Egg wrap (5 eggs)
The egg wrap is a portability upgrade. Constraint: wraps get soggy if the filling is wet. Recommended: cook out moisture, then roll tight while warm.
*Egg-only baseline. Wrap + cheese add calories and carbs.
Overview
Goal: a wrap that holds together and tastes balanced. Recommended: soft scrambled eggs + cooked greens + a small amount of salty cheese.
Constraints
Quick takeaway
Cook spinach first, then eggs. Warm the wrap, add filling, roll tight, and let it rest seam-side down for 30 seconds.
Validation: the bottom stays dry and the wrap doesn’t split.
Ingredients
Keep the filling compact. Overfilling is the common failure mode.
Base (1 serving)
Optional add-ons
Constraint: watery fillings (tomatoes) increase sogginess—keep them minimal or add at the last moment.
Steps
Cook out moisture, then roll while everything is warm and flexible.
Step by step
- Heat pan on medium. Add a small amount of oil.
- Cook spinach 1–2 minutes until wilted. Season lightly and move to the side.
- Whisk eggs, pour into pan, and scramble softly. Pull while slightly underdone.
- Warm the wrap (dry pan or microwave for 10 seconds).
- Add spinach + eggs + feta in a tight line. Add sauce sparingly.
- Fold sides in, roll tight, rest seam-side down 30 seconds, then slice.
Troubleshooting
Wrap up: dry filling + tight roll = portable meal.
Nutrition notes
Eggs are the anchor. Wrap and cheese decide carb and calorie range.
Baseline (5 eggs)
Levers
Quick takeaway: control moisture and you control portability.
Tips & variations
Keep the base stable and rotate flavor.
Recommended
- Add pickled onions for acid and crunch
- Use salsa as a low-effort sauce
- Add mushrooms (cooked) for volume
- Wrap in foil for cleaner eating
Avoid
- Over-saucing (soggy wrap)
- Too many wet veggies
- Overcooking eggs
- Cold wrap (splits)
Quick takeaway: warm wrap, dry filling, tight roll.
FAQ
Practical answers for a wrap that holds up.
Wrap up: keep moisture low and seasoning high.