Creamy Fermented Breakfast Oats | Food as Medicine | The Culinary Cure™ (2024)

by Kristen Coffield | Breakfast

Creamy Fermented Breakfast Oats | Food as Medicine | The Culinary Cure™ (1)

Fermenting oats is an easy way to to make them more nutritious, deliciously creamy and shorten the cooking time. The process of fermenting grains breaks down the proteins, fats and carbohydrates; making the nutrients more bioavailable, and creating a healthy, rich, flavorful breakfast porridge.

I love steel cut oats, but I don’t always have 45 minutes in the morning to cook up a batch. For years I have precooked my oats and reheated them in the morning — which works quite well. Discovering the simple process of of overnight fermenting, however, has changed everything.

Fermenting has been used for centuries to preserve food. It is not complicated and it increases the nutritional value of the food being fermented. It also cuts the cooking time down to almost in half. I am always trying to find ways to make what I am eating more healthy, nutritious and readily available; fermenting does all three.

In addition to fermenting the oats before making breakfast oatmeal, I have started thinking about my oatmeal differently. I grew up eating oatmeal with brown sugar and butter; today, I add savory flavors to make it more versatile. It may be my Scottish heritage, but I find oatmeal with butter from grass-fed cows, salt and pepper quite delicious. I also like to add things like pomegranate seeds, walnuts, and cacao for sweet variety. I have also added miso, scallions, cheese and a fried egg to make it more hearty.

This is not your bland childhood oatmeal. This is oatmeal all grown-up and taken to the next level. It has texture, flavor, and packs a nutritional punch to start your day. You can enjoy it sweet or savory, and layer on the flavors and protein.

Using plain kefir in this recipe is optional, but using it will speed up the fermentation process.

Creamy Fermented Breakfast Oats | Food as Medicine | The Culinary Cure™ (2)

4.5 from 2 votes

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Creamy Fermented Breakfast Oats

Fermenting oats is an easy way to to make them more nutritious, deliciously creamy and shorten the cooking time. The process of fermenting grains breaks down the proteins, fats and carbohydrates; making the nutrients more bioavailable, and creating a healthy, rich, flavorful breakfast porridge.

Course Breakfast

Keyword fermented foods, oats

Servings 4 Servings

Ingredients

  • 1 cup steel cut oats
  • 1 1/4 cups filtered water
  • 2 Tbsp. Plain kefir - kefir is a fermented dairy drink. This step is optional but speeds up the fermentation process.

Instructions

  1. Place grains in a medium bowl and cover with water. If using kefir, mix into water before adding to oats.

  2. Cover bowl with plastic wrap and place at room temperature in a spot away from direct sunlight.

  3. Ferment overnight, but no more than 24 hours.

  4. Cook your fermented oats following the directions on the package, and adding a pinch of sea salt to the cooking water.

  5. Serve with toppings of your choice.

Recipe Notes

I make a batch of oatmeal and reheat it for an easy breakfast on busy mornings.

Kristen Coffield

Creamy Fermented Breakfast Oats | Food as Medicine | The Culinary Cure™ (3)

I am a passionate advocate for food as medicine, life navigator and culinary coach. This is my space for sharing what excites, inspires and motivates me to live my best life. It began as a recipe blog for nourishing, simple, weekday meals and has become something much bigger… a guide to resilient wellness. I am excited to share my knowledge of how daily habits can cumulatively help you to live like you mean it and age like you want to.

  1. Creamy Fermented Breakfast Oats | Food as Medicine | The Culinary Cure™ (4)

    TM on December 31, 2021 at 11:55 am

    Hello,
    Is it safe to eat oats which was soaked in sea-salted water for 32 hours (more than your recommended 24 hours)? Is this level of fermentation unsafe?
    When soaking oats, should they be rinsed before cooking?
    Thanks.

    Reply

    • Creamy Fermented Breakfast Oats | Food as Medicine | The Culinary Cure™ (5)

      Kristen Coffield on August 11, 2022 at 8:49 am

      You can ferment the oats and make overnight oats to optimize the fermented goodness.

      Reply

    • Creamy Fermented Breakfast Oats | Food as Medicine | The Culinary Cure™ (9)

      Kristen Coffield on August 13, 2022 at 11:03 pm

      The Bible for fermentation is The Art Of Fermentation by Katz. I also recommend only using Himalayan Pink Sea Salt!

      Reply

  2. Creamy Fermented Breakfast Oats | Food as Medicine | The Culinary Cure™ (10)

    Lindsay Hanco*ck on February 3, 2022 at 12:29 am

    Does cooking just destroy all of the great bacteria you just cultured? Could you cook first, cool then ferment?

    Reply

    • Creamy Fermented Breakfast Oats | Food as Medicine | The Culinary Cure™ (11)

      Kristen Coffield on August 11, 2022 at 8:48 am

      Cooking them does change the value of the good bacteria, but makes delicious cooked oats.

      Reply

  3. Creamy Fermented Breakfast Oats | Food as Medicine | The Culinary Cure™ (12)

    Silvio Fontana on August 10, 2022 at 3:07 am

    it is indeed sad and probably reflective of a health www site when there is no follow up and answering of questions, Shame. I also would like to know, Why, go to the effort of fermenting oats with cultures of various types, then knowing that the cooking of oats will destroy all microbes you have created, not only, but also, if you supplement with HCI, this acid environment will also denature the grown probiotics

    Reply

    • Creamy Fermented Breakfast Oats | Food as Medicine | The Culinary Cure™ (13)

      Kristen Coffield on August 11, 2022 at 8:46 am

      Fermenting is so important.

      For thousands of years we fermented foods as a way to preserve them. Then modern technology and chemical preservatives entered and we lost that important process.

      The good humans consume had changed more in the past 50 years than in all of human existence before that.

      Basically, we should eat as our great great grandparents. If it wasn’t around then we shouldn’t eat it now.

      Making fermented slaws is great too! Because we get all the good veggie fiber.

      Always happy to help!

      We’ve had a wild couple of months. If you follow me on Instagram you would have seen our condo got flooded by an upstairs neighbor. We became grandparents for the first time. I helped my sister through a double mastectomy. We are still dealing with a family member who passed without a will and was a hoarder, that’s been crazy and we care for my 89 year old dad with Parkinson’s. Since May we’ve been all over the place.

      Always happy to connect and make suggestions, answer questions and help.

      Eat Well. Be Well.
      Kristen

      Reply

    • Creamy Fermented Breakfast Oats | Food as Medicine | The Culinary Cure™ (14)

      kathy on February 10, 2023 at 9:51 am

      I see this concern pop up a lot on sites concerning raw milk and other probiotic foods. I think we shouldn’t worry about heat killing the microbes if we eat from a variety of sources. Some uncooked ferments and some cooked. Cooking will not kill all microbes, and if only a few survive, microbes multiply exponentially in the right environment, like in our gut.
      Second, the fermentation process creates additional nutrition to the foods like added B vitamins and fatty acids that are not nullified in the cooking process.
      It is important to enjoy our food, so I think don’t be afraid of cooking things like sauerkraut, heating milk to warm it, heating milk to make yogurt or grains to make soothing oatmeal!
      Traditional cultures cooked fermented foods for thousands of years. Saurkraut traditionally is never eaten raw, it’s fermented then cooked, and the people in those cultures still gained the benefits we know about today.

      Reply

    • Creamy Fermented Breakfast Oats | Food as Medicine | The Culinary Cure™ (15)

      kathy on February 10, 2023 at 9:54 am

      I forgot to add: fermenting also begins the digestion process outside the body, similar to cooking, making the food more digestible for us, so there are benefits beyond just ingesting the microbes. hope that is helpful!

      Reply

      • Creamy Fermented Breakfast Oats | Food as Medicine | The Culinary Cure™ (16)

        Kristen Coffield on April 19, 2023 at 12:00 pm

        Great comment! Just eat more fermented foods because it’s super beneficial for your overall health and wellness. Thank you for this great comment!
        Eat Well. Be Well.
        Kristen

        Reply

    • Creamy Fermented Breakfast Oats | Food as Medicine | The Culinary Cure™ (17)

      Ludovic on January 16, 2024 at 8:06 am

      There are many potential reasons to ferment even if you subsequently heat it up. The fermentation process increases digestibility and bioavailability of nutrients. Also, recent studies have shown that even eating dead probiotic cultures benefits our living microbiome (probably via some dna exchange)

      In ancient Scotland oats was traditionally fermented (for more than 24h – often for weeks) and then cooked before eating…

      Still, I believe that fermenting AFTER cooking is a valid option and I sometimes do it. There are even commercially available fermented oat yogurts with live probitics and as I found online one can cultivate lactobacteria in home-made oat milk.

      But assuming someone wants to eat a warm or hot porridge in winter and still have some health and digestive benefits, then fermenting and then cooking seems good compromise…

      Reply

      • Creamy Fermented Breakfast Oats | Food as Medicine | The Culinary Cure™ (18)

        Kristen Coffield on January 17, 2024 at 10:59 am

        I love your comment!

        There is prebiotic benefit for sure and the fermenting basically, pre cooks the oats to a certain degree, shortening the cooking time.

        Thank you for sharing.
        Zestfully Yours,
        Kristen🍋

        Reply

  4. Creamy Fermented Breakfast Oats | Food as Medicine | The Culinary Cure™ (19)

    Victoria on August 11, 2022 at 7:56 pm

    Kristen,no need to justify or apologise for not replying to the comments made. People always make the wrong assumptions. They always think someone is online going to answer all their questions as soon as they are typed and then they get all grumpy and superior when they don’t. Real life, people – gets in the way of many a timely reply. xx

    Reply

  5. Creamy Fermented Breakfast Oats | Food as Medicine | The Culinary Cure™ (20)

    Tina on October 19, 2022 at 7:54 am

    I fermented porridge for four days with water and Kombucha. The jar was sealed and kept in a dark place. Is this really safe? They lookes and smelled fine, but I’m still nervous about potentially getting botulism or some other food-borne illness. Thanks in advance.

    Reply

    • Creamy Fermented Breakfast Oats | Food as Medicine | The Culinary Cure™ (21)

      Kristen Coffield on October 19, 2022 at 11:33 am

      Per my recipe the oats can be fermented overnight and no more than 24 hours. You can try my method to make a tasty breakfast.

      Reply

      • Creamy Fermented Breakfast Oats | Food as Medicine | The Culinary Cure™ (22)

        Ludovic on January 16, 2024 at 8:08 am

        The likely reason is that then the taste might be too acidic, ie sour – so mostly for the taste aspect, not for security… the bacteria end up eating all the sugar and at some point it no longer tastes like cereals

        Reply

  6. Creamy Fermented Breakfast Oats | Food as Medicine | The Culinary Cure™ (23)

    Lien on December 16, 2022 at 6:32 pm

    Can I use milk, instead of water and kefir, and leave out on the counter overnight to ferment?

    Reply

    • Creamy Fermented Breakfast Oats | Food as Medicine | The Culinary Cure™ (24)

      Kristen Coffield on January 23, 2023 at 10:05 am

      You need a fermented product to create the fermentation process. That’s why I use the kefir too get the benefits of fermentation.

      Eat well. Be well.
      Kristen

      Reply

  7. Creamy Fermented Breakfast Oats | Food as Medicine | The Culinary Cure™ (25)

    Michelle Parent on January 28, 2023 at 10:13 am

    I fermented sticky rice with distillers yeast and then saved the liquid to ferment the oats. Smells like sourdough bread and tastes wonderful.

    Reply

    • Creamy Fermented Breakfast Oats | Food as Medicine | The Culinary Cure™ (26)

      Kristen Coffield on January 29, 2023 at 8:31 pm

      Michelle,

      Impressed with your fermentation skills! What an interesting way to add flavor and dimension to the creamy fermented oats. Thank you for sharing.

      Eat Well. Be Well.
      Kristen

      Reply

  8. Creamy Fermented Breakfast Oats | Food as Medicine | The Culinary Cure™ (27)

    norm on September 11, 2023 at 6:42 am

    I use contents from probiotic capsule or sourdough starter to accomplish oat fermentation. Generally leave on counter for 2 or 3 days plus eat it raw to enjoy the full compliment of probiotics before killed off by heat. Your recipe sounds interesting. Does cooking the kefir fermented oats provide some kind of food safety or just taste?

    Reply

  9. Creamy Fermented Breakfast Oats | Food as Medicine | The Culinary Cure™ (28)

    Lynne W on October 23, 2023 at 10:04 am

    Creamy Fermented Breakfast Oats | Food as Medicine | The Culinary Cure™ (29)
    I added butter and Non-fortified Brewer’s yeast flakes. Per another fermentation recipe I fermented the oats for 36 hours. It was delicious! I don’t mind the texture, but I am used to pouring boiling water over regular oats in a bowl and eating within about 5 minutes or less. This will be more digestible, I am hoping. This is my off Keto time for those who know not to do Keto all the time. I am hoping not to gain weight back.

    Reply

    • Creamy Fermented Breakfast Oats | Food as Medicine | The Culinary Cure™ (30)

      Kristen Coffield on October 26, 2023 at 9:35 am

      Breaking down the undigestible plant proteins with fermentation has the double benefit of keeping the fiber while reducing the inflammatory response. LOVE your method!
      Zestfully Yours,
      Kristen Coffield 🍋

      Reply

    • Creamy Fermented Breakfast Oats | Food as Medicine | The Culinary Cure™ (31)

      Kristen Coffield on January 19, 2024 at 8:45 am

      Lynn,

      Thanks for your comment. I love your suggestion.

      I would suggest not doing Keto all the time because it’s challenging for hormones. Fasting is a much healthier option.

      Zestfully Yours,
      Kristen

      Reply

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