Cottage Cheese Egg Bites for Women Over 50 (15g Protein, Meal-Prep Breakfast)
At 61, the breakfasts that actually stick are the ones I can grab and go. No cooking when I am already out the door. That is why I meal-prep, and these cottage cheese egg bites stay in heavy rotation.
If you love the Starbucks bacon and gruyere egg bites, these are better and cost a fraction of the price. Fifteen grams of protein in every bite, and a simple steam-bath trick that makes them just as creamy as the ones from the cafe.

Cottage Cheese Egg Bites
Ingredients
- 9 eggs
- 14 oz cottage cheese 2%
- 8 oz gruyere cheese shredded
- 6 tablespoons all-purpose flour gluten-free works too
- 1/2 yellow onion or white, diced small
- 5 slices bacon or bacon bits to save time
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
- 1/4 teaspoon pepper
- 1/4 teaspoon red pepper flakes optional
Instructions
- Heat the oven to 425F. Lay the bacon and diced onion on a foil-lined tray and bake about 15 minutes, until crispy. Set aside. (Using bacon bits? Skip this step.) A silicone muffin mold works beautifully here, or line a muffin tin.
- Reduce the oven to 350F and make a steam bath: set a rimmed dish on the bottom rack and carefully pour in boiling water. This is what gives you that creamy, cafe-style texture.
- Blend the eggs, cottage cheese, flour, half the gruyere, salt, pepper, and the optional red pepper flakes until smooth, about 45 to 60 seconds.
- Pour the mixture into a 12-cup muffin tin. Sprinkle the bacon and onion over each, stir lightly to distribute, and top with the remaining gruyere.
- Bake 20 minutes on the upper rack, with the water pan beneath. The centers should be set but slightly jiggly. Broil the last 5 minutes for a golden top.
Notes
Make a batch on Sunday and breakfast is handled all week. (Adapted from Joy to the Food, made my own.)
15g protein per bite · 12 bites · meal-prep friendly
Protein you can grab on the way out
The hardest part of eating well after 50 is not knowing what to eat, it is having it ready when life is moving. These bites solve that. Make them once and you have grab-and-go protein for days, no decision and no cooking required.
The trick to creamy egg bites
A pan of hot water on the rack beneath them. That steam is the whole secret to the soft, custardy texture you pay for at the cafe. Cottage cheese does the rest, melting in for protein and creaminess without a trace of curd. Find more of my recipes here.
Ingredients
- 9 eggs
- 14 oz cottage cheese (2%)
- 8 oz gruyere cheese, shredded
- 6 tablespoons all-purpose flour (gluten-free works too)
- ½ yellow onion (or white), diced small
- 5 slices bacon (or bacon bits to save time)
- ¼ teaspoon salt
- ¼ teaspoon pepper
- ¼ teaspoon red pepper flakes (optional)
How to Make It
Step 1. Heat the oven to 425°F. Lay the bacon and diced onion on a foil-lined tray and bake about 15 minutes, until crispy. Set aside. (Using bacon bits? Skip this step.) A silicone muffin mold works beautifully here, or line a muffin tin.
Step 2. Reduce the oven to 350°F and make a steam bath: set a rimmed dish on the bottom rack and carefully pour in boiling water. This is what gives you that creamy, cafe-style texture.
Step 3. Blend the eggs, cottage cheese, flour, half the gruyere, salt, pepper, and the optional red pepper flakes until smooth, about 45 to 60 seconds.
Step 4. Pour the mixture into a 12-cup muffin tin. Sprinkle the bacon and onion over each, stir lightly to distribute, and top with the remaining gruyere.
Step 5. Bake 20 minutes on the upper rack, with the water pan beneath. The centers should be set but slightly jiggly. Broil the last 5 minutes for a golden top.
Chef Tips
- Meal-prep all week. Keep in the fridge up to 5 days, or freeze up to 3 months.
- Reheat fast. 30 seconds from the fridge, 60 to 90 seconds from frozen.
- Make them yours. Swap in spinach, peppers, or a different cheese, whatever you have on hand.
Per bite: 201 calories · 15g protein · 6g carbs.
Strong starts at breakfast
Independence is built on ordinary mornings done well. When breakfast is ready and full of protein, you start the day ahead instead of behind.
Make a batch this weekend. Future you, halfway out the door, will be glad you did.
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