I want to do something crazy awesome… and I need your help to do it.
Here’s the deal:
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I’m ready!
As many of you know, being told that you have to stop eating something because of an allergy, sensitivity or health concern, sucks. Especially if that something has been in your life for, like, as long as you can remember… like oats.
When I posted the recipe for my Quinoa Carrot Cake Breakfast Cookies, I mentioned that oats could be replaced with cooked quinoa in most oatmeal cookie recipes. From what I’ve tested so far, you can just swap them out at a 1 to 1 ratio.
That very same day, I received a bunch of sweet messages from the ladies in our community overjoyed that they could have oatmeal cookies again. I could feel the happiness radiating from their messages. It was beautiful.
Since then, I’ve created a Zucchini Chocolate Chip Breakfast Cookie with quinoa instead of oats and now these Banana Bread Breakfast Cookies… all to try to share the message: you can use cooked quinoa instead of oats in oatmeal cookies!
This is where you come in.
It would be super cool if everyone shared this recipe (and the concept behind it) with the intention of reaching every darn person that is allergic or sensitive to oats.
Right now, they think that they will never have anything resembling an oatmeal cookie again.
But we can change that.
Tweet it
Facebook it
Pin it
Instagram it
Let’s see how loud we can get!
Are you in?
To print, email or text this recipe, click here.
Print Quinoa Banana Bread Breakfast Cookies Author: Leanne Vogel Recipe type: Vegan, Gluten-free, Dairy-free, Refined sugar-free, Yeast-free, Corn-free, Egg-free Prep time: Cook time: Total time: Serves: 24 Little morsels of banana bread in the shape of a cookie. Lightly sweet and perfect for breakfast! Ingredients- ¾ cup raw quinoa
- 1½ cups water
Dry
- 1 cup Bob’s Red Mill Gluten-free All-Purpose Baking Flour
- ½ cup freshly ground flax seed
- ½ teaspoon ground cinnamon
Wet
- ½ cup maple syrup
- 2 tablespoons grape seed oil, or melted coconut oil, or walnut oil, or… any kind of oil you want, really!
- 2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
Add-ins
- ⅓ cup raw walnuts
- 1 banana, cut into small chunks
Optional Topping
- 1 banana, sliced into coins
Instructions
- Add quinoa and water to a saucepan. Cover and bring to a boil. Reduce heat to low, and simmer for 15 minutes. Once complete, remove from the stove, remove lid and allow to cool for a couple of minutes.
- Meanwhile, preheat oven to 350F and line a baking sheet with parchment paper or a silicon baking mat. Set aside.
- Add all dry ingredients to a large bowl. Then, measure 1½ cups of the cooked quinoa and add to the dry ingredients. Stir to coat, until all quinoa granules are covered in the mixture. Set aside.
- Add all wet ingredients to a small bowl and stir well.
- Pour into the bowl with dry ingredients and stir to combine.
- Stir in walnuts and banana chunks.
- One tablespoon at a time, scoop mixture onto prepared baking sheet, leaving a small space between each cookie. They will not spread out, so you can keep the cookies close. Lightly form each cookie, as you’d like them to come out. I flattened them slightly between my palms.
- Place sliced bananas on top (if using) and bake in preheated oven for 25-30 minutes, until cooked through and golden.
- Remove from the oven, let cool on the pan for 10 minutes before transferring to a cooling rack and allowing them to cool completely. Because cooked quinoa was used in this recipe, when the cookies first come out of the oven, they’re a bit soft on the inside but they will firm up nicely!
- Once they’ve cooled completely, transfer them to a container and keep in the fridge for up to 7 days.
Notes Quinoa – be sure to rinse and drain quinoa with water before boiling.
To make the nuts in this recipe easier to digest, soak them in water for at least 8 hours. Then, drain, rinse and set on a towel to dry. Alternatively, you can soak and dehydrate for 12 hours. Then use them in this recipe. 3.5.3226
View nutrition information (once on page, scroll down)
For details on why you should soak your nuts, and a quick step-by-step on everything nut soak, check out this post.
Add quinoa and water to a saucepan. Cover and bring to a boil. Reduce heat to low, and simmer for 15 minutes. Once complete, remove from the stove, remove lid and allow to cool for a couple of minutes.
Meanwhile, preheat oven to 350F and line a baking sheet with parchment paper or a silicon baking mat. Set aside.
Add all dry ingredients to a large bowl. Then, measure 1½ cups of the cooked quinoa and add to the dry ingredients. Stir to coat, until all quinoa granules are covered in the mixture. Set aside.
Add all wet ingredients to a small bowl and stir well.
Pour into the bowl with dry ingredients and stir to combine.
Stir in walnuts and banana chunks.
One tablespoon at a time, scoop mixture onto prepared baking sheet, leaving a small space between each cookie. They will not spread out, so you can keep the cookies close. Lightly form each cookie, as you’d like them to come out. I flattened them slightly between my palms.
Place sliced bananas on top (if using) and bake in preheated oven for 25-30 minutes, until cooked through and golden.
Remove from the oven, let cool on the pan for 10 minutes before transferring to a cooling rack and allowing them to cool completely. Because cooked quinoa was used in this recipe, when the cookies first come out of the oven, they’re a bit soft on the inside but they will firm up nicely!
Once they’ve cooled completely, transfer them to a container and keep in the fridge for up to 7 days.
Thank you so, so, so much for banding together with me. I am hoping that we can make a BIG change in the lives of many when we pull this off!
Okay, go!
This entry was tagged: breakfast cookie, cookie, Quinoa, quinoa breakfast cookie
