Recipe · Cutting / No-cook / High-protein

High-Protein Cottage Cheese Bowl

A tub of cottage cheese, crunchy cucumber, sweet cherry tomatoes and a heavy hand of everything-bagel seasoning, all stirred together in one bowl. Forty grams of protein, three hundred calories, and not a single thing turned on in the kitchen. This is the lunch I make when I’m hungry now and patient never.

GoalCut
Total time5 min
Servings1 big bowl
Protein / serving40 g
Calories / serving300 kcal
A bowl of cottage cheese topped with cucumber, cherry tomatoes and everything-bagel seasoning under cold light Bowl 01 / Finished

For years I thought cottage cheese was punishment food. The stuff you ate on a diet because the magazine said to, cold and bland out of a plastic tub, with the texture of something that had given up. I’d choke it down standing at the counter and feel sorry for myself. Then one summer I was deep in a cut, too tired to cook, and I dumped a tub into a bowl with the only fresh things in the fridge — half a cucumber and a handful of cherry tomatoes going soft. I shook some everything-bagel seasoning over the top because it was there. And I sat down and actually enjoyed it.

That’s the whole trick, it turns out. Cottage cheese on its own is sad. Cottage cheese with crunch, with sweetness from the tomatoes, with salt and onion and sesame from the seasoning, with a little crack of black pepper — that’s a real bowl of food. It tastes like something a person chose to eat. And the numbers are almost rude: a fat bowl that fills you up, forty grams of protein, three hundred calories, and you didn’t dirty a single pan to get there.

I make this most days I’m cutting now, usually for lunch when I want to be full but I don’t want to think. Five minutes, one bowl, a fork. No heat, no mess, no standing over a stove feeling hard done by. Just cold, savoury, satisfying food that happens to be very kind to your macros. Make it once the way I do and you’ll stop calling cottage cheese punishment too. I’ve got you.

01Who it’s for & when to eat it

Cottage cheese is one of the best lean bases a lifter can keep in the fridge, because it bends every direction you need it to. The protein is high, the calories are low, and what you stir through it decides the job. Here’s how I steer it.

On a cut

The default bowl

Low-fat cottage cheese with cucumber, cherry tomatoes and everything-bagel seasoning. Big volume, loads of protein, barely any calories — exactly what you want when you’re hungry but the day’s nearly spent. My go-to cutting lunch.

On a bulk

Build it up

Take it sweet instead — cottage cheese with granola, a drizzle of honey and a spoon of nut butter. Easy clean calories that go down without a fight when appetite’s low. Numbers are in the variations below.

On TRT

Steady fuel

Same savoury base with half an avocado and a scatter of seeds for the fats. Light on digestion, keeps you full for hours, and nothing overshot. A solid steady-day lunch.

Timing: cottage cheese is slow-digesting protein, so it’s a brilliant late lunch or an evening bowl that holds you through to morning. It’s also the easiest thing on earth to pack — assemble it cold and eat it whenever the hunger lands.

02Ingredients

Makes 1 big bowl — one generous serving. Scaling up for the week? Keep the cottage cheese and the chopped veg in separate tubs and combine just before eating, or the tomatoes will weep.

Servings 1 · adjust on the live recipe card
  • Low-fat cottage cheese200 g · 7 oz
  • Cucumber, diced60 g · ½ cup
  • Cherry tomatoes, halved60 g · ½ cup
  • Everything-bagel seasoning1 tsp
  • Spring onion, sliced optional1 tbsp
  • Lemon, juice of¼ lemon
  • Chilli flakes optional¼ tsp
  • Fresh dill or parsley, chopped1 tbsp
  • Black pepperto taste

Swaps I actually use: no everything-bagel seasoning? A pinch of salt, a pinch of garlic powder, some toasted sesame and a little dried onion does the same job. Skyr or thick Greek yoghurt works if you want the bowl smoother instead of curdy. Swap the cucumber and tomato for grated carrot, radish or roasted pepper — anything cold, crunchy and bright. And if you want it sweet instead of savoury, see the variations below; the base doesn’t mind either way.

03Step by step

Drain it

Tip off the watery liquid first

Spoon the cottage cheese into your bowl and tip off any pooled liquid sitting on top. That thin water is what makes a sad, sloppy bowl. Drain it and you get a thicker, creamier base that holds the toppings instead of drowning them.

Magnus says: drain the tub, every time. Two seconds of effort, a far better bowl.

Cottage cheese spooned into a bowl with the watery liquid being tipped off
Chop the veg

Dice the cucumber, halve the tomatoes

Dice the cucumber small so you get crunch in every forkful, and halve the cherry tomatoes so they release a little of their sweetness into the bowl. Slice the spring onion thin if you’re using it. Keep the pieces bite-sized — this is a stirred bowl, not a salad.

Diced cucumber and halved cherry tomatoes on a board ready for the bowl
Season the base

Lemon, pepper, and a squeeze of brightness

Squeeze the lemon juice over the cottage cheese and crack in plenty of black pepper. Give it a stir. The acid wakes the whole bowl up — cottage cheese can be flat on its own, and a little sharpness is what turns it into something you actually want to eat.

Magnus says: taste the base before you top it. If it’s flat, it’s almost always more lemon or more pepper.

Lemon juice and black pepper being stirred through cottage cheese
Pile it on

Veg over the top, then the seasoning

Scatter the cucumber, tomatoes and spring onion over the cottage cheese. Shower the everything-bagel seasoning across the lot, add the chilli flakes if you like a little heat, and finish with the chopped dill or parsley. Don’t fully mix it in — a little structure looks better and eats better.

Magnus says: the seasoning goes on last so it stays crunchy. Stir it in early and it just dissolves.

Cottage cheese bowl topped with cucumber, tomatoes and everything-bagel seasoning
Eat it

Straight away, while the veg is crisp

That’s it — no heat, no waiting. Eat it right away while the cucumber still snaps and the tomatoes are juicy. If you’re packing it for later, keep the veg and seasoning separate and combine when you sit down, so nothing goes soft.

Finished cottage cheese bowl with a fork, ready to eat under cold light

04The spec sheet

Real numbers, calculated — not guessed. This makes one big bowl, about 300g of food. Here’s what the whole serving and a flat 100g actually give you.

Macros — per serving & per 100g
NutrientPer servingPer 100g
Energy300 kcal100 kcal
Protein40.0 g13.3 g
Carbohydrate16.0 g5.3 g
— of which sugars11.0 g3.7 g
Fat6.5 g2.2 g
— of which saturates3.5 g1.2 g
Fibre2.0 g0.7 g
Sodium~0.85 g~0.28 g
Calorie density
100 kcal / 100g

Very low. Cottage cheese and crunchy veg are mostly water and protein, so you get a genuinely big bowl for the calories — volume is your best friend on a cut, and this delivers it.

Protein per 100 kcal
13.3 g / 100 kcal

A lifter’s metric, and a very strong one. A huge share of these calories is protein, exactly what you want when you’re holding muscle while the scale comes down.

Key micros (per serving, approx.)
  • Calcium~180 mg · 18% DV
  • Vitamin B12~1.4 µg · 58% DV
  • Phosphorus~310 mg · 44% DV
  • Selenium~20 µg · 36% DV
  • Riboflavin (B2)~0.3 mg · 23% DV
  • Vitamin C~12 mg · 13% DV

Macros are calculated from standard food-composition data and will shift a little with your exact ingredients and brands. Micronutrient figures are estimates against general adult Daily Values. Numbers are for guidance, not medical advice — see our Nutrition Disclaimer.

05Bulk / Cut / TRT variations

One base, three jobs. The cottage cheese stays the same — you adjust what you stir through it. Macros below are for a full serving.

Cut

The lean default

Low-fat cottage cheese with cucumber, tomato and everything-bagel seasoning. Heavy on lemon, pepper and fresh herbs for flavour, no added fat. Maximum volume, minimum calories — this is the bowl I live on before a shoot.

300Kcal
40G Protein
6.5G Fat
Bulk

Take it sweet

Same cottage cheese gone sweet: a handful of granola, a drizzle of honey and a spoon of peanut butter stirred through, with berries instead of the savoury veg. Clean, easy calories that go down even when appetite’s flat.

550Kcal
46G Protein
22G Fat
TRT

Steady & balanced

The savoury base with half an avocado and a scatter of mixed seeds for healthy fats. Moderate calories, slow-digesting protein, plenty of fibre — full and satisfied without overshooting your day.

450Kcal
43G Protein
22G Fat

06Meal prep & storage

This is about the most prep-friendly meal there is, as long as you respect the one rule: keep the wet veg away from the cheese until you eat. Cut tomatoes weep, and a watery bowl is a sad bowl.

Fridge
3 days

Cottage cheese keeps well in a sealed tub for around three days. Store the chopped veg in a separate container and combine just before eating.

Freezer
Not ideal

I don’t freeze it — cottage cheese splits and goes grainy on thawing, and fresh veg turns to mush. This one’s a fridge meal, eaten fresh.

Assemble
60 sec

No reheating, ever. Drain the cheese, tip in the veg, shake over the seasoning. A full minute, start to fork, and you’re done.

If you’re prepping for the week, my honest advice is to portion the drained cottage cheese into tubs and keep one little container of pre-chopped cucumber, tomato and spring onion alongside. Sixty seconds to combine at lunch — barely more effort than opening a packet, and it tastes a great deal better.

Free · the 7-day “Get Fed” plan

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07Common questions

How does this hit 40g of protein? +

It’s almost all the cottage cheese. A 200g serving of low-fat cottage cheese carries roughly 38 to 40g of protein on its own, depending on the brand, and the veg and seasoning round it out. If your tub reads lower on the label, bump the cottage cheese to 220g and you’ll land right on the mark.

Can I make a sweet version instead? +

Easily. Skip the cucumber, tomato and seasoning, and stir through berries, a little vanilla and a drizzle of honey. Cottage cheese is brilliant sweet — it’s the curd version of yoghurt. For a higher-calorie sweet bowl with granola and nut butter, see the Bulk variation above; it’s built exactly for that.

I don’t love the texture of cottage cheese — help? +

Two fixes. First, drain off the watery liquid, which is half the problem. Second, blend the cottage cheese for a few seconds before you top it — it goes smooth and creamy, almost like a thick dip, and the curds disappear entirely. Many people who think they hate cottage cheese only hate the curd texture, and blending solves it.

How do I turn this into a proper bulk meal? +

Add carbs and fat. Stir through a handful of granola, a drizzle of honey and a spoon of peanut butter, and swap the savoury veg for berries. That takes the bowl from around 300 to roughly 550 calories with 46g of protein — clean calories that go down easy even on low appetite. See the Bulk variation above for the full numbers.

What if I can’t find everything-bagel seasoning? +

Make your own. A pinch of flaky salt, some toasted sesame and poppy seeds, a little dried onion and a little garlic powder gives you the same savoury, oniony, salty hit. Even just garlic powder, sesame and a crack of pepper will carry the bowl. It’s a flexible thing — use what’s in the cupboard.

Is this enough food for a real meal? +

For most people, yes — it’s a big, filling bowl and cottage cheese is slow to digest, so it holds you. If you’re a larger lifter or training hard that day, scale the cottage cheese up or pair it with one of the cutting recipes below for a fuller plate. The numbers stay friendly even when you double it.

From my 7-day Cut plan

This bowl lives inside a full week of meals.

This cottage cheese bowl is one lunch in my 7-day cutting plan — seven days of high-protein, low-calorie meals with the macros counted and the grocery list written. You pick the goal; I do the maths.

See the cutting meal plan
Cottage cheese bowl portioned as part of a cutting meal plan under cold light

08Pairs well with

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Magnus Olafsson in his kitchen — bald, bearded and broad, in his pink apron, under cold light
About the author

Magnus Olafsson

I’m Magnus — twenty years under the iron, from a cold gym in Stockholm to the classic-physique stage, and now mostly in my kitchen in a pink apron. I’ve cut for shows, bulked through winters, and I’ve been on TRT since I was thirty-five. I know what it takes to eat for the body you’re chasing, and I know it shouldn’t come with a side of shame.

Everything here is food I actually cook and macros I actually count. I don’t diagnose, I don’t promise, and I never make a number up. I just feed you well and tell you the truth.

NPC Illinois NPC Classic Physique On TRT since 35 20 years training

Slim Diet Era shares recipes and general nutrition information. It is not medical or dietetic advice, and we do not provide guidance on obtaining or using any controlled substance. See our Medical Disclaimer and Nutrition Disclaimer.