I love making simple and healthy plant-based breakfasts and when I’m not making my vegan crepes or vegan pancakes, I make a smoothie bowl, like Vegan Açaí Bowl or Pitaya Bowl. If I want something even more summery, I make one with strawberries and bananas. A Banana Smoothie Bowl is a thicker smoothie served, in a bowl with pieces of fresh fruit for a delicious nutrient-loaded breakfast. Who doesn’t love a smoothie bowl for breakfast? It’s like serving ice cream for breakfast with all the benefits of adding healthy breakfast toppings you have in the pantry. So let’s see how you can make this banana strawberry smoothie bowl at home.
How To Make Strawberry Banana Smoothie Bowl
This is the easiest recipe ever to start the day with a healthy breakfast. All you need to make a thick, creamy smoothie bowl are 3-ingredients:
Frozen Ripe Bananas – peel, cut them in chunks, and place them in an airtight container in the freezer the day before. Frozen Strawberries – you can freeze freshly picked strawberries or buy ready frozen strawberries. Unsweetened Almond Milk – or any non-dairy milk you love like oat milk, coconut milk, or soy milk for a protein boost.
You can make a smoothie bowl in a food processor or a high-speed blender. Both options work, but I tend to prefer my food processor as the large blade makes it easier to blend the frozen fruits.
Food Processor Option
You can also add all the ingredients directly into a food processor.
Expert Tips for Texture
The key is to make a smoothie bowl thick and not runny, is a perfect ratio of frozen fruits to liquid. You must weigh the frozen fruits in grams or ounces and don’t use measuring cups for frozen fruits. It won’t be accurate, and then you will struggle to adjust the amount of non-dairy milk, adding too much, and turning the bowl into a runny smoothie. So to make a thick smoothie bowl like nice cream, always aim for this exact combo of ingredients:
6 oz of frozen fruits – any frozen fruits strawberry, banana, pineapple, mango. Don’t use fresh fruit for smoothie bowls! 1/2 cup non-dairy milk of choice.
The best fruits to increase the thickness of smoothie bowls are:
Ripe banana Mango Dried dates
Making High-Protein Smoothie Bowl
If you want to make the smoothie bowl a bit thicker, add high protein or high fiber ingredients like:
plant-based protein powder cashews chia seeds flaxseed meal nut butter like almond butter or peanut butter. Homemade granola such as my Chocolate Granola or my Peanut Butter Granola Recipe.
However, note that adding any of these ingredients will make the smoothie difficult to blend. It means you will have to add more non-dairy milk, 1 tablespoon at a time. If your smoothie bowl is difficult to blend, add more non-dairy milk 1 tablespoon at a time, not more! Blend between each addition, scraping down the jug’s sides with the blender tamper or spatula for the food processor. Patience and slow addition of liquid are the magic ingredients to keep the smoothie bowl thick.
Best Toppings
Smoothie bowls are healthy breakfasts as long as you add the right smoothie bowl toppings to them. A smoothie bowl itself is basically fruits and milk of choice. It means it brings you vitamins, fiber, and carbs from fruits and protein from milk. The best toppings for smoothie bowls are the ones that add complementary nutrition like:
Seeds – most seeds are great sources of plant-based proteins, vitamins, and fiber. They are also gut-friendly and fulfilling. Great seeds to add on top of your smoothie bowl are pumpkin seeds, hemp seeds, sunflower seeds, chia seeds, or golden flaxseeds. Grains – oats, buckwheat cereals, puffed quinoa all these grains are great sources of plant-based protein and fiber as well to keep you full. Nut butter Coconut flakes Fresh fruits – a smoothie bowl is often topped with fresh fruits like blueberries, raspberries, sliced bananas, and fresh strawberries.
More Vegan Smoothie Bowls
If you love this strawberry banana smoothie bowl recipe, you may also want to try one of my plant-based smoothie bowl below.