spinach banana cottage cheese pancakes​

Spinach Banana Cottage Cheese Pancakes

Craving something sweet but secretly good for you? These spinach banana cottage cheese pancakes blend up green, cook up golden, and taste like a treat.

Spinach banana cottage cheese pancakes are a blended batter made from oats, banana, spinach, cottage cheese, and eggs, cooked into soft golden pancakes with no visible greens. This recipe serves 2 to 3 people, delivers fluffy, protein-packed pancakes with a naturally sweet banana flavor, and works well for a quick weekday breakfast or a make-ahead meal prep option.

These spinach banana cottage cheese pancakes came out of a Tuesday morning where I had wilting spinach, two overripe bananas, and zero patience for measuring flour. I tossed everything in the blender instead of mixing it by hand, and the batter turned this pale mint green that had my kid convinced I’d made a mistake.

It wasn’t. The color disappears once they hit the griddle, and the pancakes taste like banana, not salad.

Why You’ll Love These Pancakes

These pancakes taste like banana bread but cook in under ten minutes flat. The blender does all the work, so there’s no flour to measure and no dry ingredients to sift. Kids who won’t touch spinach on a plate will eat it here without noticing, and the cottage cheese keeps every bite soft instead of rubbery. This is a solid weekday breakfast when you want protein without a production.

spinach banana cottage cheese pancakes​

Spinach Banana Cottage Cheese Pancakes

These spinach banana cottage cheese pancakes are a quick blended breakfast made with oats, banana, spinach, cottage cheese, and egg. They cook up soft, golden, naturally sweet, and protein-packed with no visible greens.
Prep Time 5 minutes
Cook Time 5 minutes
Resting Time 2 minutes
Total Time 10 minutes
Course Breakfast
Cuisine American
Servings 2 servings
Calories 220 kcal

Equipment

  • Blender
  • Nonstick griddle
  • Spatula
  • Measuring Cups
  • Measuring Spoons

Ingredients
  

Main Ingredients

  • 1 cup Old-fashioned oats use certified gluten-free oats if needed
  • 2 small Bananas ripe or overripe for best sweetness
  • ½ cup Spinach loosely packed, about a handful
  • ½ cup Cottage cheese room temperature preferred
  • 1 Egg

Spices and Flavor

  • 1 tsp Vanilla extract
  • 1 tsp Baking powder
  • 1 tsp Cinnamon

For Cooking and Serving

  • Butter for coating the griddle
  • Honey optional topping
  • Maple syrup optional topping
  • Peanut butter optional topping
  • Fresh fruit optional topping

Instructions
 

  • Add the oats, bananas, spinach, cottage cheese, egg, vanilla extract, baking powder, and cinnamon to a blender.
  • Blend until completely smooth, the spinach is no longer visible, and the batter is uniformly light green with no dark flecks. This should take about 45 seconds; blend another 10 to 15 seconds if needed.
  • Let the batter rest in the blender jar for 1 to 2 minutes so the oats can absorb some liquid and the baking powder can begin activating.
  • Heat a nonstick griddle over medium-low heat and coat it with butter.
  • Pour the batter onto the griddle to form pancakes. Cook until the edges start to brown and set.
  • Flip the pancakes carefully and cook the second side until lightly browned and cooked through.
  • Serve warm with honey, maple syrup, peanut butter, fresh fruit, or your favorite toppings.

Notes

Use very ripe, spotted bananas for the sweetest flavor and smoothest batter. Blend long enough that no spinach flecks remain, or the pancakes may have a slightly grassy taste. Keep the griddle at medium-low heat because this batter is wetter than standard pancake batter and needs time to cook through without scorching. If the batter is too thin, let it rest for a few minutes so the oats can thicken it naturally. If the pancakes stick, add a little more butter to the pan. If the centers are gummy, lower the heat and cook them longer. For a dairy-free version, swap the cottage cheese for the same amount of dairy-free yogurt. Baby kale can replace spinach in the same quantity. Store cooked pancakes at room temperature for up to 2 hours, in the refrigerator for 3 to 4 days, or in the freezer for up to 2 months. Reheat in a toaster or dry skillet for the best texture.
Keyword banana cottage cheese pancakes, blender pancakes, healthy breakfast, oat pancakes, protein pancakes, spinach banana cottage cheese pancakes, spinach pancakes

What Ingredients Do You Need for Spinach Banana Cottage Cheese Pancakes?

spinach banana cottage cheese pancakes​ Ingredients

Main Ingredients

  • Old-fashioned oats – 1 cup, blends into the base
  • Small bananas – 2, riper means sweeter
  • Spinach – about ½ cup loosely packed, a handful
  • Cottage cheese – ½ cup, adds protein and moisture
  • Egg – 1, binds the batter

Spices and Flavor

  • Vanilla extract – 1 teaspoon
  • Baking powder – 1 teaspoon, helps them puff
  • Cinnamon – 1 teaspoon, warms up the banana

Optional Toppings

  • Honey
  • Maple syrup
  • Peanut butter
  • Fresh fruit

The oats replace flour entirely here, which is what makes this pancake batter come together in one blender jar. Cottage cheese is doing double duty too. It’s not just protein, it’s what keeps the texture soft instead of dense once the pancakes hit the pan.

The spinach banana combination sounds strange until you actually make it. Banana dominates the flavor completely, and the spinach just fades into the green color. If you’ve made banana oat blender muffins before, this uses the exact same no-fuss blending logic.

How to Make Spinach Banana Cottage Cheese Pancakes Step by Step

How to Make spinach banana cottage cheese pancakes​
  1. Add all ingredients to your blender and blend until smooth, the spinach is no longer visible, and the batter turns light green.
  2. Heat a nonstick griddle to medium-low and coat it with butter, then pour and cook the pancakes until the edges start to brown.
  3. Serve warm with your favorite toppings.

Tip: I put my blender on smoothie mode and blended for about 45 seconds. That’s usually the sweet spot for a fully smooth, no-fleck batter.

Pro Tip: The batter should look uniformly light green with zero dark flecks of spinach before you stop blending. If you still see chunks, blend for another 10 to 15 seconds.

Tip: Medium-low heat matters more than you’d think. Too hot and the outside browns before the inside sets, since this batter is wetter than a standard flour-based pancake batter.

Pro Tip: Wait for the edges to brown and set before flipping. That’s your visual cue that the pancake is ready to hold together.

spinach banana cottage cheese pancakes​ Recipe

Expert Tips for Perfect Spinach Banana Cottage Cheese Pancakes

Pro Tips for Success

The key to a fully smooth batter is giving the blender enough time and not rushing it. I’ve pulled the blender early before, and you end up with green flecks and a slightly grassy bite you can actually taste.

For best results, use bananas that are more spotted than yellow. Riper bananas break down easier in the blender and give the whole batch more natural sweetness, so you can skip added sugar entirely.

The most common mistake is cranking the heat too high on the griddle. Instead, keep it at medium-low so the center cooks through before the outside scorches.

Spinach banana cottage cheese pancakes work best when the cottage cheese is at room temperature before blending. Cold cottage cheese straight from the fridge can make the batter blend unevenly.

Let the batter rest in the blender jar for a minute or two before pouring the first pancake. It gives the baking powder a chance to start activating, and I’ve noticed the second batch always puffs up slightly more than the first.

Delicious Variations

Dairy-Free Version: Swap the cottage cheese for a dairy-free yogurt alternative in the same amount. The texture will be a touch less protein-dense but still blends smooth.

Alternative Ingredients: No spinach on hand? Baby kale works in the same quantity and blends just as invisibly into the batter.

Quick Version: Skip the toppings entirely and eat these plain straight off the griddle. Honestly, the banana sweetness carries the whole thing on its own.

Troubleshooting Common Problems

Problem: The batter is too thin and spreads all over the griddle.
Solution: Let it rest for a few minutes before cooking. The oats absorb liquid as they sit, thickening things up naturally.

Problem: Pancakes stick to the pan even though it’s nonstick.
Solution: Add a bit more butter than you think you need. This batter is wetter than traditional pancake batter and needs the extra fat to release cleanly.

Problem: The centers stay gummy even after the edges brown.
Solution: Lower your heat further and give each pancake more time. Gummy centers almost always mean the heat is too high for how thick this batter is.

How to Store and Reheat Spinach Banana Cottage Cheese Pancakes

Storage MethodDurationBest Practice
Room Temperature2 hoursCover loosely, best eaten same day
Refrigerator3 to 4 daysStore in an airtight container
Freezer2 monthsFreeze in a single layer first, then bag

Reheat these in the toaster or a dry skillet over medium-low heat until the edges crisp back up slightly and the center feels warm through. The microwave works in a pinch, but the pancakes come out softer and a little damp instead of crisp at the edges.

Leftover pancakes make a solid base for a quick trifle if you layer crumbled pieces with yogurt and fruit. They also work crumbled into a bowl with peanut butter and sliced banana for a five-minute breakfast the next day.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I make spinach banana cottage cheese pancakes ahead of time?

Yes. Blend the batter and store it covered in the refrigerator for up to 24 hours, or cook the pancakes fully and reheat them later in the week.

Can I substitute the cottage cheese?

You can use ricotta or a dairy-free yogurt in the same amount. The texture will shift slightly but the pancakes still blend smooth and cook the same way.

How do I know when the pancakes are done cooking?

Watch the edges. Once they start to visibly brown and set, flip the pancake, then cook the second side until it also browns lightly.

Can I freeze these pancakes?

Yes, freeze cooked pancakes in a single layer until firm, then transfer them to a freezer bag for up to 2 months. Reheat straight from frozen in a toaster.

Can I make this recipe gluten-free?

Use certified gluten-free old-fashioned oats in place of regular oats. Everything else in the recipe is naturally gluten-free.

Give These a Try

Seriously, if you’ve got two overripe bananas sitting on your counter right now, this is the move. It takes one blender jar, one pan, and about ten minutes start to finish.

If you liked this one, you’ll probably want to check out the original cottage cheese and spinach pancakes recipe too, or browse this ambrosia salad recipe if you’re planning out the rest of the week.

Save this to Pinterest so you don’t lose it, and drop a comment below once you’ve made it. I mean it, I want to know if your kids notice the green.

Conclusion

Spinach banana cottage cheese pancakes give you a fast, protein-packed breakfast that hides real vegetables without any weird aftertaste. One blender, one pan, ten minutes, and you’re eating.

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