- Calories
- 410
- Protein
- 34g
- Fiber
- 8g
- Sat. fat
- 6g
- Sodium
- 620mg
- Added sugar
- 1g
What this recipe does for you.
A freezer-friendly high-protein breakfast burrito, 34g per burrito, that reheats from frozen without a soggy tortilla. 45 minutes makes a batch of six.
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.
Mission Carb Balance Large Flour Tortilla
I froze six brands of tortilla and reheated them side by side. The high-fibre Carb Balance wrap stayed pliable rolling cold and crisped cleanly in the skillet instead of cracking apart, and it adds fibre without tasting like cardboard. UK readers: BFree Sweet Potato Wraps or the Mission High Protein wraps from the larger supermarkets behave the same way.
Ingredients
Serves 6- Mission Carb Balance Large Flour Tortilla · The wrap that survives the freezer
- Aromatics, salt, fat (full ingredient list ships with photography)
Method
The filling ratio is one egg plus two whites, a third cup beans, a third cup protein, per burrito
Per burrito: one whole egg plus two egg whites, a third of a cup of black beans, a third of a cup of cooked lean protein like turkey or chicken, two tablespoons drained salsa, and a tablespoon of cheese. Scaled for six, that is six eggs, twelve whites, two cups beans, two cups protein. The whites lift the protein to 34g without the fat that turns reheated eggs rubbery.
Soft-scramble the eggs and pull them off the heat early
Eggs that are fully cooked now will be overcooked after reheating. Scramble the egg-and-white mix on medium-low and pull the pan while the curds are still glossy and slightly underdone. They finish setting from residual heat, then survive a second cook from frozen without going to rubber.
Keep everything dry, this is the whole game
Water is what makes a frozen burrito soggy. Drain the salsa in a sieve for five minutes, rinse and pat the beans dry, and let the cooked protein cool so it stops steaming. A wet filling sealed in a freezer bag has nowhere to send that moisture except into the tortilla.
Warm the tortilla, then roll it tight and seam-side down
A cold tortilla cracks when you fold it. Warm each one for ten seconds so it turns pliable. Pile the filling just below centre, fold the sides in, then roll away from you into a tight cylinder. Tight rolling leaves no air pockets where ice crystals form. Rest it seam-side down so it seals itself.
Wrap in parchment then a freezer bag, never foil
Foil traps steam against the tortilla in the freezer and you reheat to a soggy seam. Wrap each burrito snugly in parchment, then load them into one labelled freezer bag with the air pressed out. Parchment lets the wrap breathe and peels off clean. They keep three months this way.
Reheat from frozen in two steps: microwave at half power, then a dry skillet
Unwrap, set the frozen burrito on a plate, microwave at 50 percent power for two minutes so the centre thaws without the edges overcooking. Then move it to a dry hot skillet for two minutes, turning once. The microwave heats the inside, the skillet crisps the outside. This two-step is the only method that gave a hot middle and a tortilla that crackled instead of flopped.
No microwave? Bake from frozen at 190C for 25 minutes
Keep the parchment off, wrap loosely in a fresh sheet of parchment on a tray, and bake at 190C or 375F for twenty to twenty-five minutes from frozen. Open the parchment for the last five minutes to crisp the outside. Slower than the skillet route but hands-off for a batch.
Cool fully before freezing or you will steam the wrap from the inside
Let assembled burritos cool to room temperature on a rack before they go in the bag. A warm burrito releases steam inside the parchment as it chills, and that condensation is exactly the moisture you spent step three removing. Ten minutes of patience protects the texture.
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 high-protein breakfast burrito: 34g protein, freezer-friendly 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
- Whole eggs only, wet salsa stirred straight into the scramble, rolled in a warm flour tortilla, foil-wrapped and frozen, reheated in the microwave from frozen.
- What happened
- The tortilla steamed inside the foil and went soggy at the seam. The salsa water leached into the wrap overnight in the freezer, so even before reheating the bottom was damp. Eggs reheated rubbery.
- What we changed
- Cut the whole eggs with egg whites to lower the fat that overcooks, drained the salsa in a sieve, and stopped wrapping in foil for freezing.
- 02
Test 2
- What we tried
- Half whole eggs half whites, drained salsa, beans patted dry, rolled and wrapped in parchment then a freezer bag. Reheated in the microwave on a plate.
- What happened
- Far drier and the eggs stayed tender, but the tortilla was still floppy from the microwave alone. The middle was hot while the ends were cool, a classic microwave problem.
- What we changed
- Added a dry-skillet or oven finish after the microwave to crisp the tortilla, and microwaved at 50 percent power first to heat evenly.
- 03
Test 3
- What we tried
- Soft-scrambled egg-and-white mix pulled off heat while glossy, drained salsa, dry beans, lean turkey, rolled tight seam-side down, parchment plus freezer bag. Microwave 50 percent power 2 minutes, then 2 minutes in a dry hot skillet.
- What happened
- Tender eggs, dry interior, and a tortilla that crackled at the seam instead of flopping. Repeated from a 3-week-old frozen batch with the same result. This is the published version.
- What we changed
- Nothing. The microwave-then-skillet two-step is the move that makes freeze-and-reheat actually work.
Frequently asked
- How do I reheat these without a soggy tortilla?
- Two steps. Microwave the frozen burrito at 50 percent power for two minutes to thaw the centre, then finish it two minutes in a dry hot skillet, turning once. The microwave alone leaves a floppy wrap and uneven heat. The skillet crisps the outside while the inside is already hot. A 190C oven for twenty-five minutes works if you have no microwave.
- How long do they keep in the freezer?
- Three months wrapped in parchment inside a sealed freezer bag with the air pressed out. I reheated a three-week-old batch with no quality loss and the texture held well past that. Label the bag with the date. In the fridge rather than the freezer, eat within four days.
- Why egg whites instead of all whole eggs?
- Two reasons. Whites push the protein to 34g per burrito without adding fat, and lower-fat eggs reheat far more tenderly. The fat in a yolk-heavy scramble is what turns rubbery on a second cook. Cutting whole eggs with whites keeps the eggs soft after freezing and reheating, which whole eggs alone did not.
- Can I make these vegetarian?
- Yes. Drop the turkey and double the black beans to two thirds of a cup per burrito, or swap in crumbled extra-firm tofu that you have pressed and pan-fried dry. The protein lands around 26g instead of 34g. Keep the dry-filling rule either way, since beans and tofu both carry water.
- Is it safe to reheat eggs from frozen?
- Yes, when you reheat to steaming hot all the way through, which the two-step method does. Cool the cooked burritos quickly before freezing, freeze within two hours of cooking, and reheat from frozen rather than thawing on the counter. See the USDA egg safety guidance below.
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