Protein in Yoghurt with Fruit
One Plain Greek yoghurt + 1/2 cup berries of yoghurt with fruit contains 18g of protein at 132 kcal. That\'s a protein-per-calorie ratio of 13.6g per 100 kcal — a strong protein contribution per calorie — fits well into any protein-focused eating plan.
Protein by portion size
| Portion | Protein (g) | Calories | g protein / 100 kcal |
|---|---|---|---|
| Plain Greek yoghurt + 1/2 cup berries (~200g) | 18 | 132 | 13.6 |
| Fruit-on-the-bottom yoghurt cup (~170g) | 7 | 180 | 3.9 |
| Activia / Yoplait yoghurt (~113g) | 5 | 100 | 5.0 |
| Plain non-fat Greek + 1 medium banana | 18 | 205 | 8.8 |
| Plain non-fat Greek + 1 Tbsp honey | 17 | 165 | 10.3 |
How much yoghurt with fruit to hit your protein target?
Phillips & Van Loon 2009 (JISSN) established 0.4 g/kg per meal as the per-meal threshold to fully stimulate muscle protein synthesis — roughly 25–40g for most adults. To hit those targets purely from yoghurt with fruit:
- 278g of yoghurt with fruit for 25g protein (~183 kcal)
- 444g of yoghurt with fruit for 40g protein (~293 kcal)
- Per 1g of protein from yoghurt with fruit: 7.3 kcal
What this protein density means
For perspective, the highest-density protein whole foods cluster around 15–19g of protein per 100 kcal: chicken breast 18.8, white fish 16–17, Greek yoghurt 17 (non-fat), tuna 15. Medium-density sources (5–12 g/100kcal) include eggs, beef, salmon, tofu, and lentils. Below 4g/100kcal, foods are primarily carb or fat sources with incidental protein. Yoghurt with Fruit at 13.6g/100kcal is firmly in the high-density tier — fits naturally as a primary protein source in any high-protein eating plan.
Protein density comparison
Reference points for context (g protein per 100 kcal):
- Chicken breast (cooked, skinless) — 18.8g/100kcal
- White fish (cod, tilapia, cooked) — 16–17g/100kcal
- Greek yoghurt (plain, non-fat) — 17g/100kcal
- Tuna (canned, drained) — 16g/100kcal
- Cottage cheese (low-fat) — 14g/100kcal
- Eggs (whole) — 8g/100kcal
- Lentils (cooked) — 8g/100kcal
- Whole milk (full fat) — 5g/100kcal
- Rice (cooked white) — 2g/100kcal
- Avocado — 1.2g/100kcal
Use the calculators
- Protein Calculator — set your daily target (Morton 2018, Helms 2014)
- Macro Calculator — protein, carbs, fat from a calorie target
- Lean Body Mass — for g/kg LBM protein targets
- Full calorie breakdown for Yoghurt with Fruit
Protein content of related foods
Frequently asked questions
- How much protein is in yoghurt with fruit?
- Yoghurt with Fruit contains approximately 18g of protein per Plain Greek yoghurt + 1/2 cup berries (132 kcal). Per 100g, that's 9.0g of protein. The protein-per-calorie density is 13.6g per 100 kcal — classified as high.
- Is yoghurt with fruit a good source of protein?
- Yes — yoghurt with fruit is a strong protein source. A strong protein contribution per calorie — fits well into any protein-focused eating plan. For comparison: chicken breast delivers 18.8g protein per 100 kcal; Greek yoghurt 17g; eggs 8g; lentils 8g; rice 2g.
- How much protein do I actually need per day?
- The Morton 2018 meta-analysis in the British Journal of Sports Medicine (49 randomised trials, 1,863 subjects) established 1.62 g/kg of body weight per day as the dose-response plateau for muscle gain from resistance training. For active adults during fat loss, the Helms 2014 review recommended 1.8–2.2 g/kg of total body weight to preserve lean mass. The old RDA of 0.8 g/kg is a population minimum, not an optimum. For a 70 kg adult, evidence-based daily protein targets are 112–154g.
- How is protein quality measured beyond grams?
- The Digestible Indispensable Amino Acid Score (DIAAS) is the modern protein quality measure, evaluating both amino acid profile and digestibility against human requirements. Animal proteins — whey, casein, eggs, chicken, fish — score 1.0+ (complete and highly digestible). Most plant proteins score below 1.0: pea ~0.82, rice ~0.59, soy ~1.0 (the plant exception). For vegans, combining sources across the day (legumes + grains, soy + nuts) produces a complete amino acid profile and offsets the digestibility gap by targeting the upper end of intake ranges.
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