Starbucks’ First Certified Vegan Breakfast Is Overnight Grains
Photos by Maxine Builder
If you’ve ever tried to eat vegan at Starbucks, you know that it can be pretty slim pickings. Sure, most Starbucks drinks can be customized to exclude dairy. (After all, the company has been offering soy milk since 2004 and recently upped its non-dairy game with the addition of almond milk last fall.) But if you’re looking for a vegan food at Starbucks, you’ve been basically limited to fruit cups, a plain bagel, and packaged snacks like select Kind bars, mixed nuts, and Hippeas. That all changes this week, though, with the introduction of Starbucks’ first certified vegan breakfast. Called Overnight Grains, it’s made by “cooking” quinoa, chia seeds, and steel-cut oats in coconut milk. It’s served with a layer of pineapple and mango at the bottom, along with almond slices and toasted coconut.
I visited a store in Manhattan that was offering this new Starbucks breakfast item, and, to be quite honest, it didn’t really look that pretty, even with colorful layer of tropical fruit. But perhaps that’s to be expected because, well, it’s oatmeal. The packaging, however, is compact and functional. The label on the top says, “Certified Vegan,” and it’s clearly designed to be an on-the-go breakfast, especially since they’re kept with the other grab-and-go foods in the fridge, like the Bistro Boxes. When you take off the plastic lid, you see that the almond and toasted coconut slices are kept in a separate container above the actual oatmeal, so they don’t get soggy. It also means you can add as many or as few almonds as you’d like.
Aesthetics aside, I was excited to try Starbucks’ new vegan breakfast, and I wasn’t disappointed. The overnight grains taste really good. You’d never know there was no dairy included unless you read the label closely. They’re that creamy and rich. The fruit at the bottom is nice and bright without being too tart, and the almonds add a nice crunch and texture to the otherwise soft grains.
