Kids

DIY Dino Egg Oatmeal: Find Your Inner-Child (& the Hidden Dinosaurs)

My name is Riddley and I have a confession. It’s terrible, horrible confession: From the ages of 8 to 14, I seldom (really, never) ate breakfast. There was nary an egg, a piece of toast, or fruit in sight. I have no reason besides laziness.

Not dino egg oatmeal. Photo by James Ransom

There was, however, one breakfast worth setting an alarm for: Dinosaur Eggs Oatmeal. Most mornings, the anticipation of ripping open one of those brown Quaker packets while waiting for the kettle to boil was almost too much for me to bear. I wanted my oatmeal and I wanted it now, preferably consumed while watching Rocky and Bullwinkle cartoons.

But, oh, was it wait worth the wait: Adding just enough water to avoid watery oats, stirring (with a fork, as Quaker’s website suggests), watching the white shell around the eggs disappear to reveal the colorful dinosaur within, and consuming the brown sugar-heavy oats in one minute flat.

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On the weekends, I’d use two oatmeal packets. Yes, I was crazy like that.

Not dino egg oatmeal. Photo by Mark Weinberg

Now, I’ll wake up an hour early just to eat breakfast. Even—okay, especially—if it’s dinosaur eggs oatmeal. And since I’m the kind of person who can let anything be, I decided to make my own version, borrowing the coating technique from puppy chow to form an “egg shell” around dinosaur-shaped sprinkles. If you like your oatmeal completely inundated with dinosaur eggs (and who can blame you), double the egg recipe!

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Top Comment:
“As someone who ate this regularly as a child (and had a bowl or two in the test kitchen last week), I think a homemade version sounds AWESOME. Also, your technique is inspired! ”
— Sarah J.
Comment

The hardest part of making the oatmeal is, and will always be, waiting for the water to boil.

Dino egg oatmeal! Photo by Alpha Smoot

Dinosaur Eggs Oatmeal

Makes eleven to twelve 1/2-cup servings

For the dinosaur eggs:

1/4 cup white chocolate chips
1 tablespoon unsalted butter
1/4 cup dinosaur-shaped sprinkles
1/2 cup confectioners' sugar

For the instant oatmeal:

5 cups quick (or instant) oats, divided
1 teaspoon kosher salt
1/2 cup dark brown sugar
1/2 cup dry milk powder

For the dinosaur eggs, place the white chocolate and butter in a microwave-safe bowl. Microwave in 30-second increments, stirring in between, until the chocolate is melted. Quickly add the sprinkles and stir to coat. The sprinkles might start to bleed a little, but that’s okay! Transfer this to a resealable quart-sized plastic bag and add to the confectioners' sugar.

Photo by Alpha Smoot

Now, it’s time to shake it like a Polaroid picture. Shake the bag to coat and separate the sprinkles, periodically squeezing the larger clumps. Keep shaking until “eggs” form. Some eggs will be bigger than others, but this just means there’s multiple dinosaurs hiding inside. If this bothers you, gently break up the larger clumps into smaller eggs using your fingers.

For the instant oatmeal, place 3 cups of the oats into a large bowl. Put the remaining 2 cups into a blender and process until powdery, then place into the bowl with the whole oats. Add the salt, brown sugar, and powdered milk and whisk to combine. Add the dinosaur eggs and use your hands to mix and evenly distribute. Transfer this to an airtight container to store.

Photo by Alpha Smoot

For serving, place 1/2 cup of the oatmeal into a bowl and add boiling water until you get your desired consistency. Stir with a fork and watch those eggs dissolve! Feel the child-like happiness. Serve.

See the full recipe (and save and print it) here.

See what other Food52 readers are saying.

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    Jennifer Geller
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    Sarah Jampel
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    Richard
I fall in love with every sandwich I ever meet.

6 Comments

Jennifer G. November 27, 2015
My son loves it - thanks!!!
 
Ashley L. November 21, 2015
I think this is a neat recipe. I'd definitely make this for a small child (um okay myself lol). I like homemade versions of recipes like this . Thanks!
 
Kat November 17, 2015
Ugh, really?! No thank you! ;-)
 
Sarah J. November 17, 2015
As someone who ate this regularly as a child (and had a bowl or two in the test kitchen last week), I think a homemade version sounds AWESOME. Also, your technique is inspired!
 
Richard November 17, 2015
That sounds disgusting. No thanks
 
katey November 8, 2016
I haven't tried this homemade version, but I can definitely vouch for the store bought version!