high protein Easter brunch
Planning a high protein Easter brunch that’s actually exciting — not just a pile of plain eggs — is harder than it sounds. Most Easter menus swing toward sweet pastries, sugary mimosas, and carb-heavy casseroles that leave guests dragging by noon. If you want a holiday spread that satisfies, fuels, and impresses, protein has to lead the table.
This guide gives you everything you need: one complete centerpiece high protein Easter brunch frittata recipe (with full ingredient list and step-by-step instructions), plus 14 supporting dishes that transform a standard Easter breakfast into a nutrient-dense, flavor-packed brunch your guests will talk about for months.
Every recipe here clears 20–30 grams of protein per serving. They’re designed to work together as a cohesive spread, with make-ahead options built in so you’re not stuck in the kitchen while everyone else hunts eggs. For more inspiration on pairing proteins with fresh vegetables, RecipeTin Eats has an outstanding library of technique-focused recipes worth bookmarking.
Why This High Protein Easter Brunch Menu Actually Works
This isn’t a random collection of egg dishes. It’s a calculated spread that balances textures, cooking methods, protein sources, and make-ahead logistics.
The centerpiece is a spring vegetable frittata — the MVP of high protein Easter brunch. It serves eight, scales easily, reheats beautifully, and delivers 28 grams of protein per slice. Around it, you build supporting dishes that cover every dietary need: smoked salmon for pescatarians, Greek yogurt parfaits for lighter eaters, turkey sausage for meat lovers, and cottage cheese pancakes that even the most skeptical carb-lover will devour.
⚡ At a Glance — What Makes This Menu Work
- One centerpiece frittata recipe with full instructions below
- 14 complementary high protein Easter brunch dishes that pair perfectly
- Make-ahead instructions for every dish — most prep done the night before
- Covers keto, gluten-free, low-carb, and dairy-free variations
- Every dish hits 20–30g protein per serving minimum
- Spring-forward flavors: asparagus, herbs, smoked fish, fresh berries
The Centerpiece: Spring Garden High Protein Easter Frittata
This is the dish that anchors your high protein Easter brunch table. A perfectly set frittata with crispy edges, a custardy interior, and vivid spring vegetables looks stunning on a platter and does the heavy nutritional lifting for the whole spread.
Spring Garden High Protein Easter Frittata
Ingredients
- 12 large eggs — room temperature
- ½ cup whole milk ricotta cheese
- ¼ cup Pecorino Romano, grated — or Parmesan
- 6 oz smoked salmon, roughly torn
- 1 cup asparagus tips, blanched
- ½ cup baby spinach, packed
- ¼ cup sun-dried tomatoes, chopped
- 3 scallions, sliced thin
- 2 tbsp fresh dill, chopped
- 1 tbsp fresh chives, snipped
- 2 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
- 1 tsp kosher salt
- ½ tsp cracked black pepper
- ¼ tsp crushed red pepper flakes — optional
Instructions
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1Preheat your broiler to high and position the rack 6 inches from the heat source. In a large bowl, crack all 12 eggs and whisk vigorously for 90 seconds until the mixture is uniformly pale yellow with no streaks of white visible.
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2Season the eggs with kosher salt, cracked black pepper, and red pepper flakes. Add the ricotta in small dollops — don’t mix it in fully. Those pockets of ricotta will bloom into creamy, protein-rich clouds throughout the frittata.
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3Heat the olive oil in a 10-inch oven-safe skillet over medium heat until shimmering. Add the scallions and cook 2 minutes. Add baby spinach and cook 45 seconds until just wilted.
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4Add sun-dried tomatoes and asparagus tips. Cook 1 minute to warm through. Reduce heat to medium-low — this is the critical temperature control step to prevent rubbery eggs.
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5Pour the egg mixture over the vegetables in a slow, even stream. Scatter the torn smoked salmon across the top, pressing in slightly. Sprinkle with fresh dill.
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6Cook undisturbed for 6–8 minutes until the edges have set and the center jiggles like set gelatin. Run a spatula around the edge every 2 minutes. The bottom should be golden, not dark.
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7Transfer to the broiler for 2–3 minutes. Watch every 30 seconds — you want the top golden, puffed, and just set with no wet gleam remaining.
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8Rest for 5 minutes before slicing. Garnish with fresh chives, extra dill, and a drizzle of good olive oil. Serve directly from the pan.
Nutrition Per Serving
* Percent Daily Values based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Values are estimates; exact nutritional content will vary based on ingredients used.
Chef Julia’s Pro Tips for the Perfect High Protein Easter Brunch Frittata
Temperature Is Everything
Medium-low stovetop heat is non-negotiable. Too high and the eggs seize into a rubbery disk. You want the proteins to coagulate slowly and gently.
Room Temp Eggs Only
Cold eggs from the fridge cook unevenly. Pull your eggs out 30 minutes before cooking for the most uniform, custard-like set.
The Ricotta Trick
Don’t whisk the ricotta into the egg mixture. Drop it in by the teaspoon so it stays in distinct pockets — they become molten protein bombs in every bite.
Make It the Night Before
Slice, cover, refrigerate. Reheat individual slices covered in a 300°F oven for 8 minutes. It tastes just as good the next day — sometimes better.
Quality Salmon Matters
Spend the extra few dollars on good smoked salmon. Cold-smoked wild salmon has a far cleaner taste than farmed for this high protein Easter brunch centerpiece.
Don’t Skip the Dill
Dried dill is a completely different flavor profile. Fresh dill is bright, grassy, and springy — exactly what a high protein Easter brunch frittata needs.
Common Mistakes That Ruin a High Protein Easter Brunch Frittata
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✗Using a non-stick pan under the broiler✓ FIX: Switch to cast iron or stainless steel. Non-stick coatings can release toxic fumes above 500°F.
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✗Adding wet vegetables without patting dry✓ FIX: Excess moisture is the number one reason frittatas weep and turn watery. Pat everything completely dry before adding.
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✗Skipping the stovetop set and going straight to the oven✓ FIX: The stovetop phase gives you control. You can see and feel the frittata setting in real time.
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✗Overseasoning before cooking✓ FIX: Smoked salmon and Pecorino are both very salty. Season with less than you think you need and adjust at the table.
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✗Cutting immediately out of the oven✓ FIX: The internal carry-over cooking continues for 3–5 minutes after the heat is off. Rest fully before slicing.
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✗Not whisking the eggs long enough✓ FIX: Whisk for a full 90 seconds — set a timer — until the mixture is homogenous and slightly frothy.
14 More High Protein Easter Brunch Dishes to Complete Your Spread
Build the rest of your high protein Easter brunch table around these dishes, arranged by protein source for a balanced, varied spread.
For even more easy dinner-to-brunch crossover ideas, How Sweet Eats has a fantastic roundup of crowd-pleasing recipes that translates beautifully to a brunch format. And for the science behind why eggs are such exceptional brunch food, the nutritional properties of eggs are well-documented and make a compelling case for leading every high protein Easter brunch with them.
Egg-Based High Protein Easter Dishes
Hard-boil 18 eggs. Slice and mix yolks with Greek yogurt (not mayo — adds 4g extra protein per batch), Dijon mustard, apple cider vinegar, salt, and smoked paprika. Pipe back into whites. Top with everything bagel seasoning and microgreens. These are the most photographed dish on any high protein Easter brunch table.
Halve avocados, remove enough flesh to fit an egg snugly. Crack one egg per half. Season with salt, pepper, and red pepper flakes. Bake at 425°F for 12–14 minutes until whites are opaque. Serve with two strips of turkey bacon (7g protein each) and cotija cheese.
Smoked Salmon & Seafood Protein Dishes
Whip block feta with 2 tablespoons full-fat Greek yogurt until smooth. Slice English cucumbers into thick coins. Pipe whipped feta onto each slice. Top with smoked salmon, a caper, and fresh dill. The most elegant dish on your high protein Easter brunch table requiring zero cooking — do the whole platter the night before.
Poach 1 lb large shrimp in salted water with a bay leaf and lemon for 2–3 minutes until pink. Transfer to an ice bath. For the crema: blend ripe avocado, Greek yogurt, lime juice, garlic, and cilantro until silky. Arrange shrimp on the rim of a martini glass over the crema for Easter table drama.
Dairy-Based High Protein Easter Brunch Options
Blend 1 cup full-fat cottage cheese, 2 eggs, ¼ cup rolled oats, 1 tbsp maple syrup, and ½ tsp vanilla until smooth. Let batter rest 5 minutes. Cook on buttered non-stick skillet over medium heat — 2 minutes per side. Serve with fresh berries and a dollop of Greek yogurt. Skeptics always ask for the recipe.
Set out 8-ounce containers of full-fat plain Greek yogurt (17g protein each). Offer toppings: fresh berries, hemp hearts (10g protein per 3 tbsp), pumpkin seeds, honey, and granola. The best self-serve option for guests with dietary restrictions — everyone customizes, zero morning prep.
Meat-Based High Protein Easter Dishes
Mix 1 lb ground turkey with sage, thyme, garlic powder, onion powder, fennel seed, salt, and pepper. Form into 8 thin patties. Cook in cast iron over medium-high heat for 4 minutes per side until golden. The fennel seed is the secret ingredient that makes people ask if these are pork.
Group 4–5 asparagus spears. Wrap tightly with one slice of prosciutto, spiraling upward. Brush with olive oil. Roast at 425°F for 12 minutes until crispy. Visually spectacular on an Easter brunch table — assemble the night before and roast fresh that morning.
Variations & Substitutions for Every Dietary Need
🥬 Dairy-Free
Replace ricotta with silken tofu (same protein content). Use nutritional yeast instead of Pecorino. Equally protein-dense.
🥩 No Seafood
Swap smoked salmon for diced ham, chicken sausage, or extra ricotta with roasted red peppers.
⚡ Keto / Low-Carb
Skip sun-dried tomatoes. Add extra spinach and goat cheese. Already very low-carb at 8g net carbs per serving.
🌱 Full Vegetarian
Replace smoked salmon with smoked mozzarella or firm tofu marinated in liquid smoke and soy sauce overnight.
🔢 Double the Batch
Use two 10-inch skillets simultaneously. Don’t try one giant frittata — the center will never set evenly.
🌶️ Spicy Version
Add ½ tsp harissa paste to the egg mixture and top with pickled jalapeños and a drizzle of chili oil.
Storage & Reheating Your High Protein Easter Brunch
The frittata stores exceptionally well. Once fully cooled, slice into wedges, layer between parchment paper, and store in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 4 days.
For reheating: place slices on a baking sheet, cover loosely with foil, and warm in a 300°F oven for 8–10 minutes. This preserves the custardy texture far better than the microwave, which turns egg dishes rubbery in under 60 seconds.
The frittata also freezes well for up to 6 weeks. Wrap individual slices in plastic wrap, then in foil. Thaw overnight in the refrigerator before reheating. Don’t freeze slices with fresh herb garnish — add those after reheating.
🐣 Make-Ahead Timeline for Stress-Free Easter Morning
2 days before: Hard-boil eggs for deviled eggs. Make whipped feta.
Night before: Blanch asparagus. Make turkey sausage patties (uncooked). Assemble cucumber bites. Prep frittata egg mixture and refrigerate.
Easter morning: Cook frittata (35 min). Roast asparagus bundles (15 min). Cook sausage patties (25 min). Set out yogurt parfait bar. Done.
Serving Suggestions for the Ultimate High Protein Easter Brunch Table
The frittata goes in the center of the table on a wooden board or large platter with a rim. Surround it with smaller dishes in descending height so every dish is visible from every seat.
Color-code your table: the greens (asparagus, spinach, cucumber, herbs), pinks and oranges (salmon, shrimp, strawberries), whites (deviled eggs, feta, Greek yogurt), and golds (frittata crust, sausage, honey) create a naturally Easter-appropriate palette that looks professionally styled without effort.
Label each dish with small cards noting the protein content per serving. This detail is viral-worthy on high protein Easter brunch tables — guests photograph it, and it prompts food conversations that make the meal feel intentional.
Nutrition Estimate Per Serving (Full Brunch Plate)
The following estimates reflect a complete high protein Easter brunch plate: one slice of frittata, two deviled egg halves, one smoked salmon cucumber bite, and one turkey sausage patty.
| Nutrient | Per Brunch Plate | % Daily Value |
|---|---|---|
| Protein | 52g | 104% |
| Calories | 620 kcal | 31% |
| Total Fat | 38g | 49% |
| Saturated Fat | 12g | 60% |
| Total Carbohydrates | 14g | 5% |
| Dietary Fiber | 4g | 14% |
| Sodium | 980mg | 43% |
| Calcium | 320mg | 32% |
| Iron | 4.2mg | 23% |
| Vitamin D | 4.8mcg | 24% |
| Omega-3 Fatty Acids | 1,800mg | N/A |
*Estimates calculated using USDA FoodData Central. Values will vary based on exact brands and portion sizes.
Frequently Asked Questions About High Protein Easter Brunch
Your High Protein Easter Brunch, Done Right
A high protein Easter brunch doesn’t have to mean plain scrambled eggs and a protein shake. With the spring garden frittata as your centerpiece and any combination of the supporting dishes above, you’re serving a holiday meal that’s genuinely nourishing, visually spectacular, and almost entirely make-ahead. Your guests will eat well, feel satisfied well into the afternoon, and — most importantly — ask you for the recipe before they leave.