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Sous Vide Egg Bites Recipe (Make Them at Home)

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Sous Vide Egg Bites- made with real food ingredients at home
Wellness Mama » Blog » Recipes » Sous Vide Egg Bites Recipe (Make Them at Home)

A year or so ago, Starbucks announced a new menu offering: sous vide egg bites. They are one of their only gluten-free food options and I’ve seen several people raving about them on social media. I tried them while traveling when there were no other decent breakfast options and I’ll give it to Starbucks on the taste… they are good!

Unfortunately, they contain carrageenan and maltodextrin, ingredients I try to avoid. They also cost about $5 (or more in airports), which makes them much pricier than our normal breakfast options. In fact, for our whole family to eat them we’d have to spend almost $40.00!

Instead, I figured out how to make them at home with real-food ingredients. A whole batch costs about what one order costs in a coffee shop!

Why Sous Vide Rocks

I’ve been experimenting with sous vide cooking for about six months and it has become one of my go-to kitchen gadgets. If you aren’t familiar with it, sous vide cooking uses circulating water at a carefully controlled temperature to achieve incredible results. The best steaks, chicken, and eggs I’ve ever cooked were cooked in a sous vide.

In the past, this method required a big machine and was most often used in restaurants. Most methods also use plastic bags to submerge the food in water (so I’d never tried it because we avoid plastic if at all possible).

Sous Vide at Home!

Now, thanks to smaller and much less expensive home sous vide immersion machines (like this one that I have), sous vide is possible at home! It is still a pretty expensive kitchen gadget, but I asked for it as a gift for a big-ish birthday (me=getting old!) and have used it a lot!

After much experimentation, I’ve also found that this recipe is possible without a sous vide machine (although not quite as good). In fact you can do it three ways:

  1. Mason jars in sous vide: The traditional way with a sous vide machine in a pot of water and small mason jars. This yields the best texture and result. I’ve found that 4-ounce mason jars and 8-ounce mason jars both work.
  2. Silicone bags in sous vide: With silicone bags (like these) using a sous vide machine and a pot of water. The texture is amazing, but the presentation isn’t as pretty. This is the method I use to sous vide most other foods without using plastic. Since sous vide is low-temperature cooking, I don’t worry about using the silicone.
  3. Egg-poaching cups: By poaching the eggs using egg-poaching cups in a skillet of water. This is the fastest method and also the least expensive if you don’t already have a sous vide machine.

Sous Vide Egg Bites

Once you’ve decided on one of the three cooking methods above, you’ll also need the ingredients and some patience!

Starbucks lists their ingredients online so the recipe was relatively easy to duplicate. I was surprised that the first ingredient was cottage cheese! I’ve actually been on a bit of a cottage cheese kick anyway since finding a grass-fed organic brand at the grocery store (ask for Good Culture cottage cheese at yours).

Other ingredients include eggs (obviously), cheese, cream, and optional ingredients like bacon, vegetables, or other add-ins.

Time-Saving Tips:

  • Make these with just eggs and cheese and add other flavors as toppings when you re-heat.
  • Make a double or triple batch of these while the sous vide is running and keep in the fridge until ready to use. I often make 16-24 to keep in the fridge for several days of breakfasts.
  • Use 4-ounce size mason jars for a small breakfast or 8-ounce jars and double the recipe for bigger kids or adults.
Sous Vide Egg Bites- made with real food ingredients at home

Sous Vide Egg Bites Recipe (Low-Carb, Keto, THM-S)

Make the popular sous vide egg bites at home with higher quality ingredients and save money over the expensive restaurant options. There are endless ways to mix up this recipe and it is a great one to make ahead for breakfasts. 
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 50 minutes
Total Time 1 hour 5 minutes
Calories 259kcal
Author Katie Wells

Servings

10 4 oz jars

Ingredients

  • 12  eggs
  • ½ cup cottage cheese I love that brand because it is grass fed, organic and doesn’t contain gums or stabilizers
  • ½ cup heavy cream
  • ½ tsp each of salt pepper, garlic powder, and paprika, or any other spices you like
  • ½ tsp hot sauce of choice optional
  • 2 TBSP butter
  • 10 slices of bacon cooked (optional)
  • any cooked vegetables you like optional
  • 1 cup gruyere or cheese of choice grated

Instructions

  • Set the sous vide machine to 172°F. This is the common temperature for eggs and you can cook almost any egg recipe this way. 
  • Crack the eggs into a blender or food processor and add the cottage cheese, heavy cream, spices, and hot sauce. 
  • Blend on medium speed until just blended and smooth. You don’t want to add extra air by blending on high.
  • Use the butter to lightly grease ten 4-ounce mason jars (or five 8-ounce jars). You can also easily double or triple this recipe, just use more jars!
  • If using bacon and vegetables, place these in the bottoms of the jars.
  • Add the grated cheese to the jars.
  • Pour the egg mixture into the jars and hand tighten the lids (do not over tighten!). 
  • Cook for 50 minutes if you are planning to reheat or one hour if you are planning to eat right away.
  • Remove from heat and refrigerate right away if not consuming immediately. In theory, these should last at least a week in the refrigerator because they were cooked at over 140 for over half an hour, but we’ve never had them last that long without being eaten! 

Nutrition

Nutrition Facts
Sous Vide Egg Bites Recipe (Low-Carb, Keto, THM-S)
Amount Per Serving (1 (4 oz.) jar)
Calories 259 Calories from Fat 175
% Daily Value*
Fat 19.4g30%
Saturated Fat 7.9g49%
Cholesterol 261mg87%
Sodium 773mg34%
Carbohydrates 1.5g1%
Sugar 0.6g1%
Protein 19g38%
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.

Notes

If making in egg-poaching cups without a sous vide machine, follow the steps to mix the ingredients and assemble in egg poaching cups instead of mason jars. Add these to a skillet of boiling water until eggs are cooked. Do not attempt this method with mason jars, as they will crack!
This recipe is incredibly adaptable and can be made without cheese for those with dairy allergies or who are strict paleo. It is naturally low-carb and keto-friendly. Also, since I’ve had several readers ask about various recipes, this would be an “S” meal on the Trim Healthy Mama plan. 

Like this recipe? Check out my new cookbook, or get all my recipes (over 500!) in a personalized weekly meal planner here!

Ever tried sous vide? Ready to give it a try? Share below!

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Katie Wells Avatar

About Katie Wells

Katie Wells, CTNC, MCHC, Founder of Wellness Mama and Co-founder of Wellnesse, has a background in research, journalism, and nutrition. As a mom of six, she turned to research and took health into her own hands to find answers to her health problems. WellnessMama.com is the culmination of her thousands of hours of research and all posts are medically reviewed and verified by the Wellness Mama research team. Katie is also the author of the bestselling books The Wellness Mama Cookbook and The Wellness Mama 5-Step Lifestyle Detox.

Comments

87 responses to “Sous Vide Egg Bites Recipe (Make Them at Home)”

  1. Chris Avatar

    Is there a reason you don’t put the bacon and cheese on top? So that you can broil and still eat from the jars?

  2. Angie Avatar

    I thought you were against eggs according to a trailer tease I saw a while ago for your program. Explain?

  3. Darlene Morehouse Avatar
    Darlene Morehouse

    I can’t wait to try this! What are the two different texture layers from in the egg bites in the photograph? Is it just the eggs doing a little something different on the bottom or did the grated cheese sink to the bottom and make it look different?

  4. Diane Avatar

    I just discovered the completely addictive Starbucks egg bites and am delighted to learn I can now make them at home!!! Do you think I could sub a pretty firm ricotta for the cottage cheese? Thanks!

    1. karen Avatar

      I do use ricotta, its great room temperature for lunch at work. Layered like this….. Carmelized mushrooms and onions, then spinach, I season, salt & pepper and any spices I like to match this all first before adding ricotta on top of the previous layers to hold down the layers, then turkey bacon and then pepper jack sprinkled on top last, then pour a beaten mixture of NO cream just eggs and more ricotta. Sprinkle a little cardamom and chili powder to give first bite flavor and pretty color. You do not have to carmelize but at least saute veggies, brings out the flavor. You can “oven” carmelize mushrooms & onions together with butter and bake the turkey bacon too all at once very simple while you are preparing the rest. I always have carmelized Mushrooms, onions and tomatoes on hand. For quick recipes.
      Desert is made easy this way too. Layer dried cherries, soft cream cheese spread on top and more cherries and sprinkle chocolate chips pushing down into the cream cheese, sprinkle cardamom, cinnamon and nutmeg then add beaten eggs and ricotta. Both the savory and sweet Egg cups cook in Sous Vide as stated in the recipe above for a quiche like the egg cup, or in the other methods for a more scrambled egg texture.

  5. Amanda Jonker Avatar
    Amanda Jonker

    could you put theses in a crock pot of hot water, if you don’t have the Sous Vide machine – as it doesn’t boil but is a slow heat?

  6. Rozzieb Avatar
    Rozzieb

    In the ingredients it says Cottage cheese, and in the directions it says cream cheese. Does it matter? Or is it just whatever your preference?

  7. Silvia Messmer Avatar
    Silvia Messmer

    5 stars
    Do you add the cottage cheese with the eggs before they are blended? I didn’t see where it was added.

  8. Candace Avatar

    These sound delish! They would make wonderful breakfasts for guests! (Or just my hubby and me…!) I will be trying the egg poaching cups and the recipe says to “add to a skillet of boiling water until the eggs are cooked”. Approximately how long is that? Thank you!

    1. Fiona Avatar

      5 stars
      Just made these in a brand new egg poacher I found at Value Village. My Starbucks sous vide habit was getting out of hand. They are exactly like the Starbucks ones….seems the cottage cheese is what gives it that special flavour.
      I cooked mine for 10 minutes once the water was boiling and then put them under the broiler with extra cheese on top.

  9. Jeni Herman Avatar
    Jeni Herman

    Cottage cheese or cream cheese? (List says cottage, blender part says cream…) Thanks! These look good 🙂
    I haven’t splurged on a machine, but am a food network fan, so I’ve drooled over them for awhile. Somehow, it never occurred to me to try to rig one up! I like the comment about using my canner/extra bands.
    Do you think I have to have the circulator, or is it worth bringing to a boil, then reduce the heat & cook on low? Or do I have to maintain a boil for safety?

    1. Katie - Wellness Mama Avatar

      It should all say cottage cheese. And I don’t think it is possible to replicate the results with just boiling water. For one thing, with sous vide, it is never getting close to boiling temp (212) but is usually staying at 150 or below. It would be very difficult to maintain this temperature consistently for hours on the stove or with other methods.

  10. Carin Avatar

    Starbucks has that great crispy cheese flavor, have you managed to replicate this? Would you broil or pan fry then to finish them?

  11. Wanda Avatar

    Hey Katie! Is it cream cheese or cottage cheese? Cottage cheese is listed in the ingredients, but the instructions say cream cheese.. I would gamble and do both but it doesn’t always work out in sous vide! I’m excited to try this recipe, I got a sous video supreme 6 years ago and it gets lots of use!

  12. Angela Avatar

    Sounds amazing! This may be the thing that breaks me down and gets me to buy an instant pot! 🙂

    In the blender step, do you mean add cottage cheese rather than cream cheese? I don’t see cream cheese on your ingredients list.

  13. Margaret O'Brien Avatar
    Margaret O’Brien

    I have some double egg coddlers. I bet they would work well for this too. I expect they are probably about the size of the 4 oz. jars.

  14. Catherine Avatar

    Could you bake this in the oven like an egg custard? Blend all the ingredients and then bake in ramikins??

  15. Shari Avatar

    How do you reheat these… I am guessing microwave but I’m no fan of those. Is there another reheat option?

  16. Carrie Avatar

    You should be able to do the mason jars safely in the regular stockpot without the sous vide if you put the jars on a metal trivet or canning rack. Even with the sous vide, it’s a good idea to use the trivet to let water circulate completely around and under the egg cups. I use the trivet from the Instant Pot, but an ad hoc trivet can be created using just canning lid bands. Can’t wait to try this, thanks!

  17. Nan M Avatar

    Thanks for the great looking recipe! Two questions. The instructions call for cream cheese but there is no cream cheese in the ingredients list. Should this be cottage cheese? Also, there’s no mention of how to plate this. Does it just slide out of the jar upside down onto the plate? The picture does not look like those toppings were cooked in the jar with the eggs, as the instructions would suggest. For plating, did you add the bacon and veggies and cheese, omitting them from the egg mixture, or did you do both? And the picture sure makes it look like there is a crust on the bottom.

    1. Katie - Wellness Mama Avatar

      It should say cottage cheese… fixed now 🙂 they do slide out of the jars pretty easy, but I added extra crumbled bacon and cheese for visual appeal when taking the picture. When not trying to photograph and make it look pretty, I’d actually recommend putting under the broiler with some extra cheese for a crispy outer shell.

  18. Kara Avatar

    Looks great, can’t wait to try it! Hubby is obsessed with the Starbucks version, and we need to find a cheaper (and healthier!) substitute.

    I plan on attempting cooking method #3, as I don’t own a Sous Vide. Do you think this would work with a silicone muffin pan set in a large skillet, instead of the silicone egg poachers?

  19. Lori Avatar

    5 stars
    I’ve never tried Sous Vide, but now I want to try! I don’t have a Sous Vide machine so I’ll have to try one of the other methods you mentioned.

    I love poached eggs. Is the texture similar? It looks a little custardy in the picture.

    Thanks for another great post, Katie!

    1. Priscilla Whitley Avatar
      Priscilla Whitley

      They are so good. I’ve only had the Starbucks ones but agree I don’t like the ingredient list. It is a smooth texture. It’s delicious.

    2. karen Avatar

      A poached egg isn’t beaten. This is more like a quiche texture. Same ingredients as a quiche as well!

  20. Joy Avatar

    I’d love to hear more about how you cook meat sous vide without plastic! I have been hesitant to try this method for that very reason, but I may now pick up that machine! What sort of container do you submerse it in?

4.24 from 21 votes (8 ratings without comment)

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