Tell me if this always happens to you too…
Whenever you need the perfectly ripe (or even overripe) bananas, you arrive at your grocery store only to find green-as-grass bananas. Every time! Then on the days when you don’t need bananas, you see rows and rows of perfect yellow bananas. It’s a major conspiracy, don’t you think?
Since I was planning on testing a banana recipe this week, I knew I had to plan well in advance. Two huge bunches of greenish-yellow bananas went into my cart a week ago and then promptly into a brown paper bag to expedite ripening. The evil grocery store conspirators were not going to get me this time.
As it turned out, my testing went better than expected and I only went through about 6 bananas leaving me with an embarrassing amount of bananas on my counter. I guess that still beats running out mid-testing. Some of the leftovers were peeled and popped into the freezer for smoothies and then I went on a bit of a banana bender with the rest. First, Bananas Foster. Second, Bananas Foster Baked Oatmeal. It was one tasty weekend.
Traditional Bananas Foster recipes involve a lot of butter, sugar, and rum which create a syrup around the banana slices. Many recipes also flambé the bananas. Since fire + me don’t mix in the kitchen (especially first thing in the morning), I simply chose to sauté the bananas instead. Phew. I also swapped the butter for coconut oil and the refined sugar for sweeteners like coconut sugar or maple syrup and then I cut down the oil and sugar by more than half. So you can say this version is inspired by Bananas Foster, but it’s certainly not a classic version.
Most recipes use rum in the syrup, but since I didn’t have any plain rum on hand I used Kahlua (which also happens to be vegan). The alcohol cooks off in the syrup leaving just a very light caramel flavour mingling nicely with the bananas. Add a scoop of coconut ice cream and you’ll have yourself a lovely dessert that seems much more fancy than it really is.
Just be sure not to sauté the heck out of the bananas like I did. No one wants a limp banana.
For the recipe above, I used 1 tbsp coconut oil, 2 tbsp maple syrup, 2 tbsp Kahlua, 2 bananas sliced lengthwise, a handful of chopped walnuts, and a pinch of cinnamon.
Of course, you can also turn Bananas Foster into breakfast!
This recipe is easy too. Just sauté a few small, ripe bananas in 1 tablespoon each of: coconut oil, maple syrup, and Kahlua (or rum). Add a sprinkle of cinnamon and sauté for about 5 minutes, or until they soften.
Then stir it into your oatmeal mixture, top with even more banana slices, and b-a-k-e. [I can imagine that this would be even better with blueberries mixed in. I’m dreaming of summer blueberries right now and I might cry.]
So there you have it – Bananas Foster Baked Oatmeal. I’m warning you, the banana flavour is intense so this is for hard-core banana lovers only. Serve it with a spoonful of nut butter, a drizzle of maple syrup, and some pajamas (or in my case a fleece robe that Eric gave me 10 years ago. It has a burn hole on the sleeve from a cooking accident, but I still love it.)
Bananas Foster Baked Oatmeal
Yield
4 servings
Prep time
Cook time
Total time
Ingredients
For the baked oatmeal
- 3/4 cup rolled oats
- 1/4 cup oat flour
- 1 tsp cinnamon
- 1/2 tsp baking powder
- 1/2 cup walnut halves, chopped
- 1 & 1/4 cup almond milk
For the Bananas Foster mixture
- 1 small banana, sliced (for garnish on top)
- pinch of fine grain sea salt and nutmeg
- for the Bananas Foster:
- 3 small firm ripe bananas, chopped
- 1 tbsp coconut oil
- 1 tbsp pure maple syrup (or other sweetener)
- 1-2 tbsp Kahlua (or rum)
- sprinkle of cinnamon
- 1 tsp pure vanilla extract
Directions
- Preheat oven to 350°F and lightly grease a 5-6 cup casserole dish.
- Stir all of the oatmeal ingredients in a large bowl until combined. Set aside while you prepare the Banana Foster.
- Add coconut oil, maple syrup, and Kahlua into a skillet. Increase heat to medium and whisk until combined. When the mixture starts to simmer and bubble, add the chopped bananas and stir well until coated in syrup. Sprinkle on cinnamon. Sauté for about 5 minutes, reducing heat if necessary, until the bananas soften. Remove from heat and stir in the vanilla.
- Stir the banana mixture into the oatmeal mixture and scoop it into your casserole dish. Bake uncovered for about 40-45 minutes at 350°F or until the top is golden and with a thin firm layer on top and a soft middle. You will think it’s undercooked at first, but the oatmeal will firm up as it cools. Straight from the oven it has the texture of stove-top oatmeal, but when cooled you can pretty much slice it into squares. I’ve also been known to eat this cold straight from the fridge for a snack.
O.M.G. – this is a MUST MAKE. I am so excited that I have all of the ingredients on hand too. And I’m so glad that you ended up sauteing the bananas because it brings out just as much sweetness as I’m sure is needed.
I will let you know how it goes and be sure to post a rendition on my site, giving you 99.9999999% credit! Love this!
Looks delicious! And a great way to incorporate booze into a banana-filled breakfast ;)
I’m a lover of all 3 B’s and I can’t wait to make this tomorrow (or tonight!)
Oh, yummy! I can’t wait to try this. Two questions: I assume you used regular rolled oats, not the quick cooking right? And I was suprised it only takes 1 1/4 cups almond milk. Is the juice from the bananas what keeps it moist when baking? Usually when I make oats I do 1 part oats to 2 parts liquid. Just wondering…Thanks for sharing!
This looks so perfect for a chilly weekend morning brunch! Making a note to try this soon! :-)
this looks so good and I am starving right now…thankfully i have all these ingredients at home…oatmeal for dinner sounds perfect to me!
Hmm fire and me in the morning don’t mix either. I think I would singe my eyebrows off. Love the recipe though. Will be bookmarking it for when the cooler weather hits here in Australia.
This sounds yummy. I do not have alcohol in my house at all…do you know of a substitute for the Kahlua? Maybe a bit of coffee and some sort of syrup? I am lucky that Wegmans, one of our local groceries, has a policy of putting out both ripe produce and less ripe, so you can usually get ripe or green bananas. Sometimes they run out of the ripe produce on busy days, but at least they try to give consumers a choice! Also have been expanding organic choices…they even have store-branded organic tomatoes and beans at a pretty good price!
ummm added to overnight oats???????????!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Booze or not this will be my breakfast/lunch/dinner tomorrow!
Thx
This looks so great–a not-so-bad-for-you dessert. I’m always looking for more. Thank you!
“I’m dreaming of summer blueberries right now and I might cry.”
^ Yes. Totally. I am a huge blueberries fan too
I love blueberry flavor smoothies and pretty much anything vegan with blueberries in it…if I could figure out a low-carb blueberry-lemon dessert I’d be making it every day because I love lemon flavor stuff too (I use to love blueberry lemon cake and pastries hehe)
Yummy! What a delicious looking meal.
This looks incredible. Dessert for breakfast. And for post dessert, – because its just that wholesome!! ;)
Looks so good! Good to know Kahlua’s vegan. I often entertain non-vegans and it’s nice to have alcohol that we can all have on hand.
I love banana! This looks so good mmm.
Made this today and it was delicious!!
I know just what you mean! Those banana conspirators always get the best of me. I learned a trick recently, though—if you want overripe bananas, you can just roast the bananas whole until they are as sweet as you’d like. Your baked oatmeal looks so delicious and comforting, yum.
Thank you so much for this recipe Angela!! I made it the night you posted it and ate leftovers cold for snacks and breakfast. I live in CT and lost power during the blizzard so my husband, daughter, and I went to stay at my parents house. My mom made this for breakfast this morning and my whole family loved it. I added a tablespoon of peanut butter, hemp seeds and some extra cinnamon on top and it was perfect!!! Also curious if you plan to try a version of this using steel cut instead of rolled oats? Thanks!! Leslie
Hey I really want to make this but all I have is quick oats! Would this affect the recipe a lot? I love your blog and think that your photographs are so beautiful- they make me hungry just looking at them! Hope you’re having a great week :)
Hey Dana, Good question! To be honest, I’m not sure how it would turn out. My guess is that it wouldn’t have the same chewy texture as rolled oats provide and it might be a bit mushy. I would probably hold out until I got rolled oats if I were you, but by all means if you want to experiment, go for it!
Can you make this the night before then cook it?
My husband LOVES this!