Goal
A single plate that delivers about 100 grams of protein, tastes great, and uses simple supermarket ingredients.
What you will make
Grilled top sirloin, fluffy quinoa, and a sheet pan of roasted broccoli, peppers, and zucchini with lemon and parsley.
Ingredients for 1 powerhouse serving
Protein target about 100 to 105 g per serving
Time 40 to 45 minutes, mostly hands off
Steak
- Top sirloin or striploin steak, about 16 oz raw to yield about 12 oz cooked
- 1 teaspoon olive oil
- 1 teaspoon kosher salt
- 1 teaspoon coarse black pepper
- ½ teaspoon garlic powder
- ½ teaspoon smoked paprika
Quinoa
- ⅖ cup dry quinoa, about 70 to 75 g, rinsed
- 1 cup water or light stock
- Pinch of salt
Roasted vegetables
- Broccoli florets 1 heaping cup, about 150 g
- Red bell pepper 1 small, sliced
- Zucchini ½ medium, sliced
- Red onion ¼ small, sliced
- 2 teaspoons olive oil
- ½ teaspoon kosher salt and ¼ teaspoon black pepper
- ½ teaspoon garlic powder
- Lemon wedges and a small handful of chopped parsley for finishing
Step by step
- Heat the oven and prep veg
Set oven to 425°F, 220°C. Toss broccoli, pepper, zucchini, and onion with 2 teaspoons olive oil, salt, pepper, and garlic powder. Spread on a sheet pan. - Start quinoa
Bring 1 cup water with a pinch of salt to a boil. Stir in rinsed quinoa, reduce to low, cover, and simmer 15 minutes. Turn off heat and rest covered 5 minutes, then fluff. This yields about 1¼ cups cooked. - Roast vegetables
Roast 18 to 22 minutes until edges char and centers stay tender. Squeeze lemon over and sprinkle parsley. - Season and grill the steak
Pat steak dry. Rub with 1 teaspoon olive oil, salt, pepper, garlic powder, and smoked paprika.
Grill on high heat 4 to 6 minutes per side for medium rare, or until the thickest part reads 130 to 135°F, 54 to 57°C. Rest 5 to 10 minutes on a board before slicing against the grain. - Plate
Spoon 1¼ cups quinoa onto the plate, add a generous heap of roasted vegetables, and top with about 12 oz cooked steak slices. Finish with extra lemon and parsley.
Protein math, plain and transparent
- Cooked top sirloin about 26 g protein per 100 g. Twelve ounces cooked is about 340 g, which is roughly 88 to 92 g protein.
- Quinoa 1¼ cups cooked about 10 g protein.
- Vegetables on this plate about 3 to 5 g protein total.
Total about 101 to 107 g protein for the plate.
All counts use cooked weight for the steak, which is why the raw steak listed is larger. Trimming and grill loss vary, so there is a small range.
Approximate macros per serving
- Protein about 100 to 105 g
- Carbs about 60 to 70 g
- Fat about 45 to 50 g
- Calories about 1,000 to 1,150
Numbers vary with cut, trimming, oil, and exact veg mix.
Make it lighter or bigger
- About 80 g protein use about 9 oz cooked steak instead of 12 oz.
- About 120 g protein keep the plate the same and add 4 oz extra cooked steak slices.
Grocery list
For 1 serving
- Top sirloin or striploin steak, about 1 lb raw
- Quinoa, ¾ cup dry is more than enough for the week, or buy in bulk and measure ⅖ cup for this recipe
- Broccoli 1 small crown
- 1 red bell pepper
- 1 zucchini
- 1 small red onion
- 1 lemon
- Fresh parsley small bunch
- Olive oil
- Kosher salt, black pepper, garlic powder, smoked paprika
For 4 servings
- Top sirloin or striploin steaks, about 4 lb total raw
- Quinoa, 1¾ to 2 cups dry
- Broccoli 4 small crowns or 2 large
- Red bell peppers 3 to 4
- Zucchini 2 medium
- Red onions 1 to 2
- 2 lemons
- Fresh parsley 1 bunch
- Olive oil
- Kosher salt, black pepper, garlic powder, smoked paprika
Prep and storage
- Cook quinoa and roast vegetables up to 4 days ahead and refrigerate in airtight containers.
- Grill steaks fresh for best texture, or cook to rare, chill, then reheat slices gently in a hot pan for 30 to 60 seconds per side.
- Leftovers keep 3 to 4 days refrigerated.
Notes for success
- Pull steak from the fridge 20 to 30 minutes before grilling for even cooking.
- Resting the steak keeps juices in the meat, which protects tenderness at this large portion size.
- Season vegetables boldly, roast hot, and finish with lemon to balance the richness of the steak.