Keto oatmeal is the perfect breakfast for chilly mornings! This easy baked “oatmeal” is hearty and delicious, and doesn’t contain a single grain of oats or sugar. Best of all, it has only 2.7g of net carbs per serving!
So how long do you think it will take someone to freak out over this keto oatmeal recipe, and start yelling at me that oatmeal isn’t keto?
3…. 2…. 1….
Regular oatmeal certainly isn’t keto friendly. So it’s a good thing that this keto oatmeal recipe doesn’t contain a single flake of oats. No, not even the most minuscule amount. As with all of my keto breakfast recipes, this one is completely grain-free, gluten-free, and sugar-free.
And yet it has the perfect oatmeal-like texture and a rich, hearty maple flavor. You have to try it to believe it!
Why you will love this recipe
Oatmeal by its very definition should contain oats. But oats are quite high in carbs and not something generally recommended on a keto diet.
Still, a warm bowl of oatmeal on a chilly winter morning is hard to beat for comfort food. So I have invented my own way of making a delicious oatmeal substitute that tastes like the real deal.
I use a combination of flaked coconut and sliced almonds, ground to the size of oats. It works like a dream and it’s a trick I’ve used in other recipes as well, most notably my Keto Oatmeal Cookies. Those are a fan favorite!
If this recipe looks a little familiar to some of you, then you probably own a copy of my cookbook, Easy Keto Breakfasts. There are a lot of tasty recipes in that book, but this maple keto oatmeal is one of my favorites. It’s the ultimate breakfast comfort food!
Reader Testimonials
“Oh how I love this oatmeal! I missed oatmeal more than anything when I went keto. Nothing satisfies like a bowl of hot cereal to start the day.” — Annie
“My family LOVES this “oatmeal”. My daughter just informed me that I’m going to have to make it forever now, so don’t lose the recipe! I love your ideas, thanks for sharing them with the rest of us! ❤” — Cathy
“I have made a couple of different versions of Low carb baked oatmeal. This recipe of Carolyn’s is by far the best ever!!! My daughter and granddaughter who don’t follow low carb prefer this over regular oatmeal!” — Lois
Ingredients you need
- Coconut: Use unsweetened flaked coconut, such as Let’s Do Organic. Shredded coconut doesn’t work as well, since it’s smaller to begin with. If that’s all you can find, don’t process it with the almonds. Simply add it in along with the other dry ingredients.
- Almonds: When coarsely ground, sliced almonds have a similar texture to oats. Make sure you aren’t using slivered almonds, as they are much thicker and won’t provide the same consistency.
- Brown sugar replacement: I always prefer Swerve Brown, as it tastes the most like real brown sugar. You can also use granulated erythritol and 2 teaspoons of molasses. This will add only 1g carbs per serving.
- Collagen: Collagen protein, or collagen peptides, is integral to the consistency of this keto oatmeal. It provides a thicker, gooier consistency. Unfortunately, other protein powders like whey or egg white won’t do the same thing.
- Flavoring: I really love maple extract for this baked oatmeal, but you can do other extracts as well. Try vanilla or caramel.
- Kitchen staples: Butter, heavy cream, eggs, baking powder, cinnamon, and salt.
Step-by-step directions
1. Make the “oatmeal”: In a food processor, grind the coconut and almonds until they resemble flakes of oatmeal. Transfer to a large bowl.
2. Add the dry ingredients: Whisk in the sweetener, collagen, baking powder, cinnamon, and salt.
3. Stir in the wet ingredients: Add the butter, cream, egg, and maple extract and stir until well combined.
4. Bake the oatmeal: Spread the mixture in a greased 1-quart glass or ceramic baking dish and bake at 325ºF 20 to 25 minutes, until golden brown and the center is mostly set. It should jiggle just slightly when shaken. Remove and let cool 10 minutes before serving.
Recipe tips and FAQs
Creating your “oatmeal” out of coconut and almonds is the first step, but there are a few other tricks in this recipe to get that soft, gooey baked oatmeal consistency.
Use a food processor
A food processor is the best way to grind the coconut flakes and sliced almonds because you can pulse it quickly. I find that just 3 or 4 pulses are sufficient. I have tried this in my good blender and it works, but tends to get them too fine very quickly.
Use your favorite sweetener
This is a recipe that should work with just about any sweetener. That said, I’ve only used Swerve Granular and Swerve Brown, but it doesn’t rely on those for texture or consistency so it should work with what you prefer most.
Add the collagen
I know I will be asked for substitutes but I have to say, it’s a pretty critical ingredient. It aids in that gooey, creamy consistency that baked oatmeal should have. You can try other protein powders but I honestly cannot say how well they will work.
The baking dish
An important note here: ceramic and metal bake VERY differently. Metal heats up quickly and cools down quickly. Ceramic (and glass) heat up slowly and hold their heat for quite some time out of the oven.
In this case, you want a glass or ceramic baking dish that holds about 1 quart (4 cups) in volume.
Look for the jiggle
This is a recipe you definitely do not want to over-bake. So look for the jiggle in the center. You will have a beautiful golden brown top and the sides should be set. But if you shake the baking dish, the middle should still jiggle slightly.
Frequently Asked Questions
Real oatmeal, made with oats, is not appropriate for keto diets. A a bowl of cooked oatmeal has 27g of carbs and only 4g of fiber. And most people with diabetes see a significant blood sugar spike from consuming it. So you want to avoid oatmeal on keto and low carb diets.
While oats are a big no-no for keto diets, you can enjoy hot cereal that has a similar taste and texture to oatmeal. These are usually made with nuts, coconut, and seeds, and are much lower in carbs and higher in fiber.
This keto baked oatmeal has 5.2g of carbs and 2.5g of fiber. So each ½ cup serving has 2.7g net carbs.
More delicious keto “oatmeal” recipes
- Carmelitas
- Keto Breakfast Cookies
- Keto Do-si-Dos Cookies
- Butterscotch Oatmeal Bars
- Keto Breakfast Bars
Easy Keto Oatmeal Recipe
Ingredients
- 1 cup flaked coconut unsweetened
- 1 cup sliced almonds
- ⅓ cup Swerve Brown
- ¼ cup collagen peptides
- 1 teaspoon baking powder
- ½ teaspoon ground cinnamon
- ½ teaspoon salt
- ½ cup unsalted butter melted
- ½ cup heavy whipping cream
- 1 large egg
- 1 teaspoon maple extract or vanilla
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 325F and grease a 1 quart glass or ceramic baking dish.
- In a food processor, grind the coconut and almonds until they resemble flakes of oatmeal. Transfer to a large bowl.
- Whisk in the sweetener, collagen, baking powder, cinnamon, and salt. Add the butter, cream, egg, and maple extract and stir until well combined.
- Spread the mixture in the prepared baking pan and bake 20 to 25 minutes, until golden brown and the center is mostly set. It should jiggle just slightly when shaken.
- Remove and let cool 10 minutes before serving.
Gina Croft says
I made this oatmeal and fresh out of the oven it was delish. While it sat it became oily and so I tipped the dish and after about 20 minutes poured out a 1/4 cup of oily liquid. I followed the recipe and was wondering if anyone else experienced this and if cutting back on the butter would help.
Carolyn says
I haven’t experienced it and no one else has mentioned it… not sure!
Susan Dunham says
I had the same experience and also had to cook it way longer in the glass dish. I will decrease the butter and use ceramic next time.
Mary says
This was delicious and a great substitute for baked oatmeal. I exchanged the cream for unsweetened almond milk and added an additional egg. I also added some blueberries. I did not use any Swerve or sweetner. I didn’t find it needed it to my taste. I top with berries which is enough sweetness.
Julie Stoll says
I used bocha sweet and we all loved it! Thank you for your brilliance! Wish I could show you our photo♥️
Leasa says
This was so good I almost thought I was cheating! Add this on some carb ice cream…
LINDA says
IS IT POSSIBLE TO FREEZE THIS?
Carolyn says
No idea, I didn’t try. I think you should experiment. 🙂
Jan says
Carolyn you have done it again for me. I grew up eating oatmeal and have missed it so much. I made this oatmeal this morning and I can’t get over how creamy and tasty it is. I will definitely be making this again, probably every week! Thank you so much for all of your lovely recipes.
Jackie Post Satterly says
Oh my goodness! I’m in heaven! Thanks again Carol for a wonderful recipe!
Dawnj says
This is fantastic tasting, Seriously have to limit to one bowl as no self discipline with this one! I am curious if I could add frozen strawberries, blueberries before baking without changing the consistency?
Carolyn says
The blueberries might work but the strawberries would get pretty mushy.
Dawnj says
Thank you for your quick response and expertise. I will add fresh fruit on top when serving. Making another double batch this week! This recipe is dear to my heart, thank you!
Linda says
Just came up on your website wanted to find a low-carb oatmeal just made your recipe oh my goodness it is wonderful it was delicious I had to taste it before I baked it . It’s even better after , thank you thank you looking forward to trying more of your recipes keep up the great work!!
Carolyn says
So glad you like it!
Cheri Hillman says
Mine has been in the oven for 25 minutes and is still super goopy. Not set up at all. Not sure what I did wrong?
Carolyn says
Not sure either, without being there with you, but did you use the exact ingredients?
Karen says
I don’t like the texture or flavor of Coconut but I use Coconut Oil for lots of cooking and haven’t noticed any speicific flavor at at all. Does this oatmeal have a coconut flavor? If not, I can’t wait to try it!
Carolyn says
The maple extract changes the flavor to maple!
Carman says
I loved the flavor, added maple and banana extract as I miss my banana baked oatmeal. However, I found that the almonds were hard and took away from the oatmeal feel. Any ideas on how to soften them ?
Carolyn says
Were they sliced almonds? Like the super thin ones? because they shouldn’t be hard at all. Did you accidentally use slivered almonds?
Evie McInnis says
Going to try this ASAP!
Amy says
Do you think I could make this egg free? I’m allergic, but this recipe looks yummy!
Carolyn says
I have not tried it without eggs. I don’t think it will have the gooey consistency but you can try it. I wouldn’t bake it as long.
Lauren Krupa says
Have you ever used one of the flavored collagens? I’m trying to decide which flavor to buy. Or does it have to be the unflavored??
Carolyn says
Flavored would be fine.
Lynn says
This. Is. Amazing. I used the Cinnamon Toast flavor of Keto Collagen, and it adds a nice zing to the maple extract. I never was a real fan of oatmeal, but this is decadent goodness jacked up on flavor that’ll make your tongue explode with happiness.
Carolyn says
Wow, now that’s a glowing review! 🙂
Susan Coffel says
Oatmeal in the morning is something I’ve really missed since going Keto. I made this recipe this morning, and what a yummy treat it is!
Thank you Carolyn for all your amazing recipes with so much variety..also good to know it will keep in the fridge for up to a week. But I really don’t think it will last that long before I eat it!
Susan says
Hi Carolyn,
I would really like to try this recipe. Must the collagen peptide powder be the bovine one? Or can I use the vegetarian option? Thanks, Sue.
Carolyn says
I have never tried a vegetarian one… I’d say it’s worth a shot!
Deborah M Kloss says
So very good! Enjoying it for breakfast right now! Thank you for the great recipe.
Laura says
Can the collagen peptides be omitted? Or replaced with something else?
Carolyn says
Please read the tips section…