, honey; I suspect maple syrup is not quite sticky enough
- 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
- 1 ยฝ cups quick cook oats, not old-fashioned whole rolled; must use quick cook. Use certified gluten-free if desired
- 1 cup crispy rice cereal, use certified gluten-free/vegan if desired
- 2 teaspoons cinnamon
- ยฝ teaspoon baking soda
- ยฝ cup semi-sweet chocolate chips, or another favorite baking chip, or omit
- ยฝ cup raisins, or another favorite dried fruit, or omit
Instructions
- In a large mixing bowl, add the banana and mash with a fork.
- Add the peanut butter, sweetener, vanilla, and stir to combine.
- Add the oats, crispy rice cereal, cinnamon, baking soda, and stir to incorporate. The dough should be similar in consistency to regular cookie dough; sticky but not sloppy, nor should it be crumbly or dry. If itโs too wet, add more oats. If itโs too dry, add a small squirt more sweetener or more peanut butter.
- Fold in the chocolate chips (or try cinnamon/white chocolate/peanut butter chips) and the raisins (or try craisins/dried apricots/cranberries/blueberries) and stir to incorporate.
- Using a medium 2-inch cookie scoop, form heaping 2-tablespoon mounds (I made 15). Place mounds on a large plate, flatten mounds halfway, cover with plastic wrap, and refrigerate for at least 2 hours, or up to 5 days, before baking. Do not bake with warm dough because cookies will spread and bake thinner and flatter.
- Preheat oven to 350F, line a baking sheet with a Silpat mat, parchment, or spray with cooking spray.
- Place flattened mounds on baking sheet, spaced at least 2 inches apart (I bake 8 cookies per sheet). Bake for about 15 minutes, or until edges have set and tops are just beginning to show signs of very pale golden color. Cookies will firm up as they cool. Rotate trays midway though baking. **
- Allow cookies to cool on the baking sheet for 5 minutes before removing and transferring to a rack to finish cooling.
- Store cookies airtight at room temperature for up to 1 week, or in the freezer for up to 3 months. Alternatively, unbaked cookie dough can be stored airtight in the refrigerator for up to 5 days, so consider baking only as many cookies as desired and save the remaining dough to be baked in the future when desired.
Notes
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
ยฉaveriecooks.com. Content and photographs are copyright protected. Sharing of this recipe is both encouraged and appreciated. Copying and/or pasting full recipes to any social media is strictly prohibited.
More Oatmeal Cookie Recipes:
10 Best Oatmeal Cookie Recipes โ Every single recipe is for soft, chewy cookies that are loaded with CHOCOLATE!! No raisins in sight! All are EASY, family FAVORITES, and made with common pantry ingredients!!
One-Bowl, No-Mixer, No-Chill Oatmeal Cookies โ An incredibly FAST and EASY recipe that produces perfectly thick cookies with chewy edges and soft centers!! One bowl to wash, no mixer to drag out, and no waiting around!!
Soft and Chewy Oatmeal Coconut Chocolate Chip Cookies โ These oatmeal coconut chocolate chip cookies are packed with oats, shredded coconut, and semi-sweet chocolate chips. Sure to be a new favorite recipe!
Soft & Chewy Peanut Butter Oatmeal Chocolate Chip Cookies โ 3 favorite cookies combined into 1 so you donโt have to choose!! Easy, no-mixer recipe, and always a hit!
Cowboy Cookies โ These cowboy cookies are packed with oats, chocolate chips, Cornflakes, and shredded coconut. This is a flexible recipe that you can make with different mix-ins to suit whatever is in your pantry!
One-Bowl, No-Mixer, Extra-Large Oatmeal Chocolate Chip Cookie โ A FAST and EASY recipe for ONE XL soft and chewy very THICK cookie loaded with chocolate!! No mixer needed and so DELISH!!
Oatmeal Chocolate Chip Cookies โ Soft, chewy, loaded with chocolate, and they turn out perfectly every time! Totally irresistible!!
DAMN, Averie – you work magic with your cookies. I can’t believe how healthy yet indulgent these are! They look absolutely wonderful – so thick, chewy and absolutely crammed with yummy goodness. Thank goodness you didn’t give up on trying to make a healthy cookie. My tastebuds and waistline thank you!
They are definitely packed to the max with texture and goodies!
These look incredible! We’re going on a long road trip this weekend and these would be the perfect snack for the car ride.
They are super chewy too, which prevents inhaling 5 in 5 minutes, which I am prone to on car trips :)
I made these last night and I LOVE them! I’m so surprised how subtle the banana flavor is and so guilt free! Thanks!
Thanks for LMK you tried them Rachel, and yes, very subtle – so subtle my hubs/kiddo didn’t even detect it. Glad you liked them!
These look incredible! And I love that they are so healthy. Going on my pinterest board stat! :)
thanks for pinning!
Thank you for doing your part to get me ready for swimsuit season – I need it!! The selling point list for your cookies is so long – how could I not try this recipe?! And I’m glad to hear the banana flavor is subtle – I’m not a big banana fan!
Very subtle! Hubs/kiddo didn’t even detect it at all!
These truly do look miraculous!! Mmm so chewy!
Hi! These cookies look really good and I’m always looking for new delicious healthy tteats. Can’t wait to try baking them. But I think I am going to try using a natural PB because we avoid trans-fats. I’ll let you know how they turn out!
Ok please do LMK because I am curious to know if they will hold/stay/stick together properly!
My kind of miracle :)
These are definitely miracle cookies. Oh my gosh!
My kids would go crazy for these!
First of all — Yes, yes, yes! These cookies look fantastic and I love that they are actually healthy — bravo!
Secondly, I’m loving the new design. :)
And FINALLY… what are you using for your recipe plug-in? I’m in the process of a very long redesign and am looking into others. Let me know! xo
Thanks on 1, and 2.
3. – Custom template with a Ziplist interface that Lindsay made for me!
these ARE miracle cookies – and they look like a darn tasty breakfast to me! so glad you re-visited this idea, Averie!
They’ve been a great breakfast for us, actually!
I love everything you have going on in these cookies! So much texture and ever so simple. I bet the rice cereal just brings these to another level! And I agree with you…honey or brown rice syrup are much healthier alternatives. My hubby likes the look of these (without the raisins) so I think I’ll make a batch just for him. They look so delicious! Like you could crumble them up in a bowl and pour milk over them and have thick chocolate cookie cereal! :-)
You could totally have thick chocolate cookie cereal with milk. I actually nuked them for 10 sec with a bit of maple syrup squirted over for like a pancake/cookie on the 2nd/3rd day when they werent quite as fresh and soft and it worked like a champ!
Pretty sure you nailed it on this one! Now if only I could keep a banana in the house….Between my hubby and growing daughter, we probably go through about 14 bananas in a week :)
I have a feeling I’d eat these all day long until they were gone.
Only 14? We go thru about…15 – 20 :)
And that’s not including if I decide to bake with them. Then I need another 2-3 :)
Girl, so glad you pressed onward and got into the kitchen to accomplish your healthy cookie! Best part? They look and probably taste just as good or better than your other awesome cookies. Cannot wait to bake these! Thank you, Averie! The world definitely needed this healthy cookie recipe of yours. :) Pinning… xo
Thanks for the Pin and the kind words!