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By the time the house is quiet enough to hear the heater kick on, it is usually too late for a full, sit-down breakfast. That is the hour when someone’s homework is missing, the dog has stolen another sock, and I realize we are down to the heel of the bread and exactly one bruised banana.
What I do still often have, though, is a tub of cottage cheese.
These muffins started as one of those “let us see what happens” experiments on a Tuesday night, leaning against the counter while the kids did spelling words at the table. I wanted something you could eat in three bites on the way to the car, something that would actually keep us full until lunch, but still felt like breakfast and not just leftovers disguised as breakfast.
The first batch was plain and a little too pale. The second one, with a handful of shredded cheese and a chopped-up lonely pepper, is when I realized this was going to become one of those recipes I copy onto index cards for people. The texture is tender but sturdy, almost like a tiny crustless quiche that wandered into muffin territory.
They are not fussy. They are not pretty in a bakery way. They are, however, dependable and forgiving and very good with coffee.
Why these cottage cheese muffins belong in your rotation
These are savory, protein-rich breakfast muffins built on cottage cheese and eggs, held together with just enough flour to make them portable. They do not puff dramatically, they do not crumble everywhere. They sit solidly in a lunchbox or on a paper napkin in the car.
A few reasons they work so well in real life:
- The batter comes together in one bowl plus a small one for the dry ingredients.
- They freeze and reheat nicely, which means you can bake once and have breakfasts for days.
- The add-ins are wide open. A handful of spinach, a tired scallion, that last bit of shredded cheddar from taco night, all welcome.
- The cottage cheese makes them moist and tender, without tasting obviously “cottage cheesy.” Even my cottage-cheese skeptics eat these without commentary.
This is a recipe that understands you might not have the exact same vegetables twice in a row. It does not mind.
Ingredients for Filling Cottage Cheese Breakfast Muffins
- 1 cup cottage cheese
- 2 large eggs
- 1 cup all-purpose flour
- 1 tsp baking powder
- 1/2 tsp baking soda
- 1/4 tsp salt
- 1/2 cup shredded cheese (optional)
- 1/2 cup chopped vegetables (such as spinach, bell peppers, or scallions)
- 1/4 cup chopped herbs (such as parsley or chives)
- 1 tbsp olive oil (optional)

Step by step, without the fuss
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- Preheat the oven to 375°F (190°C) and grease a muffin tin.
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- In a large bowl, whisk together the cottage cheese and eggs until combined.
-
- In another bowl, mix the flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt.
-
- Gradually add the dry ingredients to the wet ingredients, stirring until just combined.
-
- Fold in the cheese, vegetables, and herbs.
-
- Divide the batter evenly among the prepared muffin cups.
-
- Bake for 18-20 minutes or until the muffins are golden brown and a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean.
-
- Let them cool for a few minutes before transferring to a wire rack. Enjoy warm or at room temperature!

What to watch for in the oven
These muffins will not rise into big domes, so do not wait for a heroic bakery top. You are looking for:
- Color: The edges should look lightly golden, not pale and doughy. The tops may get small golden spots where the cheese melts.
- Texture: When you tap the top gently with a fingertip, it should spring back instead of feeling squishy.
- Toothpick test: A toothpick poked into the center should come out mostly clean, maybe with a moist crumb or two, but not wet batter.
If your oven runs hot, check them at 16 minutes. If you open the door and they are still glossy on top and wobbling in the center, give them another 3 to 4 minutes, then check again.
There is a small window where they go from slightly underbaked to just right, but the recipe is not overly sensitive. Even if you pull them a minute early, they will finish setting as they cool in the pan.
Options for vegetables, cheese, and herbs
This is where you can clean out the crisper drawer a little.
Vegetables
Aim for small pieces, so every bite has a bit of something and the muffins hold together.
- Fresh spinach, chopped, lightly packed
- Bell peppers, finely diced
- Scallions, thinly sliced
- Grated zucchini, squeezed in a clean towel to lose excess moisture
- Leftover roasted vegetables, chopped small
You want about 1/2 cup total, not 1/2 cup of each. Too many vegetables and the muffins can feel dense or wet, so if you get enthusiastic, just bake the extra batter in a little greased ramekin on the side.
Cheese
The 1/2 cup shredded cheese is optional but lovely. Cheddar, Monterey Jack, mozzarella, or a mix all work. A sharper cheese gives more flavor without using a lot.
Herbs
Fresh parsley or chives are friendly and mild. Dill works, too, if you like that with eggs. If you do not have fresh herbs, you can skip them, or add a pinch of dried Italian seasoning or dried chives instead. No need to overthink it.
Make ahead, freezing, and reheating
These muffins were built for the kind of week when breakfast needs to be grab and go.
- Room temperature: Once cooled, keep them in an airtight container on the counter for up to 24 hours.
- Fridge: For 3 to 4 days, store in a covered container. I like to tuck a folded paper towel in the bottom to absorb any extra moisture.
- Freezer: Cool completely, then freeze on a baking sheet until firm. Transfer to a freezer bag, squeeze out extra air, and label. They keep well for about 2 months.
To reheat:
- From the fridge, 10 to 12 seconds in the microwave per muffin is usually enough, or 5 minutes in a 325°F oven.
- From the freezer, you can either thaw overnight in the fridge or microwave in short bursts, about 20 to 30 seconds, until warm.
They are also good at room temperature, which is convenient when someone eats theirs in the car on the way to an early soccer game, as happens here more often than I admit.
Simple swaps when the pantry is low
You do not have to follow this recipe rigidly for it to work.
- Cottage cheese: Any small-curd cottage cheese is fine. Low fat or full fat both work. Very dry cottage cheese may give a slightly firmer muffin, very wet cottage cheese a softer one, but both are acceptable.
- Flour: You can swap up to half the all-purpose flour for whole wheat flour. The muffins will be a bit heartier, and you may need an extra teaspoon or two of milk or water if the batter feels very stiff.
- Olive oil: This is optional. It adds a bit of richness and helps with tenderness. You can replace it with melted butter, another neutral oil, or leave it out entirely if your cottage cheese is not very lean.
- Add-ins: No vegetables on hand, or just not in the mood to chop anything at 6:45 a.m.? You can make them with just herbs and cheese, or even plain with a little extra salt and pepper.
If you want a tiny bit more flavor overall, add a small pinch of garlic powder or black pepper to the dry ingredients. Start small, taste a baked muffin, and adjust next time.
Questions from one home kitchen to another
You can, with one small tweak. Mix everything together except the baking powder and baking soda, cover, and chill. In the morning, stir those in gently right before portioning into the muffin tin. This keeps the muffins from turning dense.
Savory muffins stick more than sweet ones sometimes. Make sure you grease the cups well, getting into the corners. If you use paper liners, use the parchment style if you can. Letting the muffins cool for 5 minutes before removing also helps them release.
Yes, they work nicely as minis. Grease a mini muffin tin and bake at the same temperature, but start checking around 10 to 12 minutes. They will be golden at the edges and just set in the center.
You can pulse the cottage cheese briefly in a blender or with an immersion blender before mixing it with the eggs. It does not have to be perfectly smooth, just a bit more blended. The final muffin texture will be more uniform and less obviously curdy.
They do. The muffins will taste a bit milder, more like a soft savory bread than a cheesy muffin, but the cottage cheese and eggs still give plenty of structure and protein.
Serving ideas for busy mornings and slow ones
On rushed mornings, I hand these over with apple slices or a banana and call it good. They are surprisingly filling, especially when still slightly warm.
On slower days, they are nice reheated and split open, maybe with a little butter or a spoonful of yogurt and some sliced tomatoes on the side. They tuck easily into a lunchbox next to carrot sticks and hummus, or into a grown up lunch with a simple green salad.
If you are feeding a group, a double batch lines up neatly on a big tray, and they stay tasty even as they cool. People can take one, then come back for another without feeling like they are committing to a full plate of food. Somehow that always leads to better conversation around the table.
Passing the recipe along
This is the sort of recipe I picture written in slightly smudged pen on a card, with a few notes in the margins, like “used scallions last time, very good” or “freezes well, make extra.”
Use what you have. Chop the vegetables small. Do not worry if one batch is a little more golden or a little more rustic than the last. They will still be breakfast, still something warm you made with your own hands on a day that might not give you much extra time.
If this one works in your kitchen, feel free to copy it down, tuck it into your recipe box, and add your own notes. That is how the good, sturdy recipes live on.

Cottage Cheese Breakfast Muffins
Ingredients
Main Ingredients
- 1 cup cottage cheese Small-curd is preferable
- 2 large eggs Best if at room temperature
- 1 cup all-purpose flour Whole wheat can be substituted
- 1 tsp baking powder For leavening
- 1/2 tsp baking soda Helps with texture
- 1/4 tsp salt Enhances flavor
Optional Add-ins
- 1/2 cup shredded cheese Cheddar, Monterey Jack, or mozzarella
- 1/2 cup chopped vegetables Spinach, bell peppers, or scallions
- 1/4 cup chopped herbs Parsley or chives are recommended
- 1 tbsp olive oil Optional for added richness
Instructions
Preparation
- Preheat the oven to 375°F (190°C) and grease a muffin tin.
- In a large bowl, whisk together the cottage cheese and eggs until combined.
- In another bowl, mix the flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt.
- Gradually add the dry ingredients to the wet ingredients, stirring until just combined.
- Fold in the cheese, vegetables, and herbs.
- Divide the batter evenly among the prepared muffin cups.
- Bake for 18-20 minutes or until the muffins are golden brown and a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean.
- Let them cool for a few minutes before transferring to a wire rack.
- Enjoy warm or at room temperature.
Notes
Hello
Welcome to Cooking Guide. I’m a home cook and former library program coordinator who collects handwritten recipes and the stories behind them, and I share dependable, comfort-filled meals from my Raleigh kitchen.
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