High Protein Muffin Tops ( Recipe)

Macros
195 calories
14g protein
4g fat
28g carbs
Red Velvet Protein Muffins with Cream Cheese Hero

Everyone knows the top is the only part of the muffin that actually matters. This recipe eliminates the dense, soggy bottom entirely and gives you exactly what you want: the soft, cakey dome with a slight crust. By utilizing a boxed cake mix as our base and fortifying it with , we maintain that authentic bakery texture while pushing the macros heavily in our favor. Each one of these muffin tops clocks in around 13 grams of protein when finished with the thick cream cheese icing. It is efficient, fast, and delivers a massive return on the minimal effort required.

If you're looking for other Red Velvet or muffin hits, try my:

The Muffin Top Strategy

Baking only the top of the muffin completely changes the heat distribution. Instead of the batter steaming inside a deep well, the shallow cavity exposes maximum surface area to the dry heat of the oven. This rapid heat transfer sets the edges quickly, causing the center to puff up and bake through in a fraction of the time. The result is a consistent, tender crumb without the risk of an underbaked middle.

Jacob eating a Muffin Top

Why You'll Love This Recipe

  • Elite Texture: The combination of commercial cake mix and a whey/casein protein blend ensures a soft, tender bite that doesn't dry out.
  • : You are getting around 13 grams of protein per muffin top, making this a legitimate post-workout option or satisfying breakfast.
  • Incredible Frosting: The Greek and sugar-free pudding mix combination creates a thick, pipeable icing that tastes like authentic cream cheese frosting but adds pure protein.
  • Speed: Using a boxed base cuts your prep time down to under five minutes. You are eating in less than 15 minutes.
  • Portion Control: The recipe yields exactly 7 large muffin tops (using a 2-inch scoop), keeping you from dealing with a massive batch of leftovers that go stale.

What makes High Protein Red Velvet Muffin Tops Unique?

What makes a baked good actually taste like a bakery item is structural integrity. When you introduce 60 grams of into half a box of standard cake mix, you completely alter the hydration requirements. Standard whey protein would turn this into a rubber tire. By using a whey/casein blend and relying on the whole egg and skim milk, we bind the modified dry ingredients while providing enough fat and liquid to maintain the signature velvety crumb. The icing relies on the stabilizing starches in the pudding mix to turn standard yogurt into a firm, dense topping that won't melt off the cake.

Red Velvet Protein Muffins with Cream Cheese On Board

Key Equipment Focus

Muffin Top Tin: This is non-negotiable for this specific result. A shallow muffin top pan provides the exact surface area needed to create the crust-to-center ratio that defines a true muffin top.

Cookie Scoop Set: I used a 2-inch scoop for this recipe, which yields exactly 7 large tops. Using a mechanical scoop ensures every top is the same size, meaning they will all finish baking at the exact same time.

Digital Kitchen Scale: Precision is everything when splitting a boxed cake mix. Weighing your half-box of mix and your protein powder is the only way to ensure the hydration levels from the milk and egg are correct.

Red Velvet Muffin Top Ingredientrs

Ingredient Deep Dive & Strategy

Red Velvet Cake Mix: The boxed mix provides the essential leavening agents, emulsifiers, and processed flour needed to guarantee a soft, tender crumb. It acts as the structural foundation that allows us to add heavy protein powder without ruining the texture.

Protein Powder: You must use a whey/casein blend (like PE Science). A 100% whey protein powder will dry out instantly in the oven and result in a rubbery, unpleasant texture. The casein retains moisture and mimics the properties of standard flour.

Skim Milk: This provides the necessary hydration to activate the leavening agents in the cake mix and hydrate the protein powder. We use skim to keep the added fats low, as the cake mix and egg provide enough lipids for mouthfeel.

Sugar-Free Cheesecake Pudding Mix: The modified cornstarch in the pudding mix acts as a cold-setting stabilizer. When whisked into the yogurt, it absorbs the excess whey, thickening the yogurt into a dense, pipeable icing that mimics cream cheese.

Red Velvet Protein Muffins with Cream Cheese Frosting Close Up

High Protein Red Velvet Muffin Tops Step by Step Instructions

1. Prep the oven and pan: Preheat your oven to 350°F (175°C). Lightly coat your muffin top tin with non-stick cooking spray to ensure clean removal.

2. Combine the dry and wet ingredients: In a mixing bowl, combine the 1/2 box of red velvet cake mix, 2 scoops of protein powder, 1/2 cup of skim milk, and 1 whole egg. Whisk until a thick, cohesive batter forms and no dry pockets of powder remain at the bottom of the bowl.

Pro Tip: Do not overmix. Once the batter comes together, stop stirring. Overworking it will develop the gluten in the cake mix and make the muffin tops tough.

3. Scoop the batter: Using a 2-inch cookie scoop, portion the batter evenly into the cavities of the muffin top tin. This should yield exactly 7 large tops. If you use a smaller scoop, adjust to 10-12 cavities.

4. Bake the muffin tops: Place the tin in the center of the oven and bake for 8 to 10 minutes. The tops are done when they spring back slightly to the touch and the edges look set.

5. Prepare the cream cheese icing: While the tops are baking, add 1 cup of yogurt and the 1/2 packet of sugar-free cheesecake pudding mix into a small bowl. Stir vigorously until the mixture thickens into a firm, icing-like consistency.

Pro Tip: Let the icing sit in the fridge for 5 minutes while the muffin tops cool. The starches in the pudding mix will continue to hydrate, making the icing even thicker and easier to pipe.

6. Ice and serve: Once the muffin tops have completely cooled, transfer the icing to a zip-top bag, snip the corner, and pipe thick squiggles across the top of each one.

Red Velvet Protein Muffins with Cream Cheese Frosting

Troubleshooting & FAQ

Why are my muffin tops dry and rubbery?

You likely used a 100% whey protein isolate. Isolate absorbs liquid rapidly and cooks into a tough, spongy texture. You must use a whey/casein blend for baking to retain moisture.

Why did my icing turn out thin and runny?

This happens if your yogurt has too much liquid whey sitting on top before you mix it, or if you didn't use enough pudding mix. Always stir your yogurt first, and ensure you use the full 1/2 packet of pudding mix to activate the stabilizers.

Why did my muffin tops spread into one giant sheet?

You overfilled the cavities. A 2-inch scoop provides the correct volume. If you just dumped the batter in with a spoon, it likely expanded over the edges. Always use a mechanical scoop for exact portioning.

Can I make these in a regular muffin tin?

Yes, but you will defeat the purpose of the recipe. If you use a standard tin, you will only get 4-5 regular , and you will need to increase the bake time to 14-16 minutes.

Can I use a different flavor of cake mix?

Absolutely. The hydration ratio of 1/2 box mix, 2 scoops of protein, 1 egg, and 1/2 cup milk is highly stable. You can use chocolate, vanilla, or yellow cake mix with the exact same method.

Substitutions Table

ComponentSwap Options
Red Velvet Cake MixChocolate Cake Mix, Vanilla Cake Mix, Devil's Food Cake Mix
Skim MilkAlmond Milk, Cashew Milk, Fairlife Non-Fat
Whole Egg45g Liquid Egg Whites (will be slightly less rich)
Sugar-Free Cheesecake MixSugar-Free Vanilla Pudding Mix, White Chocolate Pudding Mix

Storage & Reheating

Because of the dairy-based icing, these must be stored in the refrigerator. Place them in an airtight container in a single layer. They will stay fresh for up to 4 days. Do not reheat them with the icing on, as the yogurt will melt and separate. Eat them cold from the fridge or let them sit at room temperature for 10 minutes before eating.

Red Velvet Protein Muffins with Cream Cheese Frosting Bit

You Might Also Like

If you love protein-packed as much as I do, these three hits from the archive are worth checking out next.

The Final Verdict & Share

These red velvet muffin tops give you the exact bakery experience you want without the macros you don't. By utilizing the box mix hack and a heavy protein icing, you are getting efficiency and flavor in under 15 minutes. Bake them, top them, and hit your protein goals without eating another dry chicken breast.

Red Velvet Protein Muffins with Cream Cheese Hero

High Protein Red Velvet Muffin Tops

5 from 1 vote
A high-protein take on bakery-style muffin tops. Using a red velvet box mix base cut with a whey/casein protein blend, these deliver authentic cake texture with around 13g of protein per piece, complete with a thick, macro-friendly cream cheese icing.
Prep Time 5 minutes
Cook Time 10 minutes
Total Time 15 minutes
Servings: 7 muffin tops
Course: Breakfast, Dessert
Cuisine: American
Calories: 195

Ingredients
  

Muffin Top Batter
  • 0.5 box red velvet cake mix
  • 2 scoops protein powder Whey/Casein blend required
  • 0.5 cup skim milk
  • 1 egg
Protein Cream Cheese Icing
  • 1 cup Greek yogurt Non-fat
  • 0.5 packet sugar-free cheesecake pudding mix

Method
 

  1. Preheat your oven to 350°F (175°C) and lightly coat your muffin top tin with non-stick cooking spray.
  2. In a mixing bowl, combine the 1/2 box of red velvet cake mix, 2 scoops of protein powder, 1/2 cup of skim milk, and 1 whole egg. Whisk until a thick batter forms.
  3. Using a 2-inch cookie scoop, portion the batter evenly into the cavities of the muffin top tin, making 7 tops.
  4. Bake for 8 to 10 minutes until the edges are set and the tops spring back slightly to the touch. Remove and let cool.
  5. In a small bowl, aggressively stir the 1 cup of yogurt and 1/2 packet of sugar-free cheesecake pudding mix until it forms a thick icing.
  6. Transfer the icing to a zip-top bag, snip the corner, and pipe squiggles over the cooled muffin tops before serving.

Nutrition

Calories: 195kcalCarbohydrates: 28gProtein: 13gFat: 4g

Notes

High Protein Red Velvet Muffin Tops Tips & Expert Strategy

WHEY VS CASEIN: You must use a whey/casein blend for the batter. If you use 100% whey protein isolate, the muffin tops will be incredibly dry and have a rubbery texture.
DO NOT OVERMIX: Once the dry ingredients are fully hydrated, stop stirring. Overworking the batter will develop the gluten in the commercial cake mix and make your muffin tops tough instead of tender.
THE CHILLING EFFECT: The icing will improve dramatically if you let it sit in the fridge for 5-10 minutes before piping. The starches in the pudding mix need time to fully hydrate and thicken the yogurt.
SERVING STRATEGY: These are best served cold straight out of the fridge. The yogurt-based icing will hold its structure best when chilled, giving you a firm, authentic cream cheese frosting bite.

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One response to “High Protein Red Velvet Muffin Tops (High-Protein Recipe)”

  1. Jacob Hensley Avatar
    Jacob Hensley

    5 stars
    Delicious

5 from 1 vote

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Jacob Hensley Founder of BakedLean
Meet jacob, aka

bakedlean

I started BakedLean as a passion project to make healthier, high-protein versions of classic desserts and comfort foods.