Oatmeal raisin cookie is one of my favorites. This one is all oats. And no flour.

Sure, you can add chocolate, but I sometimes like a pure wholesome oat-y raisin cookie (…maybe you too?) where the raisins are the stand out morsel-size ingredient.
And this gluten-free big cookie has 40 raisins. You can’t dodge ’em if you tried.
There’s a raisin reason (or raison in French) for the cookie … that makes it a good breakfast starter with healthy breakfast ingredients!
And if size matters to you…
This oatmeal raisin cookie recipe is for 6 inches across that is great on your 8 inch plates. Or take with you in your car trips when you want fewer crumbs.
It has crumbs, otherwise it wouldn’t be a satisfying cookie… but it holds together nicely.
And better than granola that’s droppable, and one jerky hairpin turn away from needing a vacuum.
You will have finished this cookie by then. 😋
Like my younger self would have. When I found the hard and crunchy store-bought ones worthy.
I thought they were the eat-as-many-as-you-like wholesome cookies. Ya know what I mean?
I was years from understanding why healthy really mattered… and knowing that a few baking minutes is all the difference between crunchy vs. soft-baked.
And not from an artfully messy table of food ingredients that I imagined.
For a Softer Cookie:
With ith the magical oven, you can make the cookie even softer if you want with a simple ingredient tweak.
If you want to make a smoother (less oatmeal bumpy) and cake-y cookie… and don’t mind the gluten, then you can add some whole wheat flour.
Or my fave way is to add buckwheat flour that’s naturally gluten-free despite “wheat” in the name.
I love an easy gluten-free buckwheat ginger cookie snap.
If you add 1/2 cup gluten flour, you can fill a 9″ pan of cookie that’ll turn out more like a cookie-cake. There will be a little rise and it’ll be softer and spongier like a cake so it’s easier to cut.
You can even cut a cool geometric star pattern shape like this gigantic chocolate oat cookie (cake?) that’s doubly starred ⭐️⭐️ with an orange star inside the kaleidoscope cut star pattern. Do you see it?
The cuts are good for tearing and sharing, and will impress most and especially science fair aged-ones.
But if you prefer a solid cookie or wouldn’t miss the raisins, you can try this low-sugar oatmeal chocolate chip cookie that looks a lot like the signature C.C. cookie 🍪 I sat next to when I was a Doubletree Hotel catering manager.
But the baking recipe I share is without any of the sticks of butt-ah that made it paperweight heavy.
And now that we have all the cookies out of the bag, the ingredient that ties all the cookies together is the oats.
With all the grocery variety shelf options these modern days, old-fashioned oats are the best value… they cost minimal and are minimal processed (vs. instant oats). And wherever you shop, it’s usually next to the 1-minute oats.
The slow oats are the better option. And since you’re baking them and not making oatmeal, they’re time-less.
The magical oven will work out that cooking time process.
…Maybe why oatmeal is part of the famous oatmeal raisin cookie’s name.
And while oats bind the cookies together, what makes this oa-tea cookie recipe a special-tea is the Earl Grey tea choice added to the cookie batter.
The tea is good for a couple reasons (or raisins 😊). Earl Grey is a brisk bergamot black tea that can be strong. And maybe why it’s U.K.’s traditional tea. 🇬🇧
And I’ve been adding raisins to drinking Early Grey that gives it a bergamot forward citrus flavor. Earl Grey is good for breakfast or an afternoon tea. And a perfect cookie pair fit where you can do tastings with different cookies like starting with an oatmeal raisin cookie. You could try a holiday lemon cookie.
Early Grey is versatile, but had ladylike (adult) tastes. Like other black teas, it’s usually sweeter (vs. green tea = bitter). And raisins mellow out all those tastes and flavors for a smoother drinking ride.
The tea also plumps up the raisins. And you could plump up raisins in your enhanced puffery oatmeal raisin cookie if you pre-soak them in brewed tea before you add to your cookie batter.
But if you don’t have Earl Grey tea on hand, for cookie batter, you can sub with/use milk , coffee, or any liquid as substitution.
No need for a panic store run. You can get creative and use the same Dry January warm beverage you’re also brewing and drinking on hand. If it’s good as a drink, it’ll be better in a cookie! 🍪
How easy… as promised for this One-Bowl oatmeal raisin cookie.
And if you’re wondering if this cookie will be sweet enough (as it calls for no table sugar like most cookies), you can add healthier natural sweetness that come straight from the source like maple syrup or honey.
If you’re feeling Pitta (e.g. signs of feeling irritated, have warm skin to the touch, or breaking out signs) maple syrup will help you out as it’s a cooling ingredient. Fitting why it’s a staple up north. 🇨🇦
So now you have an American oatmeal raisin cookie with English-speaking cousin country ingredients.
And if you’re feeling cool, you may want a warmer ingredient.
Sinus-congested Kaphas can use honey in your cookie batter. Raw honey helps to loosen up the gunk and if you’re feeling slow going.🫖
Plus a dry oatmeal raisin will be good for drying out Kaphas that tend to have moist skin.
And with all the mouthful deets, I think you’re ready to make this ready-to-be-eaten cookie.
Gluten-Free Oatmeal Cookie (One-Bowl Easy)
Ingredients
- 2/3 cup ground oats
- 1 Tbsp maple syrup (or honey)
- 1 Tbsp baking powder
- 1 Tbsp yogurt
- 1/8 cup Earl Grey tea
- 2 Tbsp raisins (or 40 raisins)
- 1 tsp cocoa powder
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- 1 egg
- pinch of salt
Instructions
- Spray your baking pan with baking spray or brush light olive oil. You can use your round cake pans.
- Make the one-bowl cookie batter: Combine ingredients with a silverware spoon but reserve the Earl Grey tea and raisins.
- Optional: brew your Earl Grey tea and add the raisins to the warm tea. This will help plump raisins up. You can do for some, all, or none. And then add the tea and about 3/4 of the raisins (30 raisins/1.5 Tbsp) to the cookie batter.
- Shape your cookie with your spoon and a knife or offset spatula is helpful. This makes one 6 inch cookie or a few smaller cookies.
- Add the remaining raisins on top so they're visible.
- Bake at 350°F/180°C for 25-30 minutes for soft-crispy cookie doneness preference. Enjoy!


