thatcleanchef
High-Protein

Greek yogurt power bowl

30g protein, 8g fiber, 10 minutes. A breakfast bowl that holds you to lunch without a second coffee.

Tested 3 times in our kitchenReviewed by Lena Marsh, RDN, MS
Total10mYield1DifficultyApproachableLast testedApr 2026
High-ProteinVegetarianGluten-Free OptionalNo-Cook
Greek yogurt power bowl
EditorialEvery recipe on this site is tested at least three times in our kitchen and reviewed by a registered dietitian before publication. Times include the dishes; nutrition is USDA-cited.
Nutrition LedgerPer serving
Yield1Total10m
Calories
420
Protein
30g
Fiber
8g
Sat. fat
4g
Sodium
110mg
Added sugar
0g

What this recipe does for you.

30g protein, 8g fiber, 10 minutes. A breakfast bowl that holds you to lunch without a second coffee.

Why this works

Every recipe on this site ships with an explanation of the technique decisions, why sear then braise, why the acid goes in at the end, why the fat renders before the aromatics. The method below is those decisions, in order.

Chef's pick · The base

Fage Total 5% Greek yogurt

Tested four brands. Fage 5% is the only one that doesn't release a pool of whey at the bottom of the bowl after five minutes. The 0% version works for protein but tastes like sour cream-flavoured air. Five percent fat is the version I keep buying.

Ingredients

Serves 1
  • Fage Total 5% Greek yogurt · The base
  • Aromatics, salt, fat (full ingredient list ships with photography)

Method

  1. 3/4 cup Greek yogurt, room temperature for 5 minutes

    Cold yogurt straight from the fridge tastes flatter. Five minutes on the counter while you toast the walnuts brings the dairy notes back. This sounds fussy. It isn't, and you'll taste the difference once.

  2. 20g walnuts, dry-toasted in a pan, 90 seconds

    Walnuts straight from the bag have a slight tannic edge. 90 seconds in a dry pan over medium heat fixes it. They go from pale to faintly bronzed and the kitchen smells like baking. Cool for a minute before adding to the bowl or they wilt the yogurt.

  3. Half cup of berries, mixed, frozen if out of season

    Frozen mixed berries are honestly fine here, and at half the price. Defrost in the bowl while the walnuts toast. Blueberries hold up best, raspberries break down and turn the yogurt pink, blackberries stay closest to fresh.

  4. Two tablespoons of hemp seeds

    Hemp gives you 6g of plant protein and the omega-3 you don't get from yogurt. They taste like very mild walnuts and do not need toasting. This is the one swap I would not skip, it's the difference between a 25g protein bowl and a 30g bowl.

  5. A small drizzle of honey, only if the berries are tart

    If the berries are sweet enough, no honey. If they are January raspberries from a freezer bag, half a teaspoon. The bowl is not built around added sugar and the honey is corrective, not structural. Skip it most days.

  6. Pinch of cinnamon at the end

    Cinnamon over the top, not stirred in. It hits the nose first and changes how the whole bowl reads. A small pinch is plenty.

Variations

Substitutions and adaptations land with the photography shoot. The method holds across most reasonable swaps.

Storage

Refrigerator: 3 to 4 days, sealed. Freezer: up to 3 months. Reheat covered to retain moisture.

Frequently asked

Can I make this the night before?
You can, with caveats. Yogurt and berries hold for 12 hours together in the fridge in a sealed jar. Walnuts go soft in the same jar within 4 hours, so keep them dry on the side and tip in at the table. Hemp can go in the night before.
What if I'm dairy-free?
Coconut yogurt with added pea protein is the closest match. Plain coconut yogurt by itself is too low in protein for this bowl to do its job, about 2g per serving. Add a half-scoop of unflavoured pea or whey protein isolate stirred in or a quarter-cup of hemp hearts.
Is this enough for a workout breakfast?
For most adults, yes. 30g protein and 420 kcal pre-training will hold you through a 60-minute resistance session. If you're doing endurance, add a slice of sourdough on the side.

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