Amish-style apple and cinnamon baked oatmeal — cozy, wholesome, and perfect for meal prep

Total Time: 55 mins Difficulty: Beginner
Warm, hearty baked oatmeal loaded with tender apple chunks and cozy cinnamon spice — simple, wholesome, and perfect for making ahead.
A close-up of golden Amish-style apple and cinnamon baked oatmeal in a white baking dish with tender apple chunks and a caramelized golden top pinit

Mornings in my house can get a little chaotic. And if you’re anything like me, standing over the stove stirring oatmeal at 7am while simultaneously trying to function as a human being is not exactly how you want to start your day.

I needed something that I could throw together the night before, slide into the oven in the morning, and have the whole house smelling like a warm hug by the time everyone sat down at the table.

That’s exactly what this Amish-style apple and cinnamon baked oatmeal delivers. It’s the kind of breakfast that feels indulgent — warm, spiced, full of tender apple chunks and golden oats — but is actually made from simple, wholesome ingredients you probably already have in your kitchen. No fancy techniques, no complicated steps, just real food that tastes genuinely comforting.

I’ve made this recipe more times than I can count, and it never gets old. Whether it’s a slow Sunday morning or a busy weekday where you need breakfast sorted in advance, this baked oatmeal is the answer. Make it once and you’ve got breakfast covered for the entire week. That’s what I call a win.

Why you’ll love this recipe

  • Warm, cozy, and deeply comforting. This is the breakfast equivalent of a warm blanket on a cold morning. The cinnamon and apple combination is just unbeatable.
  • Made with simple wholesome ingredients. Rolled oats, fresh apples, eggs, milk, and a handful of pantry staples. Nothing complicated, nothing you can’t pronounce.
  • Perfect for meal prep. Bake it on Sunday and reheat portions throughout the week. Breakfast is done before the week even starts.
  • Naturally sweetened and surprisingly healthy. Lightly sweetened with brown sugar or maple syrup, packed with fiber from the oats and apples, and filling enough to keep you going until lunch.
  • Kid friendly and family approved. Even picky eaters love this one. The tender apple chunks and warm spices make it feel more like dessert than breakfast — which is never a bad thing.
  • Flexible and customizable. Add nuts, dried fruit, swap the apples for pears, or change up the spices. This recipe is a great base to make your own.

Ingredients with key notes

For the baked oatmeal:

  • 3 cups old-fashioned rolled oats — Old-fashioned rolled oats are essential here. Do not use quick oats — they turn mushy during baking and lose that satisfying chewy texture. Steel cut oats won’t work either without significantly adjusting the liquid ratio and baking time.
  • 2 medium apples, peeled and diced — About 2 cups of diced apple. Honeycrisp and Granny Smith are the top choices here. Honeycrisp gives you sweetness and holds its shape beautifully. Granny Smith adds a tart contrast that balances the sweetness of the dish perfectly. Either works — or use a mix of both.
  • 2 teaspoons ground cinnamon — Don’t be shy with the cinnamon. It is the star of the show here and the whole dish revolves around that warm spiced flavor.
  • 1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg — Just a touch of nutmeg adds depth and warmth. It works in the background but you would notice if it wasn’t there.
  • 1/3 cup brown sugar or maple syrup — Brown sugar gives a slightly deeper, more caramel-like sweetness. Maple syrup keeps it more natural and adds a subtle maple note. Both are delicious — use whichever you prefer or have on hand.
  • 2 large eggs — Bind everything together and give the oatmeal its slightly set, sliceable texture.
  • 2 cups milk — Whole milk gives the richest, creamiest result. Any milk works here including oat milk, almond milk, or any other plant-based alternative for a dairy free version.
  • 3 tablespoons butter, melted — Adds richness and helps the top get that beautiful golden finish. Melted coconut oil works as a dairy free substitute.
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract — Adds warmth and rounds out all the other flavors. Do not skip this.
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder — Gives the oatmeal a slightly lighter, less dense texture. A small but important addition.
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt — Balances the sweetness and brings all the flavors together.

Step-by-step instructions

Step 1: Preheat your oven

Preheat your oven to 375 degrees Fahrenheit and grease a 9×13 inch baking dish with butter or cooking spray. A properly greased dish ensures the oatmeal doesn’t stick and makes serving and cleanup significantly easier.

Step 2: Prepare the apples

Peel, core, and dice the apples into small, even pieces — roughly half an inch cubes. Smaller pieces will soften and melt into the oatmeal during baking. Larger pieces will hold their shape more and give you distinct apple chunks throughout. Both are great — it comes down to personal preference. Toss the diced apples with a small pinch of cinnamon while you prep the rest of the ingredients.

Step 3: Mix the dry ingredients

In a large mixing bowl, combine the rolled oats, cinnamon, nutmeg, baking powder, and salt. Stir everything together until evenly distributed. Making sure the dry ingredients are well mixed before adding the wet ingredients ensures the spices are evenly spread throughout the entire dish.

Step 4: Mix the wet ingredients

In a separate bowl or large measuring cup, whisk together the eggs, milk, melted butter, vanilla extract, and brown sugar or maple syrup until fully combined. Whisk well — you want the eggs fully incorporated and the sugar dissolved into the milk mixture.

Step 5: Combine everything

Pour the wet ingredient mixture into the bowl of dry ingredients. Stir everything together until well combined. Fold in the diced apples and stir to distribute them evenly throughout the mixture. The batter will look quite liquid at this stage — that is completely normal and exactly what you want.

Step 6: Pour into the baking dish

Transfer the oatmeal mixture into the prepared baking dish and spread it out into an even layer. Give the dish a gentle shake to settle everything evenly. If you want, add a few extra apple slices on top for a prettier presentation — they caramelize beautifully during baking.

Step 7: Bake

Bake at 375 degrees Fahrenheit for 35-40 minutes until the top is golden brown and the center is set. It should not jiggle when you gently shake the pan. The edges will be slightly more golden than the center — that is normal and those edges are honestly the best part. Let it cool for at least 5-10 minutes before slicing and serving.

Serving suggestions

  • Drizzle with warm maple syrup — A generous drizzle of warm maple syrup over the top right before serving takes this from great to absolutely outstanding.
  • Serve with a dollop of Greek yogurt — The tangy creaminess of Greek yogurt against the warm, spiced oatmeal is a combination that works incredibly well. It also adds extra protein to keep you fuller longer.
  • Top with a spoonful of nut butter — Almond butter or peanut butter drizzled over a warm serving adds richness and healthy fats that make this an even more complete breakfast.
  • Add a handful of chopped walnuts or pecans — Sprinkle them over the top before baking for a crunchy, nutty topping that adds great texture contrast.
  • Serve with fresh sliced apples on the side — If you’re a serious apple lover, a few fresh apple slices alongside the warm baked oatmeal doubles down on that apple flavor in the best way.
  • Pair it with a hot cup of coffee or chai — Honestly, this combination on a cold morning is hard to beat. The warm spices in the oatmeal complement both coffee and chai beautifully.

Storage tips

Refrigerator: Cover the baking dish tightly with plastic wrap or transfer individual portions to airtight containers. Store in the fridge for up to 5 days. This is the ultimate meal prep breakfast — it actually gets better after a day as the flavors develop and deepen.

Reheating: Reheat individual portions in the microwave for 60-90 seconds. Add a small splash of milk before reheating to bring back some of the creaminess and prevent it from drying out. You can also reheat the whole dish covered with foil in a 325 degree oven for about 15 minutes.

Freezer: This baked oatmeal freezes beautifully. Cut it into individual portions, wrap each one tightly in plastic wrap, and place in a zip-lock freezer bag. Freeze for up to 3 months. Thaw overnight in the fridge and reheat in the microwave with a splash of milk.

Make ahead tip: You can assemble the entire dish the night before, cover it tightly, and refrigerate it unbaked overnight. In the morning, pull it straight from the fridge and bake as directed — you may need to add 5 minutes to the baking time since it’s starting cold. This is the best way to have a hot, fresh baked breakfast with almost zero morning effort.

Let’s wrap this up

There is a reason this Amish-style baked oatmeal keeps showing up on my breakfast table week after week. It is warm, it is comforting, it fills the house with the most incredible smell, and it makes the whole week easier because breakfast is already handled. That combination is pretty hard to argue with.

If you make this recipe, I would genuinely love to hear about it. Drop a comment below, share it on Pinterest, or tag me in your photos. Seeing this recipe show up in your kitchens honestly makes my whole day. Now go enjoy a warm bowl of something good — you’ve absolutely earned it.

Difficulty: Beginner Prep Time 15 mins Cook Time 40 mins Total Time 55 mins
Estimated Cost: $ 12

Description

This Amish-style apple and cinnamon baked oatmeal is the ultimate cozy breakfast. Made with old-fashioned rolled oats, fresh diced apples, warm cinnamon and nutmeg, and simple pantry staples, it bakes into a golden, hearty dish that feeds the whole family and meal preps like a dream. Naturally sweetened, incredibly satisfying, and ready in under an hour.

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 375 degrees Fahrenheit and grease a 9x13 inch baking dish.
  2. Peel, core, and dice apples into half inch cubes. Toss with a pinch of cinnamon.
  3. In a large bowl, combine rolled oats, cinnamon, nutmeg, baking powder, and salt. Stir well.
  4. In a separate bowl, whisk together eggs, milk, melted butter, vanilla extract, and brown sugar or maple syrup until fully combined.
  5. Pour wet ingredients into dry ingredients and stir to combine. Fold in the diced apples.
  6. Transfer to the prepared baking dish and spread into an even layer.
  7. Bake for 35-40 minutes until the top is golden and the center is set.
  8. Cool for 5-10 minutes before slicing and serving.
Keywords: Amish baked oatmeal, apple cinnamon baked oatmeal, baked oatmeal recipe, healthy baked oatmeal, meal prep breakfast, apple oatmeal bake, cozy breakfast recipes, wholesome baked oatmeal
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Frequently Asked Questions

Expand All:

What type of oats work best for baked oatmeal?

Old-fashioned rolled oats are the only way to go for this recipe. They hold their structure during baking and give you that satisfying chewy texture that makes baked oatmeal so hearty and filling. Quick oats absorb liquid too fast and turn the dish into a mushy, dense block — not what you're going for. Steel cut oats need significantly more liquid and a longer baking time, so they don't work as a direct swap without completely reworking the recipe.

What apples are best for this recipe?

Honeycrisp and Granny Smith are the two best options and honestly, using a mix of both is the move. Honeycrisp apples are naturally sweet, hold their shape well during baking, and have a satisfying texture. Granny Smith apples bring a tart counterbalance that keeps the dish from being overly sweet. Avoid very soft apple varieties like Red Delicious — they tend to turn to mush during the baking time and lose their texture completely.

Can I make this dairy free?

Absolutely. Swap the regular milk for any plant-based milk — oat milk, almond milk, and coconut milk all work well here. Oat milk gives the closest result to whole milk in terms of creaminess. Replace the butter with melted coconut oil or a vegan butter alternative. Everything else in the recipe is already dairy free, so those two swaps are all you need.

Can I make this the night before?

Yes, and this is actually the best way to do it if you want a stress-free morning. Assemble the entire dish as directed, cover it tightly with plastic wrap, and refrigerate overnight unbaked. In the morning, pull it straight from the fridge and bake at 375 degrees Fahrenheit. Add about 5 extra minutes to the baking time to account for the cold start. Your house will smell incredible and breakfast will be on the table with almost zero morning effort.

How do I know when the baked oatmeal is done?

The top should be golden brown and the center should be set — it should not jiggle or appear wet when you gently shake the pan. A toothpick inserted into the center should come out mostly clean. If the top is browning too quickly before the center is set, loosely tent the dish with foil and continue baking until done. Every oven is slightly different so start checking at the 35-minute mark.

Can I freeze baked oatmeal?

Yes, and it freezes incredibly well. This is one of its best qualities as a meal prep recipe. Slice the cooled baked oatmeal into individual portions, wrap each piece tightly in plastic wrap, and store in a zip-lock freezer bag for up to 3 months. Thaw individual portions overnight in the refrigerator and reheat in the microwave with a small splash of milk for 60-90 seconds. It tastes just as good as fresh — maybe even better.

A self-taught Cook, Filmmaker, and Creative Director

Most days you can find me in the kitchen experimenting with new recipes or behind my camera capturing the stories food tells. What I’m most passionate about is creating dishes that are quick, comforting, and surprisingly healthy—and sharing them with you.

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