The biggest mistake people make with cottage cheese muffins is skipping the blender, leaving white curds scattered through the batter. Blitzing the cottage cheese with the wet ingredients breaks those curds down into a smooth, creamy base that bakes up tender and evenly moist. These pumpkin protein cottage cheese muffins get a protein boost and a soft crumb without tasting healthy or dense.
The chocolate chips aren’t just for show, they balance the warm pumpkin spice and the subtle tang from the dairy. Each bite stays interesting.
Blend cottage cheese for smooth, moist protein muffins
Cottage cheese curds can be off-putting in a baked muffin. Blending it with the wet ingredients, maple syrup, vanilla, pumpkin puree, and eggs, breaks down those curds completely. The result is a smooth, creamy batter that bakes up tender and moist, with no visible white specks.
The protein from the cottage cheese adds structure and a subtle richness, but it doesn’t taste cheesy. For the richest texture, use whole milk cottage cheese; low-fat versions work but yield a slightly leaner crumb.
Pumpkin spice and chocolate chips balance these pumpkin spice muffins
Pumpkin spice brings warmth, cinnamon, nutmeg, ginger, cloves, that complements the earthy pumpkin and the mild tang of cottage cheese. Chocolate chips add pockets of sweetness and a slight bitterness from the cocoa, cutting through the spice. Mini chips are ideal: they distribute evenly through the batter and don’t sink to the bottom during baking.
The contrast keeps each bite interesting, making the protein boost feel like an indulgence.
Mix batter just until combined for tender muffins
Gluten develops when flour meets liquid and gets agitated. Stir the dry ingredients into the blended wet mixture only until no streaks of flour remain, lumps are fine. Overmixing stretches the gluten strands, giving you dense, tough muffins instead of light, fluffy ones.
When you fold in the chocolate chips, do it gently with a few strokes; rough handling deflates the batter. The reward is a tender crumb that stays moist through the 25 to 30 minute bake.

Prep: 10 min · Cook: 30 min · Total: 40 min · Servings: 10 · Calories: 180 kcal
Ingredients to watch in pumpkin protein muffins
Cottage cheese: Whole milk cottage cheese gives the richest texture, but low fat works too.
Pumpkin puree: Use plain pumpkin puree, not pumpkin pie filling, to control sweetness.
Chocolate chips: Mini chips distribute better and sink less than regular sized chips.
Blend, mix, bake: the method for these protein muffins
Blend the wet ingredients
Pour cottage cheese, maple syrup, vanilla, pumpkin puree, and eggs into a blender. Whiz until the batter looks smooth and creamy, no curds visible, about 30 seconds. If you see white specks, give it another few pulses.
Combine with dry ingredients
Dump the blended liquid into a bowl with flour, baking powder, pumpkin spice, and salt. Stir with a spatula just until no dry flour remains, lumps are fine. The batter should be thick but scoopable, not stiff.
Fold in chocolate chips
Scatter chocolate chips over the batter. Fold gently with 4, 5 strokes; the chips should be evenly distributed without overworking the batter. Stop as soon as you can’t see bare chips.
Fill and bake
Spray muffin liners lightly with oil, this keeps the batter from sticking. Divide batter among 10 liners, filling each almost to the top. Bake at 350°F for 25 to 30 minutes; the tops spring back when pressed and a toothpick comes out clean.

Pumpkin Protein Cottage Cheese Muffins
Ingredients
- 3/4 cup cottage cheese whole milk works best
- 1/3 cup maple syrup
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 1/3 cup pumpkin puree
- 2 large eggs
- 1 1/2 cup all-purpose flour or gluten-free all-purpose flour (180 g)
- 1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
- 2 teaspoons pumpkin spice
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
- 1/2 cup mini chocolate chips or regular (90 g)
Instructions
Preheat oven and line tin:
Preheat oven to 350°F (175°C) and line a muffin tin with liners.Blend wet ingredients:
Combine cottage cheese, maple syrup, vanilla, pumpkin puree, and eggs in a blender and blend until smooth.Mix dry ingredients:
In a large mixing bowl, mix the blended liquid with flour, baking powder, pumpkin spice, and salt until just combined.Fold in chocolate chips:
Fold in chocolate chips.Fill muffin liners:
Spray muffin liners with a little oil and pour batter into each liner.Bake muffins:
Bake for 25-30 minutes.Cool and serve:
Let cool for a few minutes and enjoy.

Storage and Serving
Eat these muffins within 2 hours of baking for the softest crumb. After that, store them in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 3 days.
The texture firms slightly as they sit, but a 10-second zap in the microwave restores softness. For longer storage, freeze in a zip-top bag for up to 3 months.
Thaw at room temperature or reheat in the microwave. Don’t refrigerate, the cold dries them out faster than room air. If you add a finishing drizzle or extra chocolate chips, do it right before serving, not before storage, so the topping stays distinct.
Swap cottage cheese, sweetener, or flour, but keep pumpkin puree and eggs
Cottage cheese: Greek yogurt or silken tofu. Greek yogurt gives a tangier, slightly drier muffin; silken tofu yields a softer, more neutral crumb.
Use whole milk yogurt or firm silken tofu for best results. Low-fat versions of either may make the muffins denser.
Maple syrup: Honey or agave nectar. Honey adds a floral note and can darken the crumb; agave is milder and slightly sweeter. Use the same volume, 1/3 cup, but expect a slightly different sweetness level.
Both work well.
All-purpose flour: Gluten-free all-purpose flour blend or oat flour. A 1:1 gluten-free blend (with xanthan gum) works as a direct swap. Oat flour makes the muffins more tender and slightly crumblier; start with the same 1 1/2 cups but note oat flour absorbs more moisture, you may need an extra tablespoon of milk or water if the batter seems stiff.
Chocolate chips: Nuts, dried fruit, or omit. Chopped walnuts or pecans add crunch; dried cranberries or cherries give tart bursts.
Omit entirely for a plain pumpkin muffin. The swap changes the texture but not the structure.
Tips
- Toss chocolate chips with 1 tablespoon of the measured flour before folding in; this coats them and prevents sinking to the bottom of the batter during baking.
- If your batter seems too stiff after adding flour, stir in 1 to 2 tablespoons of milk or water; the thick batter from whole milk cottage cheese can vary in moisture, and a slight adjustment keeps muffins from drying out.
I still stir with a light hand, stopping the second the flour disappears, even if a few lumps remain.

Frequently Asked Questions
Can I make these muffins ahead of time and freeze them?
Yes, freeze in a zip-top bag for up to 3 months. Thaw at room temp or reheat in the microwave. Don’t refrigerate, it dries them out faster than room air.
Why did my muffins turn out dense instead of fluffy?
Most likely overmixing the batter once flour was added. Stir only until no dry flour remains, lumps are fine. Overworking develops gluten, making the crumb tough.
Another possibility: baking powder that’s past its prime won’t lift the batter properly.
How is this different from regular pumpkin muffins?
Cottage cheese replaces some of the fat and adds protein without a cheesy taste, after blending, the batter is smooth. The maple syrup sweetens more subtly than granulated sugar, and the pumpkin spice is balanced by chocolate chips. Each muffin packs 180 calories and stays tender from the protein structure.
