Muesli vs. Oatmeal vs. Granola: Essential Differences
Written by MasterClass
Last updated: Nov 12, 2021 • 2 min read
Muesli, oatmeal, and granola are all breakfast options that contain oats, but they have varying preparations. Learn more about the differences between muesli, oatmeal, and granola.
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What Is Muesli?
Muesli is a mixture of whole grains, nuts, seeds, and dried fruit. The mixture soaks overnight in milk or water, and you can enjoy the ready-to-eat muesli the following day as a cold breakfast cereal. You can also simmer muesli with milk or water on the stove to prepare hot porridge. Whole grains for muesli can include raw oats and corn flakes. Nuts and seed mix-ins can consist of cashews, almonds, pecans, chia seeds, and sunflower seeds. Popular dried fruits for muesli are apricots, cherries, and cranberries.
What Is Oatmeal?
Oatmeal is a breakfast porridge made with raw oats and whole milk, nut milk, or water. The mixture is traditionally simmered on a stove until thickened and warm. You can eat this breakfast staple plain or add brown sugar, maple syrup, vanilla extract, peanut butter, chocolate chips, fresh fruits, dried fruits, or nuts for added flavor. You can also prepare overnight oats, a version of oatmeal that doesn’t require cooking. Soak the oats in milk or water overnight, then consume cold the next morning with various toppings and flavorings.
What Is Granola?
Granola is a breakfast and snack food made with a base mixture of rolled, old-fashioned oats and sweetener (such as honey or brown sugar), then baked. Granola recipes can have a wide range of mix-ins added to the oats, but common ones include dried fruit, chocolate, and nuts. Granola has a loose texture similar to breakfast cereal, and it is often eaten served over milk, yogurt, or with fresh fruit. When granola is layered with yogurt and fruit in a tall, clear glass, it is called a parfait, which is a popular dessert. Granola can also be pressed with honey or corn syrup to form a granola bar, which is a common snack during outdoor activities like hiking, backpacking, and camping, as they don’t require refrigeration and can be easily packed and carried.
Muesli vs. Oatmeal vs. Granola: What’s the Difference?
Muesli, oatmeal, and granola are all popular breakfast foods. Each of these breakfast items contain oats, but they have varying preparations:
- Oats: Muesli and granola feature rolled oats, also known as old-fashioned oats. Rolled oats are typically larger than steel-cut oats, which gives muesli and granola more texture. You can make oatmeal with rolled oats or steel-cut oats, which yields a smoother texture than oatmeal with rolled oats.
- Additional ingredients: Muesli and granola are mixtures of oats, nuts, and dried fruit. Granola also contains sweeteners such as honey or agave syrup to bind the dry ingredients together to form clusters. Muesli requires milk or water, and some commercial brands include sugar. Oatmeal is a simpler mix of just oats and milk or water—sweeteners, fruit, and nuts are optional.
- Preparation: You can cook muesli and oatmeal on the stove as a hot porridge, or soak them overnight to make cold porridge. Granola is baked in the oven with a neutral oil (such as olive oil, coconut oil, or vegetable oil) on a baking sheet until golden-brown and crunchy.
- Consumption: You can eat muesli and oatmeal as whole meals by themselves, while granola serves as a snack, trail mix, or yogurt topping.
- Health benefits: The oats in muesli, oatmeal, and granola are a source of fiber (particularly beta-glucan), carbohydrates, antioxidants, magnesium, potassium, and phosphorus.
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