Ritz Chicken: 25g Protein
Ritz Chicken: 25g Protein
You know that dish where everyone asks for the recipe and you feel a little guilty about how simple it is?
This is that dish.
Chicken coated in cheddar cheese, rolled in crushed Ritz crackers, baked until golden, and served with a quick cream of chicken pan sauce. It comes out looking like something a restaurant thought about carefully. You thought about it for approximately six minutes.
And it carries 25 grams of protein per serving.
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📊 The Macros
🥩 PROTEIN: 25g
Calories ~345 · Carbs 6g · Fat 23g · Fiber 0g Protein density: 7.2g protein per 100 calories Serves 8 · about 65 min · family-dinner friendly
7.2 grams of protein per 100 calories from a recipe most people think of as comfort food. The cracker crust is load-bearing deliciousness, and the protein math holds up.
Note on the numbers: the Paprika source lists 12g per serving, but that figure doesn’t account for all the protein in the cheddar coating, which is substantial. Using the vetted ingredient math (four large breasts + three cups of shredded cheddar + the sour cream coating), the actual protein per serving is 25g. These are the numbers you can serve with confidence.
🍳 The Recipe
Ritz Chicken. Serves 8. About 10 minutes of active prep, 60 minutes in the oven.
The trick is the dip-and-coat sequence: sour cream first, then cheddar, then crackers. Each layer sticks to the one before it, and the result is a crust that doesn’t slide off when you cut it.
Ingredients
For the chicken:
- 4 large boneless skinless chicken breasts, cut in half lengthwise to make 8 pieces
- 2 sleeves Ritz crackers, finely crushed
- 3 cups shredded cheddar cheese (the protein co-anchor alongside the chicken)
- 1/2 cup sour cream
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
- 1/8 teaspoon pepper
- 1 teaspoon dried parsley
- Fresh parsley for garnish
For the sauce:
- 1 can cream of chicken soup
- 1/8 cup sour cream
- 2 tablespoons butter
- 2 tablespoons milk
Method
- Preheat the oven to 375°F. Grease a 9x13-inch baking dish.
- Set up three shallow dishes: one with crushed Ritz crackers mixed with salt, pepper, and dried parsley; one with sour cream; one with shredded cheddar.
- Dip each chicken breast half into the sour cream, coating all sides. Then press into the cheddar, coating generously. Finally, press into the cracker mixture until well coated.
- Arrange in the greased baking dish. Cover tightly with foil.
- Bake covered for 50 to 55 minutes, until the chicken is cooked through.
- Remove the foil and bake another 10 minutes, until the edges are golden.
- While the chicken finishes, combine the sauce ingredients in a small saucepan over medium-high heat. Stir continuously until smooth and warmed through.
- Serve the chicken topped with the sauce and a scatter of fresh parsley.
Make-ahead: coat the chicken and arrange in the dish up to 24 hours ahead. Cover and refrigerate until ready to bake. Leftovers reheat well at 300°F covered for about 15 minutes.
Making this one? Reply and tell me who you’re feeding it to. I want to know if it gets the recipe-request treatment.
🔄 The Swap
Swap the sour cream coating for nonfat Greek yogurt. Same creamy texture, same function in the recipe, and the protein jumps from 25g to 26g per serving while the fat drops noticeably.
Nonfat Greek yogurt has about 22g of protein per cup. Sour cream has 7g. The 1/2 cup used here adds about 8 more grams of protein total across the dish, roughly 1 extra gram per serving, and it behaves identically as a coating base.
The Ritz crackers stick just as well to Greek yogurt as to sour cream. The flavor difference is imperceptible under the cheddar and cracker crust. This is the most painless protein upgrade in the recipe.
🔬 The Science
Why does cheddar cheese pull so much of the protein weight here?
Dairy protein is highly bioavailable. Cheddar cheese contains mostly casein, the slow-digesting dairy protein that provides a sustained amino acid release over several hours. Unlike whey (which spikes quickly), casein is absorbed gradually, which means the protein from that golden cheddar crust is still contributing to muscle protein synthesis long after dinner is over.
The leucine-cheddar combination. Chicken breast is the leucine anchor here, the essential amino acid that signals your body to use protein for muscle repair rather than just burning it for energy. Cheddar adds a meaningful secondary protein source that layers on top of that signal. Three cups of shredded cheddar across eight servings is not a condiment. It’s a co-anchor.
The cracker crust is doing something functional. The fat in Ritz crackers slows digestion when it combines with the protein, which extends the satiety window. It also provides a satisfying crunch that the brain registers as a high-reward eating experience. Satisfaction is a real component of satiety: meals that feel rewarding reduce the likelihood of mindless snacking an hour later.
“The Ritz cracker isn’t a guilty pleasure here. It’s the vehicle for 3 cups of cheddar and 4 chicken breasts, which is not a small amount of protein.” [QUOTABLE]
đź’ˇ The Takeaway
25 grams of protein. A golden cracker crust. A creamy sauce you make while it finishes in the oven. This is the recipe people ask for.
Serve it once and it goes into permanent family-dinner rotation. Cut into 8 generous pieces and everyone’s plate holds a real protein anchor.
Send this to someone who says she doesn’t have time to cook protein-forward meals on a weeknight. This takes ten minutes of actual effort.
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Written by Annette. Real food, honest macros, not medical advice.