- Calories
- 480
- Protein
- 41g
- Fiber
- 6g
- Sat. fat
- 5g
- Sodium
- 720mg
- Added sugar
- 0g
What this recipe does for you.
A high-protein chicken caesar wrap: 41g protein, 20 minutes, with a lighter Greek-yogurt caesar that survives a lunchbox without going soggy.
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.
Parmigiano-Reggiano, grated fresh off the block
The Greek-yogurt base is lean, so the parmesan is doing the savoury heavy lifting that the missing oil used to. Pre-grated tubs are cut with anti-caking starch and taste flat, which leaves the dressing tasting like plain yogurt. A wedge of real Parmigiano-Reggiano grated fine is the difference between a caesar and a yogurt sauce. UK readers: any aged Italian hard cheese labelled Parmigiano-Reggiano DOP, or a mature Grana Padano as a cheaper stand-in.
Ingredients
Serves 1- Parmigiano-Reggiano, grated fresh off the block · The flavour anchor
- Aromatics, salt, fat (full ingredient list ships with photography)
Method
The build is grilled chicken, romaine, lighter caesar, one large tortilla
One large flour tortilla, about 150g of cooked chicken breast sliced, two big handfuls of romaine, and three tablespoons of the Greek-yogurt caesar below. That is the whole wrap. The chicken carries most of the 41g of protein, the yogurt adds a few more, and the romaine is structure not garnish.
The lighter caesar is Greek yogurt, parmesan, anchovy, lemon, garlic
Three tablespoons of thick Greek yogurt, two tablespoons of finely grated parmesan, one minced anchovy fillet, a small grated garlic clove, a teaspoon of lemon juice, a few grinds of black pepper. Whisk. No egg yolk, almost no free oil. It tastes like caesar because the savoury markers are all still there, just carried on yogurt instead of emulsified oil.
Do not skip the anchovy
The anchovy is what makes it taste like caesar rather than lemony yogurt. One fillet, minced to a paste against the board with the flat of a knife, disappears completely into the dressing and reads as deep savoury rather than fishy. If you genuinely cannot use anchovy, half a teaspoon of Worcestershire sauce is the nearest honest substitute, though it is not quite the same.
Grill the chicken, then cool it before it goes near the lettuce
Season a chicken breast with salt and pepper, grill or pan-sear 4 minutes a side until 74C at the centre, rest, slice. The important part for a wrap is letting it cool to room temperature first. Warm chicken steams the romaine from the inside and that is half of why supermarket wraps go limp.
Dry the romaine like you mean it
Wet lettuce is the main enemy of a wrap. Wash the romaine, then spin it in a salad spinner and finish by rolling it in a clean tea towel. Any water left on the leaves dilutes the dressing and softens the tortilla. Dry leaves also hold their snap for hours, which is what you want in a lunchbox.
Toss the filling in a bowl first, keep the dressing off the tortilla
Combine the cooled chicken and dry romaine with the dressing in a bowl and toss so everything is lightly coated. Then lay that bundle onto a bare, dry tortilla. The dressing never directly touches the tortilla, which is the single biggest fix for a base that would otherwise turn to paste.
Roll it tight, seam-side down
Pile the filling in a line across the lower third, fold the two short sides in, then roll away from you keeping firm tension so there are no air gaps. Rest it seam-side down for a minute so it sets closed. A tight wrap holds its shape in a bag, a loose one unrolls and spills.
For meal prep, wrap in parchment then foil and it holds eight hours
Roll the finished wrap in a sheet of parchment, then a layer of foil, and refrigerate. The parchment stops the foil sweating onto the tortilla and the foil holds the shape. Built this way with dry leaves and the dressing off the tortilla, it stays sound for a full eight-hour fridge day and about two hours out of a bag at room temperature. Slice it in half through the wrapping when you eat it.
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.
Why we tested this chicken caesar wrap: 41g protein, 20 minutes 3 times.
Every flagship recipe on this site goes through at least three rounds of kitchen testing before publication. We log what changed between tests so you can see the recipe's evolution, and so we can't quietly drop the failures.
- 01
Test 1
- What we tried
- Classic caesar dressing (egg yolk, oil, parmesan), grilled chicken, romaine, flour tortilla, dressed and rolled all at once for a midday lunch.
- What happened
- By noon the romaine had wilted into the dressing and the tortilla had gone translucent and tearing on the seam. Tasted fine, looked and held terribly.
- What we changed
- Rebuilt the dressing on a Greek-yogurt base to cut the free oil, and started drying the romaine properly before it touched anything.
- 02
Test 2
- What we tried
- Greek-yogurt caesar with parmesan, anchovy, lemon and garlic, romaine spun dry, chicken sliced warm, dressing spread edge to edge across the tortilla.
- What happened
- Better hold, but dressing against the tortilla still softened the base panel by hour three, and warm chicken steamed the lettuce inside the wrap.
- What we changed
- Moved the dressing off the tortilla and onto the chicken-and-lettuce bundle instead, and cooled the chicken before building.
- 03
Test 3
- What we tried
- Cooled chicken, dressing tossed only with the chicken and romaine in a bowl first, dry tortilla as the outer shell, wrapped tight in parchment then foil.
- What happened
- Held clean for a full eight hours in the fridge and stayed structurally sound out of a bag at room temperature for two. No soggy base, romaine still had snap. Repeated over three prep days with the same result.
- What we changed
- This is the published version. Keeping the wet dressing off the dry tortilla was the variable that fixed the sog.
Frequently asked
- Will it really not go soggy in a lunchbox?
- Not if you build it the way we tested. The three things that keep it intact are drying the romaine properly, cooling the chicken before it touches the lettuce, and keeping the wet dressing off the bare tortilla by tossing the filling in a bowl first. Skip any one of those and you are back to a limp wrap by noon. Do all three and it holds for a full eight hours in the fridge.
- How is this lighter than a normal caesar wrap?
- The dressing. A classic caesar is an oil emulsion bound with egg yolk, which is where most of the fat and calories sit. Swapping to a thick Greek-yogurt base keeps the savoury caesar markers, the parmesan, anchovy, garlic and lemon, while cutting the free oil. It also pushes the protein up rather than down.
- Can I use rotisserie or leftover chicken?
- Yes, and for meal prep it is the faster route. Cold cooked chicken is ideal here because it is already at the right temperature to go straight into the wrap without steaming the lettuce. About 150g of pulled or sliced rotisserie meat lands close to the same protein, though watch the sodium, as seasoned rotisserie can push it higher than the 720mg listed.
- What tortilla holds up best?
- A large plain flour tortilla, the 10-inch size, is the most reliable. It is pliable enough to roll tight without cracking and strong enough to hold the filling. Wholewheat works and adds a little fibre but cracks more readily, so warm it for ten seconds first. A low-carb high-protein tortilla is a fair swap if you want to push the protein higher still.
- Can I leave out the anchovy?
- You can, but the dressing changes character and reads more like a lemon-yogurt sauce than a caesar. Half a teaspoon of Worcestershire sauce recovers most of the savoury depth, though many Worcestershire sauces also contain anchovy, so check the label if that is the reason you are skipping it.
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