5 High-Protein Pasta Recipes Ready in 30 Minutes
Slug: high-protein-pasta-recipes-30-minutesPillar: Food and Drink > RecipesKeyword: high protein pasta recipes easyExcerpt: High-protein pasta that actually tastes good. Five recipes hitting 30g+ protein per serving — including a cottage cheese sauce you'll make on repeat.Date: 2026-07-04
Why High-Protein Pasta Has Taken Over
Protein is having a moment that doesn't seem to be ending. And pasta — one of the most satisfying comfort foods — has become one of the easiest ways to hit a high protein target without eating yet another plain chicken breast. These five recipes all hit 30 grams or more per serving, they're ready in 30 minutes, and they actually taste like something you'd choose to eat.
You can use regular pasta, protein-enriched pasta (made with chickpeas, lentils, or added protein), or a hybrid. But if you want the highest protein content with the least cooking effort, Barilla Protein+ or Banza chickpea pasta add 10 to 15 grams of extra protein per serving before you add anything else.
1. Creamy Cottage Cheese Pasta with Sun-Dried Tomatoes
This is the recipe that convinced cottage cheese sceptics. The trick is blending the cottage cheese smooth before adding it to the pan — it creates a genuinely creamy sauce with no grainy texture and around 20 grams of protein from the cheese alone. Cook 80g of pasta per person. Blend 150g of full-fat cottage cheese with a clove of garlic, a tablespoon of lemon juice, and a pinch of salt until smooth. Drain the pasta, add the sauce to the warm pan, and toss with sliced sun-dried tomatoes and baby spinach. Add pasta water a splash at a time until the sauce coats everything. Top with chilli flakes and parmesan. Around 38g protein per serving.
2. One-Pan High-Protein Bolognese
Standard bolognese, supercharged. Use extra-lean beef mince and add a can of red lentils to the sauce — they disappear into the meat and add 9 extra grams of protein per serving without changing the flavour. Brown the mince, add passata, the drained lentils, chopped tomatoes, salt, pepper, and dried oregano. Simmer for 15 minutes while the pasta cooks. Add a spoonful of Worcestershire sauce at the end. Serve with parmesan. Around 45g protein per serving.
3. Cajun Prawn Pasta
Prawns are one of the most protein-dense things you can add to any dish — a 200g serving has around 40g of protein and virtually no fat. Fry defrosted king prawns with Cajun seasoning in a hot pan, two minutes each side. Remove and set aside. In the same pan, add a tin of chopped tomatoes, a tablespoon of cream cheese, and a splash of pasta water. Simmer for five minutes, add the prawns back, toss with your cooked pasta. Around 42g protein per serving.
4. Greek Chicken Pasta
This one is our pick if you've got leftover roast chicken or a supermarket rotisserie. Shred the chicken, toss with cooked pasta, halved cherry tomatoes, sliced cucumber, kalamata olives, and a proper amount of crumbled feta — at least 60g, don't be shy. Dress with olive oil, lemon, dried oregano, salt and pepper. Served cold or at room temperature, it's actually better after 20 minutes when the pasta has absorbed the dressing. Around 40g protein.
5. Chickpea Pasta with Pesto and White Beans
The vegetarian one, and good enough that meat-eaters choose it regularly. Use Banza chickpea pasta (already 25g protein per serving). While it cooks, warm a can of drained white cannellini beans in a pan with olive oil and a pinch of salt. Drain the pasta, toss with three tablespoons of good pesto, the warm beans, and a handful of toasted pine nuts. Grate parmesan over liberally. Around 35g protein per serving with zero meat.
Tips for Maximum Protein Without Compromising the Dish
Reserve your pasta water — the starchy water is what makes sauces cling. Add parmesan to everything that isn't Asian-inspired — it adds around 7g protein per 25g and elevates every sauce. Use Greek yoghurt as a finishing swirl instead of cream for sauces that need richness. And don't skip the pasta water when making any of these sauces; it's the single most common reason a pasta dish looks dry and sad when it shouldn't.
FAQ
Is chickpea or lentil pasta actually any good?
Genuinely, yes — in 2026 the texture has improved dramatically. Banza chickpea pasta and Explore Cuisine's lentil pasta both cook to a proper al dente. They taste slightly different from wheat pasta but not worse.
How can I add more protein without meat or cheese?
White beans, lentils, edamame, and tofu are all excellent pasta additions. A tablespoon of tahini in a sauce adds protein and richness. Nutritional yeast adds a parmesan-like flavour and protein with no dairy.
For more recipe ideas, visit our Food and Drink hub.










