Cottage Cheese Wraps
Cottage cheese wraps are a great foundation recipe! They’re high in protein, wildly versatile, and super satisfying, You can stuff them with a wide range of fillings, drizzles, and spreads depending on the season. Here are all my tips and tricks and favorite ways to enjoy them.

There was a point a couple years back when the algorithm decided I needed to know about cottage cheese wraps. They looked so tasty! They were everywhere! They seemed to be a breeze to make! You pool a quick-blended mixture of cottage cheese and eggs onto a rimmed sheet pan and bake until golden on the bottom. Pile on a bunch of fillings, roll up tight, and enjoy. I was on-board. It’s a great concept, a satisfying meal, and endlessly adaptable. I’m still not sure where the concept originated, but I’ve learned a number of tips and tricks related to making these wraps (and favorite fillings) that I’m going to share today. The deep dive.
Cottage Cheese Wraps
Cottage cheese wraps are a breeze to make, but you do have to be mindful of a couple details the first few times through the process to avoid issues:
- Don’t over-process the mixture in your blender. 15-20 pulses does the job, resulting in a smooth batter.
- Yes, you need to use parchment paper.
- Spread the batter across your sheet pan gently, to a uniform thickness. Too thin, it is more likely to crack.

- Bake until the wrap is very golden on the bottom, this is right around 30 minutes in my oven. This is the color you’re after, or even a bit darker!

- After removing from the oven, let the wrap set for a bit. Roughly 3-5 minutes is about right. It’s less likely to break apart as you’re filling and rolling.

The Ingredients
To make the wrap component of cottage cheese wraps you need three things: cottage cheese, eggs, and a bit of salt. You can accent from there with abandon. I tend to spice my batter with whatever spice blend I’m fixated on at the time, but herbs, peppers, and pastes are also favorites.
- Cottage Cheese: For this recipe I always use low-fat cottage cheese. Typically 1.5%-2% I’ve found that different brands of cottage cheese impact the thickness of the batter, sometimes it is more runny than other times. If you feel like your batter is regularly too runny, use 2 eggs instead of 3. If you feel like your batter is too thick use 3 eggs in place of 2. I find two eggs usually gives me a nice consistency that is easy to pour and work with on the pan.
- Eggs: Good quality, large.
- Accents: Some favorites include chopped chives (pictured), chopped serrano chile, a couple pieces of turmeric plus freshly ground black pepper, madras curry powder, toasted onion powder.
Cottage Cheese Wrap: Variations
The variations here are endless. A few ideas to flavor the wrap component:
- Furikake: add a couple teaspoons of citrus furikake to the wrap mixture prior to baking.
- Turmeric & Black Pepper: add 1/4 teaspoon ground turmeric and a few cranks of freshly ground black pepper to your batter.
- Double allium: Add some good onion powder along with a bunch of chopped chives to your batter.
- Za'atar: add a teaspoon or two of za'atar to the batter. This goes especially well if you use labneh as a spread filling.
- Olives: Finely chopped black olives work well here, just make sure to chop them extra fine, and stir them in after blending.

Cottage Cheese Wrap Filling Ideas:
My goal when I make these is: one wrap meal. I’m going for an all-in-one situation. Filling the wraps with something green is usually where I land.
- Kale Salad: I like to stem and chop a half bunch lacinato kale. Massage with 1-2 teaspoons of good-tasting vinegar, and 1-2 teaspoons of olive oil, and a bit of salt until it collapses, add some avocado, toasted seeds, cherry tomatoes, etc. and use for your wrap filling.

- Broccoli and Winter squash: Pictured below is a wrap smeared with chive-flecked labneh, and topped with simple oven-roasted broccoli, thin crescents of delicata squash, sliced green onions, and a smear of sriracha. Calabrian chili paste is a good alternate here on the spicy front. Also, a few toasted pumpkin seeds. To roast the vegetables, toss them in a bit of olive oil, sprinkle with salt, and roast in the 350°F / 176°C oven until golden brown. You can do this at the same time you are baking the cottage cheese mixture. It's the wrap also pictured in the lead photo.

- Labneh: Use a smear of labneh (homemade labneh is the best!) across the wrap before adding other fillings and rolling. You can see labneh used as a spread in the lead photos here.
- Chili crisp
- Roasted cherry tomatoes
- Pesto
- Pan-blistered artichoke hearts
More Cottage Cheese Recipes
Cottage Cheese Wraps
You can see the wraps with various fillings in the photos up above. And you can read about favorite filling ideas in the main post. I typically keep fillings pretty simple and use up whatever I have on hand or in the refrigerator. Try to use a large, rimmed baking sheet that is roughly 11 x 16-inches in size for this recipe.
- 1 1/2 cups / 337g low-fat cottage cheese
- 2 large eggs
- 1/8 teaspoon fine grain sea salt
- Fillings and toppings: mozzarella, pesto, roasted cherry tomatoes, labneh, chili crisp, etc.
-
Line a large, rimmed baking sheet completely with parchment paper - ideally 11 x 16. It’s ok if the paper climbs up the side of the pan a bit.
-
Heat oven to 350°F / 176°C with a rack in the center.
-
Pulse the cottage cheese, eggs, and salt in a blender until just smooth. About 15-20 pulses.
-
Starting in the center of the baking pan, slowly and deliberately pour the mixture into a pool of batter, working from the center and making your way toward the edges of the pan. Aim for a rectangular shape of even thickness, and use a spatula to make any adjustments necessary. There are pictures of this process up above. It’s ok if the batter seems a bit thin, trust the process.
-
Carefully move the baking sheet to the oven and bake for about 30 minutes, or until the bottom is very golden. You’ll start to see the edges take on color when you’re getting close.
-
Remove from the oven and allow it to rest for a few minutes. This will let the wrap set and make it less likely to tear.
-
If you want to add cheese as a topping at this point you can pop it back in the oven for a few minutes. Add other topping and spreads to one side and gently roll up. Cut in half and enjoy!
Makes one large wrap. Serves 2.





Post Your Comment
Comments
Mine had great flavor, but was too dry to actually use as a wrap. Was that over cooking? Over mixing? Or do I need to adjust ingredients?
Hmm. I’m thinking that maybe your oven is running a bit hot. Maybe try again using 3 eggs, if you used 2 this time, and dialing back the heat by 25. See if that works better for your oven.
The ‘wrap’ was more like an enveloping omelette than a bread-like wrap, but it was quite tasty and I will make it again. I’m wondering if I can make them ahead of time and freeze?
Hi Jan – you can certainly try, but tbh I’m not optimistic and haven’t tried that myself.
This was yummy! I did a half-batch (3/4c cottage cheese + 1 egg) and it worked great on a quarter sheet pan. I’m looking forward to making it again today for lunch – it doesn’t seem like something that would work well as leftovers.
Yeah – totally agree with that Beth.
This is really appealing. Would well drained ricotta work as well, do you think? Cottage cheese is non-existent here in France.
Yes Margaret – if you try it let me know, but I expect it would work well. I make ricotta pancakes often, and its a similar concept.
More Recipes
Weekly recipes and inspirations.
Popular Ingredients