Best High-Protein Foods for Building Muscle
Hitting your protein target doesn't require protein powder, meal prepping for hours, or eating foods you hate. It requires knowing which foods give you the most protein per calorie and building a rotation of meals you'll actually eat. Here's the complete list — ranked and practical.
Your Daily Target First
Before worrying about which foods, lock in your number. 0.8–1g of protein per pound of bodyweight per day is the research-backed target for adults over 40 who are training. If you weigh 170 lbs, you're aiming for 135–170g daily. Most people are hitting 60–80g. That gap is why results stall.
Tier 1: The Highest-Protein Sources
These should form the backbone of your daily intake:
- Chicken breast: 31g protein per 100g cooked. Affordable, versatile, lean.
- Ground beef (93% lean): 26g per 100g. Also provides zinc, iron, B12, and creatine naturally.
- Eggs: 6g per egg, 13g per 2 eggs. Highest biological value of any whole food protein. Don't skip the yolk — that's where the nutrients are.
- Greek yogurt (plain, 2%): 17–20g per cup. Also provides casein protein (slow-digesting), calcium, and probiotics.
- Cottage cheese: 25g per cup. High in casein — excellent before bed for overnight muscle protein synthesis.
- Canned tuna/salmon: 22–25g per 100g. Fast, cheap, no prep.
- Shrimp: 24g per 100g cooked. Very low calorie — ideal for fat loss phases.
Tier 2: Solid Protein with Additional Nutrients
- Pork tenderloin: 26g per 100g. Underrated and lean.
- Turkey (ground or breast): 25–29g per 100g.
- Edamame: 18g per cup cooked. Best plant protein source alongside quinoa.
- Lentils: 18g per cup cooked. Also high in fiber — good for gut health and satiety.
- Tempeh: 19g per 100g. Fermented soy with better digestibility than regular tofu.
- Low-fat cheese: 7–10g per oz. Easy add-in to meals.
Ken's shortcut: build every meal around a protein anchor. Pick one Tier 1 source per meal, set a portion that gives you 35–50g of protein, then build the rest of the meal around it. Protein becomes automatic.
How to Hit Your Target Daily
Spread protein across 3–4 meals rather than loading it all at once. Research suggests muscle protein synthesis is optimized at 30–50g per meal — larger single doses don't produce proportionally better results. A practical daily example for a 180 lb person targeting 160g:
- Breakfast: 4 eggs + 1 cup Greek yogurt = ~50g
- Lunch: 6oz chicken breast = ~50g
- Dinner: 6oz salmon + 1 cup edamame = ~55g
- Total: ~155g ✓
No powder required. Add a protein shake on days when food intake is tight.
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