Amped-Up Protein Overnight Oats for Women Over 50 (32g Protein, No Powder)
At 61, I have stopped chasing trendy breakfasts and started asking one question of everything I eat: is this protecting my muscle? After 50, that is the question that matters most. We lose muscle a little faster with every decade, and muscle is what keeps us strong, steady, and independent.
That is why I keep coming back to overnight oats. Five minutes the night before, and breakfast is waiting for me in the morning. No scrambling, no skipping, no grabbing something sugary on the way out the door.
This version is different: 32 grams of protein and 12 grams of fiber, with not a scoop of protein powder in sight. Greek yogurt, hemp seeds, and chia do the protein lifting together, no powder and no chalkiness. (Adapted from the lovely Joy to the Food, made my own.)
32g protein · 12g fiber · 5 minutes of work
Why protein matters more after 50
Somewhere after 50, our bodies get less efficient at turning the food we eat into muscle. Eat too little protein and the body quietly borrows from the muscle you already have. Over the years, that is what becomes weak knees, a struggle with the stairs, and the loss of independence no one warns you about.
The fix is not complicated: aim for protein at every meal, roughly 30 grams, starting with breakfast. Most of us fall short in the morning, which is exactly why this bowl earns its place.
32 grams of protein, no powder required
You do not need a tub of protein powder to hit your number. Greek yogurt, hemp seeds, chia, and milk stack up to real-food protein on their own, gentler on the stomach and food your body recognizes. Use frozen mixed berries and they thaw while the oats set overnight, leaving the prettiest purple swirl by morning, and bringing the antioxidants that help protect your cells, and your DNA, as you age. Find more of my recipes here.
Ingredients
- ½ cup rolled oats (not instant or steel-cut)
- 1 tablespoon chia seeds
- 1¼ tablespoons hemp seeds (or ground flaxseed)
- ½ teaspoon maple syrup
- Pinch of sea salt
- ⅓ cup Greek yogurt
- 1 cup milk (any kind)
- ½ cup mixed frozen berries
How to Make It
Step 1. Add everything to a mason jar or bowl and stir well. Taste, and adjust the salt or maple syrup to your liking. It will look a little loose at first, and that is normal. Prefer thicker oats? Use ⅔ cup milk instead of a full cup.
Step 2. If you like them warm, leave the berries out for now and stir them in after reheating, they cool the oats and make everything saucy.
Step 3. Cover and refrigerate at least 6 hours (overnight is perfect). Eat them cold, or warm them with a splash of milk and a drizzle of honey. Top with berries and go.
Chef Tips
- Try them warm. Heat the base, stir in frozen berries as they thaw, and add a splash of cream. It is completely different from cold overnight oats, creamy and cozy, and worth it even in summer.
- Make a few at once. Stir up 3 or 4 jars on Sunday night and breakfast is sorted all week. Give them a stir before eating, the chia settles overnight.
- Keep the chia in check. The amount here is on purpose, too much and the oats turn gloopy.
- Make it yours. A splash of vanilla, a spoonful of peanut butter, a little cinnamon, or a few dark chocolate chips all work beautifully.
Per serving: about 510 calories · 32g protein · 12g fiber.

Amped-Up Protein Overnight Oats
Ingredients
- 1/2 cup rolled oats
- 1 tablespoon chia seeds
- 1 1/4 tablespoons hemp seeds
- 1/2 teaspoon maple syrup
- 1 pinch sea salt
- 1/3 cup Greek yogurt
- 1 cup milk
- 1/2 cup mixed frozen berries
Instructions
- Add everything to a mason jar or bowl and stir well. Taste and adjust the salt or maple syrup to your liking. Prefer thicker oats? Use 2/3 cup milk.
- If you like them warm, leave the berries out and stir them in after reheating.
- Cover and refrigerate at least 6 hours. Eat cold, or warm with a splash of milk and a drizzle of honey. Top with berries and go.
Strong starts at breakfast
The little choices are the ones that add up. A breakfast like this does not ask much of you, five minutes and a jar, but it sets the tone for a day where your body gets what it actually needs to stay strong.
That is the whole idea behind everything I do at 61: small, doable habits that keep us strong and independent for the long haul. Start with one good breakfast. Tomorrow, do it again.
Julie Ellis is a NASM-certified personal trainer and nutrition coach and the founder of Sixty Strong. At 61, she helps women over 50 build strength and stay independent with joint-friendly workouts and real-food nutrition.
xo, Julie