This post may contain affiliate sales links. Please read my disclosure policy.
These banana oatmeal cookies are hands down the best banana flavored cookie I’ve ever had. Not only are they moist and chewy for days, they are unmistakably banana-y!
This is one of those old fashioned recipes everyone loves. It’s originally from my grandmother’s cookbook, which is full of newspaper clippings featuring the recipes and names of people who shared them with the paper. I just love it. Such a different time in the world. Now we find everything online!
Banana is one of those flavors that can get lost when you bake with it. It can be a really subtle flavor. It always bums me out when that happens, because we love the taste of banana.
But these cookies make the list of banana things to go crazy for. Without a doubt, it’s a tie between them and my Banana Bread Recipe! Or, maybe they are tied with my Banana Cupcakes or Homemade Banana Pudding — I just can’t decide. Banana desserts are just so tempting.
- Easy to make. Making these tasty banana cookies is just as easy as eating them. They’d be great to make with kids! You can mix everything in one bowl. That means less clean up, and that’s always a good thing.
- Tons of banana flavor. These cookies meet the category of being FULL of banana flavor. Just the smell of this cookie dough mixture with the banana in it is intoxicating.
- Perfect texture. They are so moist and tender, the nearly melt in your mouth.
- Grandma’s recipe. Another reason this recipe is extra special is because I got if from my grandmother (my dad’s mom). She passed away in 2008. A few years after she passed, when I started baking a lot, my uncle gave me her cookbook. This recipe was tucked inside it, and it brings back so many special memories. I made a few changes to her original recipe to make the cookies thicker and softer, but they are essentially the same as grandma used to make.
What You’ll Need
- All-purpose flour: Be sure to measure your flour. Too much flour and you’ll end up with dry cookies, too little and they’ll get runny.
- Baking soda: A little baking soda gives the cookies a light, fluffy texture.
- Ground cinnamon & cloves: These warm spices nicely compliment the banana.
- Salt: Helps to enhance the flavors and spices in the cookie dough batter.
- Cornstarch: This is one of the secret ingredients for this recipe. Cornstarch gives the cookies a chewy texture, helps them not over spread and gives them a lovely soft texture.
- Unsalted butter: I highly recommend using unsalted butter because it allows you to control the saltiness of the cookies. However, salted butter will also work, but you’ll want to leave out the rest of the salt in the recipe.
- Sugar: Using both granulated sugar and brown sugar gives the cookies a deep, richer flavor. The brown sugar also provides extra moisture.
- Egg: You’ll need 1 egg to bind all your ingredients together.
- Vanilla extract: You can’t go wrong adding a little vanilla to banana cookies.
- Bananas: Make sure to use overripe bananas for the best flavor. They should have plenty of brown spots, but not be completely brown and nearly falling apart. If they don’t hold together anymore, they are probably too ripe and your cookies may not turn out well.
- Oats: This recipe originally called for old-fashioned rolled oats but after some kitchen testing, I decided I like quick 1-minute oats better. The texture of the cookies is a little softer when you use quick oats, but either will work.
Here’s a quick look at how to make this banana cookie recipe. Don’t forget to scroll to the recipe card below for more detailed instructions.
- Prepare the dry ingredients. Add the flour, baking soda, cinnamon, cloves, salt and cornstarch to a medium sized bowl and whisk together. Set aside.
- Combine the butter and sugars. Add the melted butter and sugars to a large bowl and whisk to combine.
- Add the egg and vanilla. Whisk the egg and vanilla extract into the creamed mixture until well combined.
- Add the mashed bananas: Add the mashed bananas to the creamed mixture and whisk together until well combined.
- Add dry ingredients. Stir the dry ingredients into the batter and mix until just combined.
- Add the oats. Pour in the oats and fold together until well combined.
- Form the dough balls. Create cookie dough balls that are 1 ½ tablespoons in size.
- Refrigerate (optional). If desired, chill the dough balls in the refrigerator for 2-3 hours or overnight. The longer they are refrigerated, the stronger the banana flavor will be.
- Prepare to bake. When you’re ready to bake the cookies, preheat the oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit, line a cookie sheet with a silicone baking mat or parchment paper and arrange the cookie dough balls on the baking sheet. (No need to bring the cookies to room temperature. You can bake them immediately after pulling them from the fridge.)
- Bake. Place in the oven and bake for about 10 minutes.
- Cool. Allow cookies to cool on the baking sheet for about 5 minutes before moving them to a cooling rack lined with parchment paper.
Helpful Tips
- Measure carefully. Proper measuring of the flour and sugar plays a big roll in determining how much your cookies will spread during the baking process. So, measure carefully. If you want to achieve the perfect light, chewy texture, check out my tutorial on How to Measure Flour Correctly. It’s best to use a food scale, but if you don’t have one, use the spoon and level method. Whatever you do, don’t pack the flour into the measuring cup.
- Use quick oats. The biggest change I made when I updated this recipe was switching from old-fashioned oats to quick 1-minute oats. You can totally use either, but I really like the way 1-minute oats absorb more moisture. The cookies not only spread a little less, but they also develop a softer texture, which I love. If you decide to use old-fashioned oats just remember that they won’t absorb as much moisture (and may spread more), and the cookies will turn out a little firmer with a bit more texture.
- Make this recipe with overripe bananas. Make sure to use overripe bananas for the best flavor and texture. They should be soft on the outside and easy to mash when you peel them. They should also smell appetizing. Overripe bananas will have plenty of brown spots, but not be completely brown or nearly falling apart. If they don’t hold together anymore, they are probably too ripe and your cookies won’t bake properly.
- Refrigerate the cookie dough balls. You don’t have to refrigerate them (they will still taste amazing), but I highly recommend refrigerating them at least 2-3 hours; overnight is even better. Refrigeration helps the dry ingredients soak up more moisture, which helps them spread less. It also allows the flavors to permeate the cookie dough better. Cookies refrigerated overnight will have the strongest banana flavor.
- Use parchment paper. These cookies can be a little sticky from all the moisture and sweetness in the bananas. You’ll want to line your cooling racks with parchment paper. If they stick to the parchment paper after cooling (and they probably will), just give them a little twist before lifting them. They will come right off.
How to Store
Store the cookies in an air-tight container at room temperature. If you are going to stack them in a container, put parchment between the layers so the cookies don’t stick to each other. These cookies are best if eaten within 4-5 days.
More Banana Recipes
If you’re like me, desserts with bananas are always a good idea. Here are some of my other favorite recipes featuring bananas.
Watch The Video
Print- Prep Time: 20 minutes
- Chill Time: 2 hour
- Cook Time: 10 minutes
- Total Time: 2 hours 30 minutes
- Yield: 35-40 Cookies
- Category: Dessert
- Method: Oven
- Cuisine: American
Description
These Moist and Chewy Banana Oatmeal Cookies are hands down the best banana flavored cookie I’ve ever had. Not only are they moist and chewy for days, they are unmistakably banana-y!
Ingredients
- 1 1/2 cups (195g) all-purpose flour (measured accurately)
- 1 tsp baking soda
- 1 1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
- 1/4 tsp ground cloves
- 1/2 tsp salt
- 2 tsp cornstarch
- 3/4 cup (168g) unsalted butter, melted
- 1 cup (225g) packed brown sugar
- 1/2 cup (104g) sugar
- 1 large egg
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- 1 cup (240ml) mashed over ripe bananas (2-3 bananas)
- 3 cups (240g) quick 1-minute oats
Instructions
- Add the flour, baking soda, cinnamon, cloves, salt and cornstarch to a medium sized bowl and whisk together. Set aside.
- Add the melted butter and sugars to a large bowl and whisk to combine.
- Add the egg and vanilla extract and whisk together until well combined. Add the mashed bananas and whisk together until well combined.
- Add the dry ingredients and fold together just until well combined. Add the oats and fold together until well combined.
- Create cookie dough balls that are 1 ½ tablespoons in size. You can refrigerate the cookie dough before baking, if you’d like, but you don’t have to. I think the flavors get even better if you refrigerate the cookie dough for at least 2-3 hours, or overnight.
- When you’re ready to bake the cookies, preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Line a cookie sheet with a silicon baking mat or parchment paper. (No need to bring the cookies to room temperature. You can bake them immediately after pulling them from the fridge.)
- Bake the cookies for about 10 minutes or until golden around the edges and lightly golden on top.
- Allow the cookies to cool for about 5 minutes, then move to a cooling rack lined with parchment paper to cool completely. The cookies can stick to the parchment paper a little bit. I find that it helps them to release if you give them a little twist on the paper before lifting them up.
- Store cookies in an air-tight container with parchment paper between the stacks of cookies so they don’t stick to each other. Cookies are best if eaten within 4-5 days.
Nutrition
- Serving Size: 1 Cookie
- Calories: 119
- Sugar: 8.3 g
- Sodium: 71.7 mg
- Fat: 4 g
- Carbohydrates: 17.9 g
- Protein: 1.8 g
- Cholesterol: 15.3 mg
Really nice banana cookie recipe. Chewy and crispy (how I like PB cookies too!) made a couple of changes. I used frozen bananas and when they aren’t frozen, they are much more liquidy than off the table old bananas. Since we don’t like nutmeg, omitted it and added 1/4 tsp cinnamon more. I also added 1 tsp espresso powder just to pull the chocolate flavor through. Added 1/2 cup cocoa over and above what dry ingredients recipe called for figuring that would help soak up a bit of the liquified banana. Since the dough was so ‘loose’ I popped the dough in the freezer for about 45 +/-minutes or until it was firmer. That made the dough much easier to shape. I also put the dough back into the freezer when not doling out cookies. ***DON’T FORGET to press the cookies down just a little. It makes a big difference as to how they bake.
Thanks for the recipe. Even with those changes I made, they turned out to be the best banana cookies I’ve ever made!
I made two batches, one for cooking and one for freezing.
I didn’t see where the recipe called for nutmeg or cinnamon??
sorry I now see cinnamon but no nutmeg
Whoops, saw this comment after responding to the other one already.
The cinnamon is listed between the flour and baking soda. There’s no nutmeg in the recipe but I think plenty of people have added it.
Absolutely Amazing cookie!! Had to bake mine at 18 mins because my oven is very old but came out so delicious. I mashed three banana total in the recipe though could use with 2, still happy with result! I was lucky enough yesterday I got 15 bananas for $1 on the side of the road and most are prime baking bananas. 🙂
Great recipe, I modified just a tad,
Used plant butter, Splenda/stevia mix, truivia brown sugar, and gluten free steel oats …. Have a diabetic in the house …. Delish…. Thank you 😊
This is the best recipe ever. I reduced the sugar in half and added some dried fruit to make it more toddler-friendly.
My husband and toddler kept opening the cookie jar and eating more and more throughout the day :))) will be making more!
So glad you enjoyed them!
This recipe is very similar to one that I found in my mom’s (now very old) Betty Crocker cookbook, back when I was younger in the 80s. I baked all the time and this was always a hit.
My recipe uses shortening (instead of butter, same measurement), does add 1 tea salt, uses 1 cup flour (instead of 1 1/2), no cornstarch, and a bit more cloves & a bit less cinnamon… Still, based on all other recipes I searched, this was the closest.
I always baked mine in a jellyroll pan and made bars instead of cookies… always! But my daughter needs these in a cookie form. So I thought I’d see what other recipes were similar & how they baked them for pointers!
This looks great. What. Would be the recipe to make 10 to 12 cookies? Thanks, can’t wait to try!
You could try cutting the recipe in half, but you still may have a few more cookies than that and cutting an egg in half can be a little tricky. I’d beat the egg, try to measure the amount and divide it in half.
Can’t wait to make this! I only have unsalted butter. How much salt should I add to recipe?
You add about a fourth a teaspoon of salt.
These look great! All I have is unsalted butter, though. How much salt should I add?
Making them right now! They smell amazing! Do they save well being frozen?
They should be fine to freeze. I hope you enjoy them!
These cookies were delicious! Had a bunch of over ripe bananas and a brand new Kitchenaid mixer begging to be used. My dad asked for oatmeal raisin cookies (also my favorite!) so I found these and added raisins. Viola! Scrumptious, moist, not overly sweet cookies. Definitely going into the keeper box.
So glad you enjoyed them!
There is no salt in this recipe? I am in the middle of making it and just noticed no salt…is that correct? Doesn’t the baking soda need salt to work??? Help!
The butter listed in the recipe is salted, so you don’t need additional salt. That said, baking soda does not need salt in order to work.
I’m so confused, the recipe says UNSALTED butter, but you said- don’t need salt because the recipe says salted butter… what is it salted or unsalted?
Because of the way comments are displayed on the backend where I respond to them, I can’t really see the comment you are replying to. That said, this recipe is an old one that was recently updated. The old version used salted butter. The updated version hasn’t really changed much, but does use unsalted butter with added salt. I hope that helps.
It’s so chewy. All the flavours compliment one another beautifully
This was a great recipe that I will be saving! I substituted the flour with Carbquick and the white and brown sugar with Swerve products to lower the carbs and they are wonderful!
So glad you enjoyed them!
I followed the recipe exactly except I added about half a cup of nuts and a handful of raisins. They cooked perfectly in 12 minutes.
They’re really good and they look nice!
I know where all my brown bananas are going to go from now on and I didn’t even have chocolate chips to add!
I can’t wait to try these! I love banana bread but cookies are so much more fun!
Also, loved the “preserving children” article from the book! So sweet and yes, a different time but experiences like that can still be found if you work at it!
Thank you! And yes, definitely!