Make Breakfast Easy: Scrumptious Breakfast Cookies – 7 Variations to Try!

Today I made Tropical Breakfast Cookies, rich with golden chunks of dried pineapple, gems of dried apricot, flakes of coconut, and the buttery crunch of cashews.

Many breakfast cookies are rather dense, fibrous, and wodgy.   

Not these! Here I present cookies that are tender, flavorful, yet hearty and satisfying.  Follow the base recipe, then include whatever ingredients you like for the variation you choose!  Scroll down for all the scrumptious options… one for every day of the week!

Base Breakfast Cookie Recipe Ingredients:

  • 2 1/2 cups old fashioned oats
  • 3/4 cup all purpose flour
  • 1/2 cup sugar
  • 1 tsp baking powder
  • 1/2 tsp baking soda
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 2 Tbsp ground flax (optional)
  • 1 egg
  • 3/4 cup milk
  • 2 Tbsp vegetable, canola, or coconut oil
  • 1 tsp vanilla
  • For the Tropical Cookies:
  • 1/2 cup diced dried pineapple
  • 1/2 cup diced dried apricot
  • 1/2 cup chopped cashews
  • 1/2 cup dried shredded coconut (I used mildly sweetened)

Directions:

  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F/180 degrees C.
  2. Line a large baking sheet with foil, lightly spray with oil.  (Hey, that rhymes!)  Or just grease a baking sheet.
  3. In a large mixing bowl, mix together all dry ingredients.  Add liquids/egg, and any additions. Stir well.
  4. Using a 1/4 cup measuring cup, scoop out the dough and plop it out in evenly spaced scoops on the prepared baking sheet.  Pat each scoop down gently with the back of the cup to flatten a bit.
  5. Bake for 15-17 minutes, or till edges are golden.  Let the cookies cool for a minute or two, then transfer to a cooling rack (or if you’ve got a hungry horde like me, simply start chucking cookies at any empty plate on the table!).

These freeze beautifully.  I usually get about 15-18 from a single batch.


TRY THESE SIX OTHER SCRUMPTIOUS VARIATIONS!

Lemon-blueberry: Add 2 tsp lemon zest, 1 cup dried or fresh blueberries, 1 tsp lemon extract. (If you use frozen blueberries instead of dried, note that the baking time might increase a minute or two.)

Apple-Cinnamon: Add 1 tsp ground cinnamon, 1/2 tsp nutmeg, a pinch of cloves, 1 cup peeled, chopped apple

Chocolate-Peanut butter: Add 1/2 cup creamy or crunchy peanut butter, 1/4 unsweetened cocoa powder

Cranberry-Chocolate-Almond: Add 1/2 cup dried cranberries, 1/3 cup mini chocolate chips, 1/3 cup sliced almonds

Banana Bread: Add 1 mashed banana, 1/2 cup chopped walnuts or pecans, 1/2 tsp ground nutmeg

Carrot Cake:  Add 1 cup grated carrot, 1/2 cup raisins, 1/2 tsp cinnamon, 1/4 tsp cloves, 1/4 tsp nutmeg

Feeding a Tribe: Breakfast Skillet Scramble

(Don’t judge a mess before you eat it)

On busy mornings when I have a lot of short people needing to be fed somewhat quickly and with something that will sustain them for a good stretch of time, this proteinacious and straight-forward breakfast is a frequent winner in our home.

We lovingly call it “Breakfast Mess”, but “Skillet Scramble” probably sounds better.

Versatile, adaptable, filling, and delicious, my kids have been known to eat it for breakfast and then cheerfully devour any leftovers for lunch as well! Try it and see what you think.

Breakfast Skillet Scramble (Breakfast Mess)

The following is less of a recipe and more of a method.

  • Eggs
  • Frozen shredded hashbrowns, or cooked chopped boiled potatoes, or leftover chopped french fries or tater tots, or leftover baked potato, diced, whatever you have!
  • Chopped/diced ham or turkey or crumbled sausage or chopped cooked bacon, or leftover steak or pulled pork… you get the idea.
  • Chopped vegetables – I have used leftover steamed broccoli, fresh sliced peppers, chopped steamed green beans, frozen green peas, chopped cooked spinach, chopped roasted asparagus… I just usually stick with one kind each time.
  • Seasonings you like – salt, pepper, granulated garlic, granulated onion, cayenne…
  • Shredded or grated or crumbled cheese – you pick your favs, I’ll pick mine: I usually go with cheddar, feta, smoked gouda or whatever I can find in my fridge.

All right. Ready? Let’s do this!

First, heat up your griddle to medium heat. If you don’t have one, use a skillet or a frying pan. Lightly grease it. Spray oil, butter, bacon grease… you pick.

  • Start with the potatoes, mostly so they have a chance to get a little crisped up. Stir them around a little so they get a bit golden, maybe 3-5 mins.
  • Add the veg. Today I had some sliced peppers and leftover steamed broccoli, so that’s what I used, adding them to the frozen shredded hash browns.
  • Once it’s all mixed about and nicely heated, start cracking eggs over the top. Depending on how many you’re cooking for, or how hungry you are, this number for me can be anywhere from about 8 eggs to 15 eggs. (I think 16 was the most I’ve done on one skillet so far.)
  • Cook till the eggs are a little set and the whites have become, well, white. Then break the yolks and drag them about to ensure a pretty even eggy layer throughout all that potato-vegetable goodness. This is exactly the part that earned the name “Breakfast Mess”.
  • Season it with what you like! I usually go for salt, granulated garlic, black pepper, and sometimes granulated onion.
  • Let it cook till it’s set enough to start cutting into wedges with your spatula. Then start cutting into wedges with your spatula. Like this:
  • Then cut the wedges into squarish chunks so you can flip them over, like this:
  • Now, sprinkle on your cheese of choice, if you’re choosing cheese. I went with feta and cheddar today. And I added a bit of chopped parsley, because I had some and felt like being fancy and irritating my kids:
  • Et, voila! A delicious, messy-looking, but scrumptious and filling breakfast delight. You’re welcome.

Eggs Benedict Sandwiches: The Flavor of Elegance with the Essence of Ease

A handheld riff on the classic Eggs Benedict, this is an easy, delicious Miller family favorite!

I love Eggs Benedict.

Butter filling the crevices and pockets of a warmly toasted English muffin, the creamy tang of smoothly whisked Hollandaise sauce, savory bacon or ham, and a perfectly poached egg perched above. Clean, brightly flavored parsley sprinkled on top for contrast – lovely!

And yet. With a large family, this can become an operation equaling the efforts of a small restaurant, without the benefits of a crew of kitchen staff all working to make it happen (since it’s usually just me in the kitchen so far). So. I have adapted and tweaked and come up with my own version that is far more family-friendly, with the flavors and textures we still love.

(Attempting to combine Saturday-morning-ease with feeding a large tribe, foodie purists may blanch at some of my tweaks. Please forgive me for my low-bred adaptations if you find them beyond what you can bear. In the meantime, my family will continue to enjoy our speedy, handheld version of this classic, elegant brunch specialty without apology or hesitation.)

Hoping you enjoy this riff on Eggs Benedict!

Eggs Benedict Breakfast Sandwiches

  • English muffins, one per person, split, toasted and buttered generously
  • 1 egg per person – fried gently as desired (i.e. sunny side up, hard, scrambled…), lightly seasoned with salt and pepper
  • 1-2 slices ham, or sliced turkey, or 3 strips of bacon per person
  • about 2 Tbsp “Hollandaise/Fauxlandaise” Sauce per person- see below for recipe
  • 1 Tbsp minced fresh parsley per person, optional

Take two halves toasted and buttered English muffin. On bottom, spread about 1 Tbsp “Hollandaise/Fauxlandaise” sauce. Layer with ham, turkey, bacon, or meat of choice. Gently lay fried egg on top, dollop another tablespoon “Hollandaise/Fauxlandaise” sauce, sprinkle with tablespoon fresh parsley. Place second half of English muffin on top, place on plate. Place in front of grateful and hungry diner. Bon appetit!

  • Another option is to cook two eggs per person, and layer them more like an open-faced Eggs Benedict, one egg on each English muffin half, with the sauce, ham, and parsley on each. Then you will need knives and forks to eat it, but it might increase the elegance quotient if that’s what you’re after. Or just increase the protein/serving size quotient to satiate children with appetites like bears with hollow legs. (That’s usually what I’m after.)

“Hollandaise/Fauxlandaise” Sauce

  • 1 1/2 cups mayonnaise
  • 1 heaping Tbsp yellow mustard (or dijon)
  • 1 Tbsp lemon juice or white wine vinegar
  • dash salt
  • dash ground black pepper
  • dash cayenne pepper
  • dash granulated garlic, optional (but I always do)
  • 2-3 Tbsp butter, melted, optional. (This is if you want to be just a step closer to genuine and assuage your conscience, but I often don’t, shamelessly.)

Whisk ingredients together in small bowl till smooth. Taste and adjust as desired. Set aside. Keep leftovers in refrigerator.

Makes about 1 1/2 cups.

(This recipe was inspired by Jane Rodmell’s “Virtuous Hollandaise” in her cookbook Best Summer Weekends, pg. 248.)