Prep time: 5 minutes
Cook time: 15 minutes
Total time: 20 minutes
Intensity: ★☆☆☆☆ (Very Easy – Blender & Oven)
Last of the recipe: Best served warm, within 1 hour of baking.
Yield: 2 large flatbreads or 4 mini wraps
Why You’ll Love This
Forget carb-heavy doughs and complicated yeast proofs. This cottage cheese flatbread is a game-changer for high-protein, low-carb eating. It’s soft, foldable, slightly chewy, and packed with over 30g of protein per serving. Use it as a wrap, pizza base, or dipper for soups. No grains, no gluten, and just one blender to clean.
Nutrition (per 1 large flatbread – ½ of recipe)
| Nutrient | Amount |
|---|---|
| Calories | 215 kcal |
| Protein | 32g |
| Fat | 9g |
| Carbohydrates | 6g |
| Fiber | 1g |
| Sugar | 4g |
| Sodium | 480mg |
Note: Nutrition varies by cottage cheese brand. Whole milk cottage cheese yields higher fat; low-fat yields lower calories.
Ingredients
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1 cup (225g) full-fat or low-fat cottage cheese – Do not use dry curds; needs moisture.
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2 large eggs – Room temperature.
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½ cup (60g) superfine almond flour – Or oat flour for nut-free.
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Optional: ¼ tsp garlic powder, ½ tsp dried oregano, or a pinch of salt.
Equipment Needed
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Blender or food processor (highly recommended for smooth texture)
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Rubber spatula
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Parchment paper
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Baking sheet
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Oven (or large non-stick pan for stovetop version)
Recipe Intensity & Timing Guide
| Step | Intensity | Time |
|---|---|---|
| Blending ingredients | Low (push-button) | 1 min |
| Letting batter rest | None (waiting) | 5 min |
| Spreading on sheet | Medium (steady hand) | 2 min |
| Baking | None (oven works) | 12-15 min |
| Cooling & peeling | Low | 2 min |
Total effort: Very low. The only “intensity” is evenly spreading the thin batter.
Instructions
1. Preheat & Prepare
Preheat your oven to 350°F (175°C). Line a large baking sheet with parchment paper. Do not grease – the flatbread will stick unless you use parchment.
2. Blend Until Velvety
In a blender, combine:
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Cottage cheese
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Eggs
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Almond flour
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Any optional seasonings
Blend on high for 30–45 seconds until the mixture is completely smooth and looks like thin pancake batter. Stop and scrape down sides if needed. No lumps allowed – lumps create holes in the flatbread.
3. Rest the Batter (Crucial Step)
Let the batter sit in the blender for 5 minutes. This allows the almond flour to hydrate and the bubbles to settle, which prevents a rubbery texture.
4. Spread Thin & Even
Pour half the batter onto one side of the prepared parchment. Using the back of a spoon or an offset spatula, spread it into a 9-inch circle about ⅛-inch thick. Keep it even – thin areas will crisp, thick areas stay doughy. Repeat with the second half of batter on another sheet (or bake in batches).
5. Bake Until Golden Edges
Bake for 12–15 minutes on the middle rack. The flatbread is done when:
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The edges are golden brown
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The top is dry to the touch
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It easily peels away from the parchment when lifted at a corner
Pro tip: If the center still looks wet, bake 2 more minutes. Do not flip.
6. Cool & Peel
Slide the parchment onto a cooling rack. Let the flatbread cool for 2 minutes – it will firm up as it cools. Then gently peel it off the paper. If it sticks, it’s under-baked; return to oven for 2 minutes.
7. The Last of the Recipe – Best Enjoyed Fresh
This flatbread is best eaten within 1 hour of baking. Its texture is soft and pliable when warm. As it cools completely, it becomes more cracker-like. To reheat the “last of the recipe,” simply warm in a dry skillet for 20 seconds per side or toast briefly.