Kefir is an underrated breakfast base. Thicker than milk, tangier than yogurt, naturally rich in protein and probiotics. Here are seven recipes I've refined over the last year — ratios, techniques, and the small details that make them work.
1. The classic smoothie bowl
- 200 ml kefir (24+ hour fermented for thickness)
- 1 frozen banana
- 100 g frozen mixed berries
- 1 tablespoon ground flaxseed
- 1 tablespoon honey or maple syrup
Blend until thick and pourable. Pour into a wide bowl, top with granola, fresh fruit, a drizzle of nut butter. The trick to a spoonable consistency (not drinkable) is using frozen fruit and limiting liquid. If it won't blend, add 30-50 ml more kefir until it moves.
2. Overnight oats with kefir
- 50 g rolled oats
- 200 ml kefir
- 1 tablespoon chia seeds
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 1 tablespoon maple syrup
- Optional: peanut butter, fresh fruit, cocoa nibs
Combine everything in a jar. Refrigerate overnight (8-12 hours). Eat cold straight from the jar. The oats absorb the kefir completely; the chia seeds add gel-like texture. The kefir slightly ferments the oats overnight, making them easier to digest.
3. Real American buttermilk pancakes
Pancakes that use kefir instead of milk + baking powder rise differently — the acid-base reaction with baking soda creates more bubbles, lighter texture, taller pancakes.
- 250 g all-purpose flour
- 15 g sugar
- 3 g baking soda
- 3 g baking powder
- Pinch of salt
- 250 ml kefir
- 1 egg
- 30 g melted butter
Mix dry separately, mix wet separately. Combine briefly (don't overmix — small lumps are fine). Rest 5 minutes — you'll see bubbles rise. Cook on medium-low heat in a non-stick pan, 2-2.5 minutes per side.
4. Greek-style parfait with figs and walnuts
Strain kefir for 4-6 hours through cheesecloth in a fine-mesh strainer over a bowl. The result is a thick, spoonable kefir-cream the consistency of Greek yogurt. Layer in a glass:
- Spoon of strained kefir
- Fresh fig slices
- Toasted walnuts, roughly chopped
- Drizzle of honey
- Repeat the layers
The whey you strain out doesn't go to waste — use it to marinate chicken or in pancake batter.
5. Avocado-kefir green smoothie
- 250 ml kefir
- ½ ripe avocado
- 1 handful spinach
- ½ green apple
- 1 teaspoon grated ginger
- Juice of ½ lime
Blend on high until completely smooth. The avocado adds creaminess and healthy fats; lime keeps it from tasting too «green». Drinkable, filling, sustains energy until lunch.
6. Kefir chia pudding (no sugar added)
- 250 ml kefir
- 3 tablespoons chia seeds
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 1 grated apple
- Cinnamon to taste
Combine, stir well, refrigerate for at least 4 hours (overnight is better). The chia absorbs the kefir into a pudding-like consistency. Top with fresh fruit and toasted almonds. Naturally sweet from the apple — no sugar needed.
7. Savory kefir bowl with eggs and herbs
For people who don't want sweet breakfasts. Pour 200 ml well-strained kefir into a shallow bowl. Top with:
- 2 soft-boiled eggs
- Fresh dill, parsley, chives
- Halved cherry tomatoes
- A pinch of flaky salt and cracked pepper
- A drizzle of good olive oil
Eat with bread for dipping. This is essentially a Persian breakfast staple, beautifully savory and protein-rich.
Tips that actually matter
- Use frozen fruit for thick smoothies. Fresh fruit + ice = watery. Frozen fruit + minimal liquid = scoopable.
- Strain kefir for thicker textures. 4-6 hours through cloth gives you Greek yogurt consistency. The whey is useful too.
- Make the night before. Overnight oats and chia puddings work overnight. Smoothies are better fresh.
- Don't overdo sweeteners.Kefir's tang carries flavor; you need less honey/maple than with milk or yogurt.
For the kefir itself: if you're not making your own yet, the beginner's guide gets you producing within 24 hours. In London, my grains are ready for pickup.