High-Protein Egg Bites are packed with protein with help from one sneaky source! Add your favorite toppings for an extra filling breakfast or snack recipe that keeps well in the refrigerator all week long, and freezes well too.

plate of egg bites
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The main thing you need to know about this high-protein Egg Bites recipe is that I recently told my middle child I had a special, after-school snack for him and he asked:

“IS IT EGG BITES?!”

That’s how good these poppable, protein-packed mini egg bites are!

Delicious eaten hot and fresh, but also great straight from the refrigerator or reheated from frozen. This meal prep-friendly recipe is perfect for breakfast, snack, and any time in between.

Watch How to Make Them

Protein-Packed Breakfast or Snack

Egg Bites are essentially mini frittatas or omelets that are packed with protein from the addition of eggs, meat, shredded cheese, plus blended cottage cheese in each bite. Here’s why you’ll love them:

  1. Economical: this recipe is a great way to stretch a pack of eggs with lower-costing ingredients such as cottage cheese, shredded cheese, and bacon or sausage (never thought the latter two would be cheaper than eggs, but here we are!)
  2. Customizable: add your favorite egg pairings to each egg bite such as the aforementioned sausage or bacon, different types of cheeses, and any or all veggies.
  3. Healthier: store-bought egg bites are incredibly salty and full of unnecessary ingredients. I like how WE control the ingredient list and nutritional content of our homemade egg bites.
  4. Cheaper: Starbucks charges $5+ for TWO egg bites. Get way more bang for your buck by making my egg bites recipe at home.
hand holding an egg bite with bacon

Ingredients Needed

All you need is a handful of everyday ingredients to make these egg cups. Raid the refrigerator for…

  • Eggs: you’ll need 8 large eggs for this recipe.
  • Meat: I love making egg bites with cooked and crumbled bacon, browned breakfast sausage, or finely diced ham. Use turkey bacon for a lighter option.
  • Cheese: we always have shredded sharp cheddar cheese on hand, but you can use whatever you love.
  • Cottage cheese: I use low-fat cottage cheese, but feel free to use what you like best.

Egg Bite Variations

This is a great recipe to customize to best fit your tastes. If you want to add veggies to your egg cups, be sure to saute them until tender before adding to the egg bites batter. Here are some tasty combos to try!

  • Mushrooms and swiss cheese
  • Ham and cheddar cheese
  • Broccoli and cheddar cheese
  • Bacon, green onions, and gruyere cheese
  • Red bell peppers, onions, and monterey jack cheese
  • Spinach, tomato, and parmesan cheese, feta cheese, or mozzarella cheese
egg bites cut in half

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What Kind of Pan To Use

Egg-based recipes are notorious for sticking to metal muffin tins, even after giving them a thorough coating of cooking spray. That said, I HIGHLY recommend you use a silicone baking pan for this recipe, which are nonstick and dishwasher safe.

Egg Bites Pan Tip

There are a ton of different styles of silicone mini muffin pans so, depending on the dimensions of the cups in your particular pan, you might get more or less mini egg muffins out of this recipe than I do, and your baking time might be more or less.

All that said, here are two pans I recommend:

I like to place the pans on a baking sheet to make transferring them in and out of oven safe and easy.

egg bites in a mini muffin pan

How to Store, Reheat, and Freeze

These Egg Bites store and reheat like a dream. Here’s the 411:

  • How to store: Cool the bites on a cooling rack then transfer to a storage dish with a lid and refrigerate for 4-5 days.
  • How to reheat: Place desired amount of egg bites on a plate then reheat in the microwave on high until warmed through – 30 seconds to 1 minute depending on how many you are reheating.
  • How to freeze: Place cooled egg bites back into the silicone mini muffin pan then freeze until solid. Transfer the frozen egg bites to a freezer-safe Ziplock bag then freeze for up to 3 months.
  • How to reheat from frozen: Place desired amount of frozen egg bites on a plate then microwave on 50% power until warmed through, 1 – 2 minutes depending on how many you’re reheating. You may want to give them a few seconds of high heat right at the end.

Alright – let’s get these bitty baby bites with big flavor onto your table!

platter of egg bites

How to Make High-Protein Egg Bites

Step 1: Blend the batter.

Start by adding large eggs, cottage cheese, a pinch of salt, plus black pepper into a high-powered blender.

cottage cheese added to a blender

Blend until the mixture is very smooth and creamy then set the egg mixture aside.

egg bites recipe ingredients in a blender

Step 2: Add toppings.

Place two, 24 cup mini muffin pans on a baking sheet to make transferring to the oven easy, then add a teaspoon or so of the meat of your choice to each mini muffin cup.

I’m showing browned breakfast sausage and cooked and crumbled bacon here.

breakfast sausage being added to a baking pan

Next add a pinch of shredded sharp cheddar cheese to each mini muffin cup. Again, about a teaspoon or so.

shredded cheese being added to a baking pan

Pour the egg and cottage cheese mixture to just below the top of each mini muffin cup.

egg bite recipe batter being poured into a pan

The egg bites will pop UP a little during the baking process, but they shouldn’t puff OUT too much.

egg bite batter being poured into a pan

Step 3: Create a water bath.

Before putting the mini muffin pans in the oven, place a baking pan on the bottom rack then fill it halfway up with hot water.

This will create a water bath, aka a steamy baking environment, which ensures a tough skin doesn’t form on the top of your egg bites.

woman creating a water bath

Step 4: Bake the Egg Bites.

Place the baking sheet with the mini muffin pans inside then bake for 20-25 minutes at 325 degrees.

egg bites being pulled out of the oven

Let the bites cool in the baking pan for 5 minutes, then pop each one out and place onto a cooling rack to cool slightly.

egg bites being placed onto a cooling rack

Enjoy warm (and with lots of ketchup, if you ask my kids!) or follow the instructions above and in the recipe card below for refrigerating or freezing them.

I hope these easy, poppable egg bites add some joy and deliciousness to your next breakfast or snack time – enjoy!

platter of egg bite with a serving spoon

More Easy Breakfast Ideas

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Egg Bites Recipe

4.9 from 9 votes

by Kristin Porter

Prep: 20 minutes
Cook: 25 minutes
Total: 45 minutes
Servings: 8 servings
This easy Egg Bites recipe is packed with protein and flavor! Make a batch for an easy breakfast or snack option.

Equipment

Ingredients

  • 8 large eggs
  • 1/2 cup low-fat cottage cheese
  • pinch of salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon pepper
  • 1 lb bacon, cooked and crumbled OR 1/2lb breakfast sausage, browned
  • 1 cup shredded sharp cheddar cheese

Directions 

  • Place a baking dish on the bottom rack of the oven then fill with a couple inches of very hot water. Close oven door then preheat oven to 325 degrees.
  • To a blender, add eggs, cottage cheese, salt, and pepper then blend until very smooth.
  • Place 2, 24 cup mini silicone muffin pans on top of a half sheet pan (see notes re: size of mini muffin pan and how many bites you’ll get if your pan has different dimensions than mine!) Fill each cup with a small amount of crumbled bacon or browned sausage, and shredded cheese, then fill to just below the top with the egg and cottage cheese mixture.
  • Bake for 20-25 minutes, rotating the sheet pan halfway through, or until the centers of the bites are set. Let cool for 2-3 minutes in the mini muffin pan then pop bites out of the pan and transfer to a cooling rack. Enjoy warm, or let cool completely then store in an airtight container in the fridge for 3-4 days.

Notes

  • Different silicone mini muffin pans have different cup widths and depths, which could affect baking time and how many mini egg bites you’ll get from this recipe. The silicone mini muffin pans I use have a cup width of 1.5” and depth of .9”.
  • Feel free to use any combo of meat, cheese, and/or veggies you like in these mini egg bites to make them your own!
  • To reheat: Place desired amount of egg bites on a plate then reheat in the microwave on high until warmed through – 30 seconds to 1 minute depending on how many you are reheating.
  • To freeze: Place cooled egg bites back into the cooled silicone mini muffin pan then freeze until solid. Transfer frozen egg bites to a freezer-safe Ziplock bag or freezer-safe/airtight container and freeze for up to 3 months.
  • To reheat from frozen: Place desired amount of frozen egg bites on a plate then microwave on 50% power until warmed through, 1 – 2 minutes depending on how many you’re reheating. You may want to give them a few seconds of high heat right at the end.

Nutrition

Serving: 3bites, Calories: 367kcal, Carbohydrates: 2g, Protein: 18g, Fat: 32g, Saturated Fat: 12g, Polyunsaturated Fat: 5g, Monounsaturated Fat: 13g, Trans Fat: 0.1g, Cholesterol: 216mg, Sodium: 588mg, Potassium: 198mg, Fiber: 0.03g, Sugar: 1g, Vitamin A: 407IU, Calcium: 137mg, Iron: 1mg

Nutritional values are estimates only. Please read our full nutrition information disclaimer.

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Photos by Ashley McLaughlin

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46 Comments

  1. April says:

    I don’t understand how you got the nutritional information. I’ve tried calculating it every which way I can think of, and your info is about three times the actual amount. For instance, 3 bites is only approx. 6 grams of protein, not 18. You have kcals at 367; I can’t make it be more than 70, no matter how hard I try.

    That’s a huge difference.

    1. Kristin Porter says:

      Hi April! This is why I have a bolded disclaimer + link underneath that nutritional information stating that it is only an estimate and shouldn’t be used as a substitute or replacement for medical advice. If you have any concerns or questions about your health you should always consult with a physician or other health-care professional like a registered dietitian. Unfortunately I (and 99.9% of other recipe websites) are at the mercy of the program we use to calculate this information. For many years I resisted adding it to my recipes because I’m not a dietitian and can’t manually, accurately calculate it myself, but an extremely high demand for even an estimate resulted in me finally providing the estimated nutrition info with each recipe via a separate plugin/program.

  2. Allie H says:

    5 stars
    love it i used a metal 24 mini muffin pan and they came out perfect. I was able to make about 29. my 3 year old even liked them! big win! they’re going to be great for breakfast on the go

    1. Kristin Porter says:

      YAY! I’m so happy to hear that, Allie! Thank you so much for your feedback and recipe rating!

  3. Todd says:

    5 stars
    I like it. I always come up short, filling the last 4 to 6 cups. Don’t know if it is my muffin pans, the size of the eggs or how much meat and cheese in each cup. I will sometimes add an extra egg, but most often I just add about 1/4 cup of water. This makes them raise a lot more and very fluffy. They shrink down after cooling in the pan

    I should learn, If I make too much egg mixture I can always cook it for breakfast that day.

    1. Kristin Porter says:

      Hey Todd! You’re exactly right and I covered this under the headline “What Kind of Pan to Use” within the post. Thank you so much for your feedback and 5 star rating!

  4. Emily says:

    5 stars
    Wonderful, easy recipe! I happened to use the exact same confetti mini muffin tray, and the recipe made a perfect 24. For my first go at this recipe, I used chorizo and cheddar cheese. I’m already working on other combinations to work up and have on standby!

    1. Kristin Porter says:

      LOVE that you loved these, Emily!! The possibilities are endless!

  5. Sarah says:

    Turned out great. Didn’t quite follow the baking directions (forgot to read them all the way) but it would make again!

  6. Michelle says:

    These look delicious! Any recommendation for a high protein replacement for the cottage cheese for those of us allergic to dairy?

    1. Kristin says:

      Hi Michelle! I haven’t tested this recipe with anything other than the cottage cheese so unfortunately I can’t say for sure. Perhaps silken tofu?

  7. Kari says:

    These were great! I made them for a brunch grad party and had many people request the recipe!

    1. Kristin says:

      Oh that’s so awesome to hear, Kari!! Thank you so much for your feedback!

  8. miranda says:

    what are nutrition information?

    1. Kristin says:

      Hi Miranda! I recommend Livestrong or MyFitnessPal if you need that information!

      1. Stephanie M says:

        Anyone find the nutrition facts on this….I couldn’t find it on MyFitnessPal

      2. Kristin says:

        Hi Stephanie! Look for estimated nutrition information to be added to recipes later this year.