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This blueberry oat bread has a delicious crumbly texture, and when it’s fresh out of the oven, your house will smell like a bakery.

Blueberry Bread
This amazing blueberry oat bread is both incredibly simple and healthier than regular breakfast bread. It’s on page 34 of my Clean Treats Cookbook, and it has been one of my go-to breakfasts for years!
It has no wheat flour, no dairy, or refined sugars, so how exactly do you get a moist quick bread without all the classic baking staples? Oat flour! It makes the bread moist, with a crumbly texture that tastes like your next favorite blueberry breakfast recipe.

Blueberry Breakfast Bread Ingredients
The dry ingredients you’ll need are oat flour, baking powder (essential for fluffiness), and old-fashioned oats for an irresistible hearty texture. The wet ingredients are honey (or maple syrup), coconut oil (or melted butter), eggs, and vanilla extract. Finally, the fruit: blueberries, ripe banana (for natural sweetness), and lemon zest.
Fresh or Frozen Blueberries
You can use fresh blueberries or frozen for this recipe. If using frozen, they will bake right into the bread and have an amazing jelly-like texture.

How to Make Blueberry Breakfast Bread
As you can see in the following steps and the video below, this blueberry oat bread comes together effortlessly:
- Whisk together the oat flour, baking powder, and salt in a large bowl.
- Blend the wet ingredients in a blender until you have a smooth, frothy texture.
- Combine the wet mixture with the dry ingredients in the bowl, and slowly whisk until well combined. Add the oats, and mix, then gently fold in the blueberries into the batter. Pour the batter into a lined loaf pan.
- Bake in the preheated oven for 45 – 55 minutes or until a toothpick comes out clean. If your bread loaf is looking golden around minute 35, cover with a piece of tin foil.
How to Freeze Breakfast Bread for Later
Allow the bread to cool to room temperature, and then slice it thickly into individual portions. Wrap each portion with plastic wrap and store in an airtight container. The bread will last for up to 2 months in the freezer. Reheat it from frozen in the toaster oven or microwave, no thawing required!
You can always thaw an entire loaf whole, using the same wrapping process, but individual slices are much easier to grab and go, plus no bread goes to waste.
Can I turn this quick bread into muffins?
This quick blueberry oat bread recipe yields 12 standard-sized muffins! Just line the muffin pan with cupcake liners or grease it, fill each about ¾ of the way to the top, and bake the muffin batter in the preheated oven for 25 minutes.
Other Quick Breakfast Bread Recipes
I have more quick bread recipes you’ll want to try, like this Greek yogurt banana bread, this chocolate chip banana bread, as well as this gluten-free recipe for applesauce bread.
Blueberry Oat Breakfast Bread

Watch how it’s made:
Ingredients
- 2 cups oat flour
- 2 teaspoons baking powder
- ½ teaspoon salt
- ½ cup honey or maple syrup
- 1 cup mashed banana, about 1 large
- ½ cup coconut oil or butter, melted
- 2 eggs, at room temperature
- 1 teaspoon vanilla
- 2 teaspoons lemon zest
- ⅓ cup old fashioned oats
- 1 cup blueberries
Instructions
Prep:
- Preheat the oven to 375°F (190°C). Line a 9 x 5-inch loaf pan with parchment paper.
Make the batter:
- In a large bowl, whisk together the oat flour, baking powder, and salt.
- In a blender, place the honey, banana, coconut oil, eggs, vanilla, and lemon zest. Blend on medium speed until the ingredients are combined and you have a smooth, frothy texture.
- Pour the wet mixture into the dry ingredient bowl, and slowly whisk until combined. Add in the oats, and mix, then gently fold in the blueberries into the batter.
Bake:
- Pour the batter into the pan and bake 45 - 55 minutes, or until a toothpick comes out clean. If your bread loaf is looking golden around minute 35, cover with foil.
Serve:
- Remove the loaf from the oven and allow it to cool down in the pan for 10 minutes before lifting the parchment paper out of the pan and slicing the blueberry loaf.
Notes
- Turn this epic blueberry oat batter into 12 muffins by baking them in a 350F preheated oven for 25 minutes.







Lorraine says
Hi Laura we LOVE this bread, but I am wondering if the oat flour can be replaced with something other than normal wheat flour. Perhaps almond or banana flour? Have you tried any other combinations yet?
Laura Fuentes says
Hi Lorraine, I have not made this bread with anything other than wheat flour, oat flour, Bob’s 1:1 gluten-free flour, or spelt flour. In all those cases, the ingredients remain the same. Almond flour will need egg adjustment and I have not tested it with banana flour. I hope this helps!
Jenna Marie says
I made this recipe today and it’s DELICIOUS. Best blueberry breakfast bread I’ve tried.
Laura Fuentes says
Glad you loved it, Jenna!
Elsa says
Very delicious. I tried making this a few times but it didn’t taste very good, probably because I gave it a lot of blueberries. This time, I followed your recipe. So I have a good breakfast. Thank you!
Danielle says
Would frozen blueberries work here? Where we live the fresh ones are getting sour and not very large…
Laura Fuentes says
Absolutely! use frozen blueberries.
Shannon says
COULD the oat flour be replaced with Almond Flour or even regular wheat flour?
Laura Fuentes says
The oat flour could be replaced by traditional wheat flour. I have not tested this recipe with almond flour. However, you can make oat flour in your blender too, no need to go out and shop.
Paula says
We had the loaf and it was wonderful, can we make these as muffins instead?
Laura Fuentes says
Absolutely! Bake in the oven for approx 18 minutes at 375F, until the tops are browned and a toothpick comes out clean when inserted in the middle.
Julia says
Hi! I currently don’t have a blender nor access to oat flour. Could I use quick oats instead of the oat flour?
Laura Fuentes says
Yes, you can use quick cooking oats instead. add an extra 1/4 cup.
Jarie says
Hi, I love the flavor of this recipie! Unfortunately, mine didnt rise at all (though still delicious). I made the muffins, and I replaced the eggs with pumpkin puree – could that be the culprit?
Laura Fuentes says
Sadly, my intuition is yes. Although pumpkin puree is often a great substitute, this bread is a bit denser than most. I’ve made it dozens of times (it’s also in my book so it’s been really tested) and in order go get a great lift the eggs are essential here. How much pumpkin did you replace it with?