High-Protein Meal Prep for the Week: A Beginner's Guide
Slug: high-protein-meal-prep-beginnersPillar: Food and Drink > Cooking TipsKeyword: high protein meal prep for the weekExcerpt: High-protein meal prep doesn't have to mean boring chicken and rice. Here's a beginner-friendly system for filling, varied meals ready in 90 minutes.Tagline: Simple batch cooking that fuels your whole week
Why High-Protein Meal Prep Has Taken Over
Protein has had a mainstream moment in 2026. Walk into any supermarket and you'll see "high-protein" plastered across everything from yoghurts to pasta. The link between adequate protein, satiety, and muscle maintenance is now widely understood outside fitness circles.
The problem isn't motivation — it's execution. Cooking high-protein meals from scratch every night is genuinely hard to maintain. That's where meal prep comes in. Not the intimidating version with 40 matching Tupperware containers, but the practical version: batch cooking your protein sources and key components once or twice a week so daily cooking is mostly assembly, not effort.
How Much Protein Do You Actually Need?
The NHS recommends 0.75g of protein per kilogram of body weight per day as the baseline for sedentary adults. If you're active or trying to preserve muscle as you age, most sports nutrition research suggests 1.6-2.2g per kilogram is more appropriate. For a 70kg person doing moderate exercise, that's roughly 112-154g of protein per day — spread across three meals, about 35-50g per meal.
The Beginner Meal Prep System
Don't try to prep every meal for the week on your first attempt. It's overwhelming, food goes off before you eat it, and it often leads to abandoning the whole thing. Instead, start with this three-component system.
One: Two batch-cooked protein sources. Pick proteins that are as good cold as they are hot — this is the meal prep golden rule. Chicken thighs, ground turkey, boiled eggs, tinned salmon, cooked lentils, and roasted chickpeas all work. Cook in bulk.
Two: One or two grains or carbs. Cook a big pot of rice, quinoa, or pasta. These store well in the fridge for 4-5 days and form the base of lunches and dinners.
Three: Pre-cut vegetables or roasted veg. Raw veg prepped in the fridge makes snacking and meal assembly much faster. Roasted veg (peppers, courgette, sweet potato) adds variety and holds up well over several days.
From these three components you can mix and match into different meals all week without eating the same thing repeatedly.
A Practical Week of High-Protein Meals
Here's how a realistic high-protein week might look using a 90-minute Sunday prep. What you prep: 1kg chicken thighs (roasted), 200g dried lentils (cooked), a dozen hard-boiled eggs, 400g dried brown rice (cooked), roasted red peppers and courgette, washed salad leaves.
Monday lunch: Rice bowl with chicken, roasted veg, and a tahini drizzle (approx. 45g protein). Monday dinner: Lentil and vegetable soup topped with a boiled egg (approx. 30g protein). Tuesday lunch: Salad with chicken, chickpeas, cucumber, and olive oil (approx. 40g protein). The meals feel different even though the components are mostly shared.
Best High-Protein Foods for Meal Prep
Knowing protein content per 100g cooked helps you build meals with intention. Chicken breast: 31g. Tinned tuna: 25g. Salmon (cooked): 25g. Eggs: approximately 13g per egg. Greek yoghurt (full-fat): 10g per 100g. Firm tofu: 8g. Cooked lentils: 9g. Cooked chickpeas: 9g. Cottage cheese: 11g.
If you eat dairy, Greek yoghurt and cottage cheese are excellent high-protein additions that require zero cooking — especially useful for breakfast. A 200g serving of Greek yoghurt with berries and a handful of almonds is around 20-25g of protein with minimal effort.
Keeping It Interesting
The number one reason people abandon high-protein meal prep is boredom. The fix isn't cooking more different things — it's varying your sauces and seasonings. The same chicken and rice goes from gym-bro meal to actually enjoyable if you rotate through sriracha mayo, teriyaki, pesto, or tzatziki. Keep a small collection of sauces in the fridge and your meals feel different even when the components are the same.
FAQ
How long does meal-prepped food last in the fridge?
Cooked chicken and fish: 3-4 days. Cooked grains and legumes: 4-5 days. Hard-boiled eggs: up to 7 days unpeeled. Roasted veg: 4-5 days. When in doubt, smell it — your nose is a reliable indicator.
Can I meal prep if I'm vegetarian or vegan?
Absolutely. Lentils, chickpeas, black beans, tofu, tempeh, and edamame are excellent plant-based proteins that batch-cook well. The key is combining them — lentils plus a whole grain, for example, provides a more complete amino acid profile.
Do I have to eat the same thing every day?
No — and you shouldn't. The system is to prep components, not complete identical meals. Mixing the same prepped proteins and grains with different sauces and vegetables produces meaningfully different meals.
Is high-protein meal prep expensive?
It doesn't have to be. Eggs, tinned fish, lentils, and chickpeas are among the cheapest high-protein foods available. The most cost-effective approach is using affordable protein sources in rotation alongside a couple of more expensive options for variety.










