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Banana Bread Breakfast Cookies + Adjective Learning with Hairy, Scary, Ordinary

super easy

Ever play Mad Libs with your kids and suddenly freeze when it’s time to come up with an exciting adjective?

That same feeling hits me when I sit down to write recipe posts — and baking these Banana Bread Breakfast Cookies was no exception … or was it?

Banana bread breakfast cookie dough in mixing bowl with handwritten recipe

Jump to Recipe

No matter how much I love cooking, baking, and feeding my family, I sometimes feel stumped trying to describe food in a way that feels fresh, fun, and true.

So instead of forcing myself to find new words, I decided to turn the problem into a game — one that involved my child, a little learning, and, of course, cookies.

The challenge was simple: who could describe this new Banana Bread Breakfast Cookie recipe using the most adjectives? Whoever ran out of words first lost.

And what does the winner get?

Vegan banana bread breakfast cookies fresh from the oven

The first cookie, obviously.

Step 1:

Before we started, I realized my child needed a little refresher on what an adjective actually is. That led us to the first step of this recipe adventure: books.

Hairy, Scary, Ordinary: What Is an Adjective? book cover by Brian P. Cleary

The book that plays a starring role in this recipe: Hairy, Scary, Ordinary: What Is an Adjective? by Brian P. Cleary.

I ordered it from Amazon, of course.

I’ll admit — I could have gone to the library. In fact, we already had taken this exact book out from the library before, along with other books from the same author covering nouns and verbs. But since we found these books to be incredibly fun and useful, I decided this was one worth owning.

Naturally, I added a few more books to the cart to hit free shipping. Noun, verb, and adverb — the whole set.

These are the kinds of books that don’t just get read once and forgotten; they stay in rotation, pulled off the shelf during homework time, writing practice, playing a game of Mad Libs, or moments like this when learning blends seamlessly into everyday life.

Before we started baking, we curled up on the couch and read Hairy, Scary, Ordinary: What Is an Adjective? together. The book uses playful rhymes and silly examples to show how adjectives describe people, places, and things — which made it easy to spot adjectives everywhere once we headed into the kitchen.

Step 2:

Flattened banana bread breakfast cookie dough on parchment paper

The second step was making the recipe itself.

I knew right away that I wanted these cookies to be breakfast-friendly. Something nourishing enough to feel good about serving in the morning, but fun enough that my child would actually want to eat it.

These banana bread breakfast cookies are designed to be:

  • Grab-and-go friendly
  • Naturally sweetened
  • Soft and satisfying
  • Easy to customize
  • Freezer friendly
Mixing dry and wet ingredients for banana bread breakfast cookies

I chose almond flour, oats, and ripe bananas as the base ingredients — simple, familiar, and wholesome.

STEP 3:

As we mixed everything together, the adjective game really took off. Without prompting, my child started describing how everything felt.

Here’s how we described the ingredients:

  • Almond flour – grainy, sandy, soft
  • Oats – dry, flaky, hearty
  • Bananas – soft, mushy, creamy
  • Brown sugar – wet, clumpy, sticky

The brown sugar was the outlier, which made it even more interesting to talk about. Why does it feel wet? Why does it clump together?

My son even showed me how you can make a sandcastle out of it. Who knew?

Cooking turned into a sensory lesson without either of us trying.

Optional Add-Ins = More Adjectives

Raisins and walnuts for banana bread breakfast cookies

Then came the add-ins — and even more describing.

  • Walnuts – crunchy, nutty, firm
  • Raisins – chewy, wrinkled, sweet
  • Chocolate chips – smooth, melty, rich

You don’t need to add all of them. You can use one, two, or none at all depending on your preferences (or your child’s tolerance for “surprises” in food). That flexibility is part of what makes these cookies work so well for families.

STEP 4:

Printable adjective activity for kids from Messy Little Readers Library

If you’re cooking with kids and want a gentle way to talk about food without pressure, I created a printable Food Adjectives Bundle you can use alongside this recipe.

It includes sensory word lists and cut-out cards to help kids describe what they notice while baking — a no tasting required activity.

Messy Little Readers Library

Messy Little Readers Library featuring Hairy, Scary, Ordinary

Hairy, Scary, Ordinary: What Is an Adjective? by Brian P. Cleary

The Story & Recipe Pairing

Hairy, Scary, Ordinary: What Is an Adjective? is playful, repetitive, and very much about noticing details — how words change meaning, how descriptions shape what we see.

Banana Bread Breakfast Cookies work the same way. The base is simple and familiar, but small changes — sweeter, softer, chunkier, warmer — turn them into something entirely different. It’s a recipe that invites noticing.

Best For:

Elementary (roughly ages 6–10), especially kids who enjoy wordplay, silly language, or describing everything.

Read Along Focus:

Read it with energy. Emphasize the adjectives. Let kids repeat the words, exaggerate them, and laugh at how ordinary things suddenly feel exciting.

Things to Point Out While Reading:

  • Words can change how something feels without changing the thing itself.
  • Descriptions help us explain what we like (or don’t).
  • Food, like language, isn’t just “good” or “bad” — it’s crunchy, soft, sweet, warm.

Simple Lessons (No Lecturing):

  • Details matter.
  • Everyone experiences food differently.
  • Having the words to describe something helps us talk about it.

Kitchen Tie-In:

While making the banana bread breakfast cookies, ask kids to describe the dough as you go — sticky, thick, sweet-smelling, lumpy.

After baking, try describing the cookies before tasting them. No right answers. Just words.

The Moment You’re Creating

This is a lively kitchen bake.

Mashing bananas, stirring oats, talking about words, textures, and smells while something familiar turns into something new. It’s noisy, a little chaotic, and full of commentary — exactly like the book.

No pressure to teach grammar. Just let language and baking the cookies overlap naturally.

And yes — the cookies were, dare I say — delicious.

Adjective-approved.

Vegan banana bread breakfast cookies fresh from the oven

Banana Bread Breakfast Cookies

Print Recipe
Soft banana bread breakfast cookies made with oats, almond flour, and ripe bananas — a wholesome, grab-and-go breakfast or snack.
Course Breakfast, Dessert, Snack
Cuisine American
Keyword baking, Banana bread, breakfast, cookies, healthy vegan breakfast, kid friendly, vegan
Total Time 25 minutes
Servings 9

Ingredients

  • 1 cup almond flour
  • 1 cup rolled oats
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt
  • 1 banana mashed
  • 2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
  • 1/4 cup tahini
  • 1/2 cup unsweetened vanilla almond milk or any other plant-based milk
  • 1/4 cup brown sugar
  • 1/4 cup chopped walnuts heaping
  • 1/4 cup raisins
  • 1/4 cup dairy-free chocolate chips

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 37f degrees F.
  • Line a cookie sheet with parchment paper. Set aside.
  • Combine flour, oats, baking soda, and salt in a medium-sized mixing bowl.
  • Add the mashed banana, tahini, vanilla, almond milk, and brown sugar to a saucepan. Mix over low heat until the bananas dissolve.
  • Pour the banana mixture into the dry ingredients. Stir until a dough forms.
  • Fold in the walnuts, raisins, and chocolate chips.
  • Use a 1/4 cup to scoop nine balls of dough onto the cookie sheet about one inch apart.
  • Bake for 15-20 minutes, or until browned slightly on top.
  • Allow to cool, serve, and enjoy!

Notes

∗These cookies should be stored in the fridge for up to seven days.
∗Use a freezer safe container fir longer shelf life (these cookies only take minutes to thaw, so a perfect grab-and-go breakfast or snack)!

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