Getting enough protein does not require hours of cooking or expensive supplements. These high-protein meals under 30 minutes each provide at least 30 grams of protein per serving — enough to support muscle building, weight management, and sustained energy throughout the day.
1. Greek Chicken Bowl (42g protein)
Ready in: 25 minutes | Protein per serving: ~42g
Season chicken breast with oregano, garlic, lemon, and olive oil. Cook in a hot skillet 6 to 7 minutes per side. Slice and serve over quinoa with cucumber, tomato, olives, and tzatziki.
Ingredients: 200g chicken breast, 100g quinoa, cucumber, cherry tomatoes, Kalamata olives, feta, tzatziki, lemon, dried oregano, garlic powder, olive oil.
2. Salmon and Edamame Rice Bowl (38g protein)
Ready in: 20 minutes | Protein per serving: ~38g
Pan-sear or air-fry a salmon fillet for 10 to 12 minutes. Serve over brown rice with edamame, shredded carrots, cucumber, and a sesame-soy dressing.
Ingredients: 180g salmon fillet, 150g cooked brown rice, 80g frozen edamame (thawed), carrots, cucumber, soy sauce, sesame oil, rice vinegar, honey, sesame seeds.
3. Tuna Steak with White Beans (45g protein)
Ready in: 15 minutes | Protein per serving: ~45g
Sear a tuna steak in a very hot pan for 90 seconds per side (medium-rare). Serve alongside white beans warmed with garlic, olive oil, and fresh parsley.
Ingredients: 200g tuna steak, 1 can white beans, 2 garlic cloves, fresh parsley, olive oil, lemon, salt, black pepper.
4. Turkey and Spinach Stuffed Peppers (35g protein)
Ready in: 30 minutes | Protein per serving: ~35g
Brown ground turkey with garlic, onion, and Italian seasoning. Add spinach and diced tomatoes. Stuff into halved bell peppers. Bake at 400F (200C) for 18 to 20 minutes. Top with mozzarella in the last 5 minutes.
Ingredients: 300g ground turkey, 2 large bell peppers, 2 cups spinach, 1 can diced tomatoes, garlic, onion, Italian seasoning, mozzarella, salt, pepper.
5. Egg and Cottage Cheese Scramble (32g protein)
Ready in: 8 minutes | Protein per serving: ~32g
Scramble 3 eggs in butter. When almost set, fold in 100g cottage cheese. Season with salt, pepper, and chives. Serve on whole grain toast. The cottage cheese melts into the eggs and makes them creamier — not visible, not flavoured like dairy.
6. Shrimp Stir-Fry with Edamame (33g protein)
Ready in: 15 minutes | Protein per serving: ~33g
Stir-fry large shrimp with garlic, ginger, and a soy-sesame sauce. Add frozen edamame in the last 2 minutes. Serve over rice. See our lemon garlic shrimp recipe for the base technique.
Best High-Protein Ingredients to Keep Stocked
- Chicken breast or thighs — 31g protein per 100g cooked
- Canned tuna — 25g protein per 100g, zero prep
- Salmon — 25g protein per 100g, cooks in 10 minutes
- Eggs — 6g protein per egg, fastest protein source available
- Greek yogurt — 17g protein per 200g serving
- Edamame (frozen) — 11g protein per 100g, add to anything
- Cottage cheese — 11g protein per 100g, works in savory and sweet dishes
- Quinoa — 8g protein per 100g cooked, the highest-protein grain
Frequently Asked Questions
What meal has the most protein?
Among quick meals, the tuna and white bean combination provides approximately 45 grams of protein per serving. A chicken breast with quinoa provides around 42 grams. Both are ready in under 25 minutes.
How do I get 30g of protein at every meal?
Combine two protein sources at each meal. Chicken with quinoa, eggs with cottage cheese, tuna with beans. Each pairing reaches 30 grams comfortably. Single protein sources like a small chicken breast or two eggs alone typically fall short of 30 grams.
What are high-protein meals for weight loss?
High-protein meals support weight loss by increasing satiety and reducing total calorie intake throughout the day. The Greek chicken bowl, salmon edamame bowl, and turkey stuffed peppers are all high in protein, moderate in calories, and low in refined carbohydrates.
For more quick dinner ideas, see our easy dinner ideas hub and air fryer dinner recipes.
Disclaimer: Protein values are approximate and based on standard nutritional data. Individual results may vary based on specific ingredients and portion sizes. This is not medical or nutritional advice.
