Recipes & Meal Ideas

6 High-Protein Snack Recipes for GLP-1 Patients

April 2, 2026 · 3 min read · By the Sharpy team
TL;DR

Six snack recipes you can batch-prep: protein balls (no-bake), savory egg cups (12 in 25 min), cottage cheese dip, ricotta protein cookies, tuna salad cups, and Ninja Creami protein "ice cream." Each delivers 10+ g of protein per serving.

Most "protein snacks" at the grocery store are 8 g of protein and 20 g of sugar. These six DIY versions are simple, high-protein, and bulk-friendly.

1. No-bake protein balls

Ingredients (12 balls):

  • 1 cup rolled oats
  • ½ cup whey protein powder
  • ½ cup peanut butter
  • ¼ cup honey
  • 2 tbsp chia seeds
  • ¼ cup mini dark chocolate chips

Method: Mix everything in a bowl. Roll into 12 balls. Refrigerate 1 hour. Store 1 week in fridge.

Per ball: 10 g protein, 130 cal.

2. Savory egg cups (sausage + spinach)

Ingredients (12 muffins):

  • 12 large eggs
  • 1 cup egg whites
  • 6 oz cooked turkey sausage
  • 1 cup chopped spinach
  • ½ cup shredded cheese
  • Salt, pepper

Method: Preheat 350°F. Whisk eggs + whites. Stir in sausage, spinach, cheese. Pour into greased muffin tin. Bake 22 min.

Per 2 muffins: 22 g protein, 200 cal. Reheat 60 sec in microwave.

3. Loaded cottage cheese dip

Ingredients (4 servings):

  • 2 cups cottage cheese
  • ¼ cup Greek yogurt
  • 1 oz feta, crumbled
  • 1 tbsp lemon juice
  • 1 small cucumber, diced
  • ½ cup cherry tomatoes, diced
  • 2 tbsp dill, chopped
  • Salt, pepper

Method: Blend cottage cheese + yogurt + feta + lemon until smooth. Stir in vegetables and dill.

Per serving (½ cup): 16 g protein, 130 cal. Eat with crackers, raw vegetables, or pita.

4. Ricotta protein cookies

Ingredients (12 cookies):

  • 1 cup whole-milk ricotta
  • ½ cup almond flour
  • ¼ cup whey protein powder (vanilla)
  • 1 egg
  • 2 tbsp honey
  • ½ tsp baking powder
  • ½ tsp vanilla
  • ¼ cup mini chocolate chips

Method: 350°F. Mix all ingredients. Drop in 12 mounds on parchment-lined sheet. Bake 18 min until edges golden.

Per cookie: 7 g protein, 110 cal.

5. Big-batch tuna salad in mason jars

Ingredients (4 servings):

  • 4 cans/pouches tuna in water (5 oz each)
  • ½ cup Greek yogurt
  • 2 tbsp Dijon
  • ¼ cup celery, diced
  • ¼ cup red onion, diced
  • 2 tbsp lemon juice
  • Salt, pepper

Method: Mix everything in a bowl. Portion into 4 mason jars. Refrigerate up to 4 days.

Per serving: 28 g protein, 200 cal. Eat with crackers or over greens.

6. Ninja Creami protein "ice cream"

If you have a Ninja Creami (one of the few specialty appliances actually worth it for GLP-1 patients):

Ingredients (2 servings):

  • 1 cup unsweetened almond milk
  • 1 cup low-fat cottage cheese
  • 1 scoop vanilla whey protein
  • 2 tbsp sugar-free pudding mix (or 1 tbsp cocoa powder for chocolate)
  • 1 packet stevia or 2 tbsp monk fruit sweetener

Method: Blend in a regular blender first to get smooth. Pour into Creami pint, freeze 24 hours, run on Lite Ice Cream cycle.

Per serving: 28 g protein, 180 cal. Tastes like real ice cream. Genuinely.

(Without a Creami: blend the same ingredients with extra ice and drink as a thick smoothie.)


Why DIY beats store-bought

Most commercial high-protein snacks have:

  • Lower actual protein than they advertise
  • Hidden sugar, sugar alcohols, or sugar-replacement ingredients that cause GI distress
  • Added oils (palm, soy) for shelf stability
  • Cost 2–3× per gram of protein vs DIY

A tub of cottage cheese is $3 and 60 g of protein. Six "protein cookies" from the store are $6 and 60 g of protein with 3× the sugar.

Storage

  • Protein balls: 1 week fridge, 3 months freezer
  • Egg cups: 5 days fridge, 2 months freezer
  • Cottage cheese dip: 4 days fridge
  • Ricotta cookies: 4 days fridge, 1 month freezer
  • Tuna salad jars: 4 days fridge
  • Creami pints: 1 week freezer

Bottom line

Pick two of these and batch-prep on Sunday. Combined with cottage cheese, Greek yogurt, hard-boiled eggs, and string cheese already in your fridge, you'll have a 5-snack rotation that supplies 50+ g of supplemental protein per day with minimal grocery effort.