Baked Steel Cut Oatmeal
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This baked steel cut oatmeal is irresistible. The whole thing can be assembled the night before or it can be assembled and baked immediately. It is infinitely customizable to your preferences — you can make it dairy-free, vegan, with or without nuts, and with any fruit your heart desires 🙂


Inspired by a recipe for baked oatmeal using rolled oats, I made a variation using steel cut oats instead. What I love about using steel cut oasts is that it allows the entire dish — egg, milk, melted butter, baking powder and all — to be assembled the night before baking.
When these oats bake, the mixture separates into distinct layers, the nuts forming a crisp-like topping, the berries bobbing underneath, the creamy oats and custard forming the foundation. Flavored with cinnamon and maple, the oats remain firm and chewy and offer the loveliest texture throughout. I could eat the whole pan in one sitting.
I love these oats with berries. I love them without. I love them freshly baked. I love them cold, straight from the fridge. I like them with walnuts. I love them with almonds. I could eat them at every meal. I like them so much that when Ben tells me he can’t make it home for dinner, I think, “Yes, I get to eat my oats!”
And while these oats are the perfect kind of thing to make for a crowd, at the moment I’m not at all upset that my children don’t like them. This is the kind of dish I hope so very much you will all whisk up tonight before hitting the hay, so you, too, have something to savor, with friends or without, all Saturday morning long.
PS: Favorite Blueberry-Almond Smoothie


You can make these oats with or without berries:




I like my Pyrex 8-inch square baking dish for this one:

By mid morning the pan usually looks like this:

By noon:

By early afternoon:

Individual bowls of steel cut oats:


This is also delicious with apples:

Baked Steel Cut Oatmeal
- Total Time: 1 hours 5 minutes
- Yield: Serves 4-6 1x
Description
Inspired by Heidi Swanson’s recipe in Super Natural Every Day via Orangette
I like my Pyrex 8-inch square baking dish for this one. You can also use six 6-oz ramekins.
If you are mixing this at night and baking in the morning, follow the recipe through step 2, omitting the fruit. Store mixture in baking vessel or in a Tupperware. In the morning, give the mixture a stir. Scatter berries (if using) into an 8-inch baking dish. Pour milk-oat mixture over the berries; then proceed with recipe.
As I noted, I like these baked oats both with berries or other fruit and without, so don’t hesitate to make them if you don’t have any berries on hand — they are so good on their own. I have used both almonds and walnuts. I do toast the walnuts. I don’t toast the almonds — it doesn’t seem to matter. The mixture can be assembled the night before, though it doesn’t have to be.
Update, Oct 2014: Almonds are my preference. Peeled, sliced apples are also my preference. I omit the cinnamon. I also now do 1/4 cup maple syrup as opposed to 1/3 cup.
If you are making individual portions, I think the easiest method is this: mix dry ingredients as instructed in step 1; spoon about three tablespoon of the dry ingredients into six 6-oz ramekins; then pour liquid over top. The liquid will reach the top of each ramekin. To prevent a catastrophe, I suggest lining a 9×13-inch baking dish with parchment paper and placing the filled ramekins in the dish to bake.
Ingredients
- 3/4 cup steel cut oatmeal
- ½ cup (60 g) almonds (sliced, untoasted are great) or walnuts halves, toasted and chopped
- 1 teaspoon baking powder
- 1½ teaspoons ground cinnamon, optional
- ½ teaspoon fine sea salt or kosher salt
- ¾ to 1 ½ cups (90 to 185 g) blueberries, optional—I like using 1 peeled, sliced apple
- 2 cups (475 ml) milk, 2% or whole
- 1/4 to 1/3 cup (80 ml) maple syrup, I find 1/4 cup to be sweet enough
- 1 large egg
- 3 tablespoons (45 grams) unsalted butter, melted and cooled slightly
- 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
Instructions
- See notes if you are refrigerating this overnight. Otherwise, preheat the oven to 375ºF. In an 8- or 9-inch baking pan, mix together the oats, the nuts, baking powder, cinnamon, if using, and salt. Place the sliced apples or berries on top.
- In a medium bowl, whisk together the milk, maple syrup, egg, butter, and vanilla. Pour the milk mixture over the oat mixture, and shake the pan to distribute.
- Transfer pan to the oven and bake for 55 to 60 minutes (Note: Several commenters have had issues with browning too quickly, so I advise checking after 30 minutes, and if it looks as though it is browning quickly, turn oven down to 350 and check periodically for doneness), or until the top is golden and the oat mixture has set. Remove from the oven, and allow to cool for a few minutes before serving.
- Prep Time: 10 minutes
- Cook Time: 55 minutes
- Category: Breakfast
- Method: Oven
- Cuisine: American
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710 Comments on “Baked Steel Cut Oatmeal”
I LOVE this recipe, thank you!
I have a new smart countertop oven and am learning to use its features- accidents that have made it better for me:
My 8×8 was dirty, so I used a 7 1/2″ x 9″ glass baking dish (has a lid, win! sloped sides); almost same size. I found the mixture a bit taller in the baking dish- in the smart oven, it didn’t dry out and overcook the top as in my conventional oven. I set at 55 minutes, extended to about 58 till liquid wasn’t boiling out any more.
I agree with apples as my favorite as opposed to blueberries. I like Cosmic Crisp for its sweetness, cut it into big chunks, and have cut back on maple syrup even more.
Fabulous to have a delicious hot breakfast on a cold, snowy morning.
So nice to read all of this, Maryanne! Thanks so much for writing and sharing your notes. So helpful for others. I love Cosmic Crisp apples, too, and yes, nothing like a hot breakfast on a cold, snowy day. It has been frigid here!
I absolutely adore this oatmeal recipe! I have made it twice in 2 weeks, first time with blueberries, the second with apple slices. I love both! I did find the sweet spot for baking it! I covered the pan with foil at the beginning and and removed it 11 min before it reached 60 minutes. Perfection! The apples had a bit of crisp in them, so you could really experience them. The intoxicating aroma of apples and cinnamon is so appreciated on a winter morning in CO. Thanks Ali!
Great to hear, Katherine! Thanks so much for writing and sharing all of this. I couldn’t agree more re apples + cinnamon + a winter morning. It has been frigid here in Upstate NY.