High Protein Chicken Bowl with Cashew Lime Crema
Tender seasoned chicken, hearty grains, crisp cabbage, and a silky cashew lime crema turn this bowl into the kind of meal that feels complete from the first bite. The chicken…
Tip: save now, cook later.Tender seasoned chicken, hearty grains, crisp cabbage, and a silky cashew lime crema turn this bowl into the kind of meal that feels complete from the first bite. The chicken brings smoky, savory depth, the beans and rice carry the meal, and the crema ties everything together with brightness instead of heaviness. It lands in that sweet spot where it still feels fresh, but it actually keeps you full for hours.
The texture is what makes this bowl worth repeating. You get juicy chicken, soft grains, creamy avocado, pops of sweet corn and tomatoes, and a sauce that clings to everything without turning the bowl watery. Soaking the cashews is the part that matters most for the crema — it’s what gives you that smooth, spoon-coating finish instead of a gritty blender sauce. The spice blend on the chicken does the heavy lifting too, so you don’t need a long marinade to get good flavor.
Below, I’m walking through the small choices that make this bowl work for dinner and meal prep alike. The crema keeps beautifully, the chicken stays flavorful the next day, and there are a few easy swaps if you need to work with what’s already in your kitchen.
The cashew lime crema came out unbelievably smooth, and it made the bowls taste like something I’d order at a restaurant. I also loved that the chicken stayed juicy the next day instead of drying out in the fridge.
Save this high protein chicken bowl for meal prep days when you want bold flavor, fresh crunch, and that creamy cashew lime drizzle.

The Reason the Crema Stays Smooth Instead of Turning Grainy
The cashew lime crema is the part that can go sideways if you rush it. Raw cashews need enough hydration to blend into something silky, and a quick soak in hot water does the job if you forgot to plan ahead. If the cashews stay too firm, the blender works harder, the sauce heats up, and you end up with a sandy texture instead of a clean, pourable drizzle.
The other piece that matters is balance. Cashews bring body, but lime juice and zest give the crema its lift. Too much water makes it thin and dull; too little makes it paste-like. The right consistency should coat the back of a spoon and still fall off in a slow ribbon when you drizzle it over the bowl.
- Raw cashews — These are what make the crema creamy without dairy. Roasted cashews won’t blend as smoothly and can bring a toasted flavor that fights the lime.
- Lime juice and zest — Juice gives the tang, zest adds the bright lime aroma that keeps the sauce from tasting flat. If you skip the zest, the crema still works, but it loses some of its spark.
- Garlic — A small clove is enough. It sharpens the sauce without making it taste like garlic dip, and that bite is what keeps the crema from feeling heavy.
- Water — Start with the measured amount, then thin slowly. Adding too much at once is the easiest way to overshoot the texture and end up with a runny sauce that disappears into the rice.
Building the Bowl So Every Bite Has the Right Balance
Season the Chicken Before It Hits the Pan
Pat the chicken dry first. That gives the spice blend something to cling to and helps the surface brown instead of steam. The smoked paprika, cumin, and chili powder should coat the meat in a thin, even layer; if the spices look patchy, the pan will leave some bites bland and some bitter. Use medium-high heat and don’t move the chicken too early. If it sticks at first, it usually needs another minute to develop a crust that releases cleanly.
Cook the Grains and Beans While the Chicken Rests
Brown rice or quinoa both work here, and either one gives the bowl enough structure to hold the toppings. Fluff the grains after cooking so they don’t pack down into a dense base. Warm the black beans gently; if you boil them hard, they split and turn mushy. The goal is a bowl that feels layered, not muddy.
Assemble in the Right Order
Start with the grains, then add the beans, corn, tomatoes, cabbage, and avocado before the chicken goes on top. That order matters because the warm chicken softens the top layer just enough, while the cabbage stays crisp underneath. Drizzle the crema last and don’t drown the bowl before serving. If you add too much too early, the cabbage wilts and the rice turns soft instead of staying distinct.
How to Adapt This Bowl Without Losing What Makes It Good
Make it dairy-free without giving up creaminess
The whole bowl is already dairy-free as written, and that’s part of why it works so well for meal prep. The cashew crema gives you the same lush finish you’d expect from a yogurt- or sour cream-based sauce, but it holds up better in the fridge and won’t separate as easily.
Swap the grains for a lower-carb base
Use cauliflower rice or shredded lettuce if you want something lighter. You’ll lose some of the hearty chew that rice or quinoa brings, so keep the beans and avocado in the bowl to preserve enough body and make it feel like a real meal.
Use thighs for extra juiciness
Chicken thighs stay more forgiving if you tend to overcook chicken breasts. They bring a little more richness and stay tender even if they sit in meal prep containers for a couple of days. Breasts still work fine; just pull them as soon as they hit 165°F so they don’t dry out.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store the components separately for up to 4 days. The cabbage stays crisp, and the crema keeps its texture when it isn’t sitting on warm grains.
- Freezer: Freeze the cooked chicken, rice, and beans, but not the fresh toppings or crema. Cashew crema can separate after freezing, so it’s better made fresh for the week.
- Reheating: Warm the chicken, rice, and beans gently in the microwave or in a skillet with a splash of water. Add the avocado, tomatoes, cabbage, cilantro, and crema after reheating so the bowl doesn’t go soggy.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

High Protein Chicken Bowl with Cashew Lime Crema
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Soak the raw cashews in hot water for 30 minutes (or cold water for 4 hours). Drain and rinse before blending; set aside while you cook the bowl base.
- Cook the rice or quinoa according to package instructions. Fluff and set aside so it’s ready for bowl assembly.
- Mix smoked paprika, cumin, garlic powder, onion powder, chili powder, salt, and black pepper in a small bowl. Pat the chicken dry and coat evenly with the spice blend.
- Heat olive oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat until shimmering. Add chicken and cook 6–7 minutes per side until deep golden and cooked through (internal temp 165°F).
- Let the chicken rest for 5 minutes before slicing. Slice it thin so it stays tender and easy to layer on the bowls.
- Add drained cashews, water, lime juice, lime zest, garlic, salt, and cayenne to a blender. Blend on high for 1–2 minutes until completely smooth and creamy.
- Adjust texture by adding more water 1 tablespoon at a time until it reaches a pourable drizzle consistency. Transfer to a squeeze bottle or small bowl for easy topping.
- Warm the black beans in a small saucepan over low heat or microwave for 90 seconds. Stir once so they heat through evenly.
- Start with a base of cooked rice or quinoa in each bowl. Layer black beans, corn, cherry tomatoes, red cabbage, and avocado slices.
- Top with sliced chicken arranged slightly overlapping across the bowl. This helps keep every bite balanced with protein and toppings.
- Drizzle cashew lime crema generously over everything. Garnish with roughly chopped cilantro and serve with a lime wedge on the side.
- Serve immediately or pack into meal prep containers with crema stored separately. Crema keeps everything fresh for up to 4 days when refrigerated.