Not every morning in my life is filled with Chocolate Chip Buttermilk Pancakes and Chocolate Chocolate Chip Banana Bread… not when things like my ten year class reunion and bathing suit season loom just around the corner. For real friends, those are two scary things. At least I don’t have to go to my ten year reunion in my bathing suit. Can you imagine the horror!? Yea… so there’s always a silver lining.
I’d like to introduce you to Low Fat Oatmeal Banana Bread. If this bread were one of your dear friends from high school, it would be that friend who wore old lady shoes because they were the most practical, and played the trombone, and was the super smart editor of the school newspaper. This bread would be the friend that was super sensible, and sweet and just downright made you feel good about your day.
Go ahead, think of this Low Fat Oatmeal Banana Bread as your friend… and then it eat. No, there’s nothing weird about that.
This bread is packed full of happy, heart-healthy oats, cinnamon spice and crazy ripe bananas. It’s just the thing to throw together over the weekend, slice up, wrap individually, and freeze for breakfast for the entire week. I just grab a slice from the freezer as I’m running out the door, and by the time I have a chance to eat it, it’s perfectly defrosted. Of course the microwave and toaster oven work wonders too.
Low Fat Oatmeal Banana Bread
adapted from the Weight Watchers site
makes 1 loaf of 10 slices, 4 points per slice
- 1 1/4 cup all-purpose flour
- 1/2 cup packed brown sugar
- 1/2 tsp salt
- 1/2 tsp baking soda
- 1/4 tsp baking powder
- 1/2 tsp cinnamon
- 3 tsp canola or walnut oil
- 1 large egg, beaten
- 2 medium egg whites, beaten
- 3 large bananas, ripe
- 1 cup uncooked old fashioned oats
Preheat oven to 350°F. Grease and flour a loaf pan and set aside. In a large bowl, stir together dry ingredients including the oats and cinnamon.
In a smaller bowl, mash bananas with a potato masher or fork. Add oil and whole egg and mix thoroughly.
Add the wet ingredients to the dry and mix well. Batter will be fairly thick.
In a medium sized bowl, with an electric hand mixer, beat the egg whites until medium stiff peaks form. Fold the egg whites into the batter in three additions.
Pour batter into pan and bake until top of loaf is firm to touch, 45 to 50 minutes. Remove from oven and allow to cool in pan for 5 minutes. Flip out and cool on a wire rack for another 10 minutes. Slice loaf into 10 equally sized slices.













{ 106 comments… read them below or add one }
← Previous Comments
very good, I put brown sugar and butterscotch chips on top to give it some extra flavor
I used 2 whole eggs instead of the egg whites and just stirred them in. The batter was definitely very thick but I didn’t want to bother with folding the egg whites into the batter. The bread smells quite good, I’ll have to see how it tastes after it cools.
I made this last weekend and another loaf is in the oven right now. Very good recipe. Moist and flavorful but not too sweet. A great alternative to the full fat recipes!!
Made this into muffins today!! Bake @350 for 18-20 minutes.
Best low fat recipe ever! I made this today- replaced oil with yogurt & buttermilk (same amount) and carameralised 1/2 of the bananas I used before I mixed it in. Came out fantastic, I think I will be making this whenever I have extra banana. Guilt free too =) I might soak half of the oat in buttermilk or something next time I make this though.
“If this bread were one of your dear friends from high school, it would be that friend who wore old lady shoes because they were the most practical, and played the trombone, and was the super smart editor of the school newspaper.”
So, you basically just described me … Except I graduated in June, not years ago. I wore old lady-ish shoes all the time, they were vintage or my orthopedic black heels (that made me feel like a witch and a housewife all at once). I play the cello, which is even more awkward to carry around in its case (while wearing my old lady shoes) than a trombone. I was a staff reporter on the school newspaper and the unofficial copy-editor.
I always feel weird commenting entries on old blog posts.
← Previous Comments
{ 19 trackbacks }