25 Low-Calorie Easter Dinners Under 500 Calories | FullTasteCo
Easter Recipe Roundup

25 Low-Calorie Easter Dinners Under 500 Calories

A festive table that won’t derail your goals — every single recipe is filling, flavorful, and under 500 calories.

25 Recipes Under 500 Calories Each Spring 2025 Collection

Let’s be honest about something: Easter dinner has always been the holiday where good intentions go to die. You sit down with the best of plans, and somehow you end up with a plate that looks like a calorie buffet — buttered rolls, heavy casseroles, glazed ham drowning in brown sugar, and a side of regret. Sound familiar?

Here’s the thing, though. Easter falls right in the thick of spring, and spring gives us some of the most naturally light, bright, and delicious ingredients to cook with. We’re talking fresh asparagus, tender peas, bright citrus, herbs from the garden, and beautiful cuts of lean protein. You don’t have to sacrifice a single ounce of flavor to keep things under 500 calories a plate. Not even close.

This list of 25 low-calorie Easter dinners under 500 calories is for anyone who wants to celebrate without the bloat. Whether you’re cooking for a crowd or just need a fresh centerpiece for your own table, every single option here is satisfying, seasonal, and genuinely worth making. No sad salads. No tricks. Just real food that happens to be good for you.

Suggested Hero Image Prompt Overhead flat lay on a weathered white-painted wooden table: a large ceramic platter of roasted spring vegetables (asparagus, baby carrots, radishes, snap peas) in shades of green, purple, and orange, surrounded by small ramekins of herb-yogurt sauce and lemon wedges, fresh sprigs of dill and thyme scattered naturally. Soft natural window light from the left casts gentle shadows. The mood is airy, rustic, and effortlessly elegant — perfect for a spring recipe blog or Pinterest food photography. Color palette: muted cream, sage green, terracotta accents.

Why Easter Is Actually the Perfect Holiday to Eat Light

I know what you’re thinking — “the holidays are not the time for diet food.” And you’re right, which is why none of these recipes are diet food. They’re just food. Good, seasonal, properly seasoned food that happens to clock in under 500 calories because that’s what spring ingredients naturally want to be.

Think about it: the classic Easter table leans on lamb, fish, spring vegetables, and fresh herbs. These are not inherently heavy ingredients. The calorie pile-up usually comes from the extras — the cream-based sides, the buttery rolls, the sugar-laden glazes. Swap those out with smarter techniques and you barely notice the difference, except you won’t need to unbutton your jeans by dessert.

According to Mayo Clinic’s guidance on energy-dense eating, filling your plate with high-volume, lower-calorie foods — like the spring vegetables that are everywhere this time of year — is one of the most effective ways to feel full and satisfied without overdoing it on calories. Easter actually hands you that setup on a silver platter. Literally.

The other thing working in your favor? Most of the recipes on this list come together fast. We’re not doing anything that requires culinary school training or a four-hour window on a holiday morning. Sheet pans, one-pot braises, quick skillet dinners — that’s the vibe here.

Pro Tip

Prep your spring vegetables (asparagus, snap peas, carrots) the night before and store them in water in the fridge. Come Easter morning, they’re crisp, ready to roast, and you’ve already saved yourself 20 minutes of prep time when it matters most.

The 25 Recipes: Your Full Low-Calorie Easter Dinner Menu

These are organized roughly by protein style — chicken and turkey, fish and seafood, lamb and lean beef, and plant-based options — so you can mix and match based on your crowd. Each comes with an approximate calorie count, the key proteins and vegetables involved, and a quick note on what makes it worth making. Let’s get into it.

Chicken & Turkey Mains

01

Lemon Herb Roasted Chicken Thighs with Asparagus

Approx. 380 calories per serving

Bone-in thighs rubbed with garlic, lemon zest, and fresh thyme. Roasted over a bed of asparagus spears so everything caramelizes together.

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02

Greek Yogurt Marinated Grilled Chicken with Spring Herb Salad

Approx. 360 calories per serving

A brilliant marinade of Greek yogurt, oregano, garlic, and lemon keeps the chicken impossibly juicy. Pairs with a bright herb salad that takes five minutes to throw together.

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03

Sheet Pan Turkey Tenderloin with Roasted Baby Carrots and Peas

Approx. 340 calories per serving

One pan, zero fuss. The turkey tenderloin stays lean and juicy while the carrots go sweet and caramelized. A real crowd-pleaser for those who want something festive without the drama.

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04

Dijon Honey Glazed Chicken Breast with Green Beans

Approx. 395 calories per serving

The Dijon-honey glaze sounds indulgent but is shockingly low in calories. Chicken breast stays moist because you’re not overcooking it — a skill that changes everything.

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05

Tuscan Chicken with White Beans and Spinach

Approx. 420 calories per serving

A one-skillet meal that feels restaurant-worthy. White beans add fiber and creaminess without the cream. This one earns compliments every single time. More chicken inspiration here.

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06

Spring Chicken Piccata with Zucchini Noodles

Approx. 370 calories per serving

Classic piccata gets a spring makeover. The briny, buttery sauce (made lighter with less butter and more lemon) is everything you want from this dish, and the zucchini noodles keep it under 400 easily.

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Fish & Seafood Mains

07

Lemon Dill Baked Salmon with Roasted Asparagus

Approx. 390 calories per serving

This is probably the most Easter-appropriate thing on the entire list. Salmon, lemon, dill — it practically smells like spring walking through the door. Rich in omega-3s, beautiful on the plate.

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08

Herb-Crusted Cod with Spring Pea Puree

Approx. 310 calories per serving

Cod is criminally underrated for a holiday table. An herby panko crust gives it a satisfying crunch, and the bright green pea puree underneath makes the whole plate look like something from a fancy restaurant.

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09

Mediterranean Baked Halibut with Cherry Tomatoes and Olives

Approx. 355 calories per serving

Everything bakes together in one dish in under 25 minutes. The tomatoes burst and create a naturally light sauce that you’ll want to scoop up with a spoon. FYI — this is also the easiest thing you will ever host a dinner party with.

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10

Garlic Butter Shrimp with Cauliflower Rice and Herbs

Approx. 290 calories per serving

The lowest-calorie option on the seafood side of this list, and absolutely no one will feel shortchanged. Shrimp cook in six minutes flat, which means this can come together even if you’re juggling three other dishes.

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11

Citrus Glazed Mahi Mahi with Mango Salsa

Approx. 340 calories per serving

A slightly tropical vibe for Easter, but why not? The citrus glaze caramelizes beautifully and the fresh mango salsa brings sweetness without any added sugar. Genuinely stunning to serve.

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Lamb & Lean Beef Mains

12

Rosemary Garlic Lamb Chops with Roasted Brussels Sprouts

Approx. 450 calories per serving

This is the big centerpiece option on the list. Two lamb chops, properly seasoned, with caramelized Brussels sprouts. Classic Easter energy but completely on track calorie-wise.

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13

Slow-Cooked Lamb Shoulder with Root Vegetables

Approx. 480 calories per serving

The highest-calorie item on this list, but we’re still under 500. Slow-cooked lamb falls apart beautifully and serves a crowd without much active effort. The root vegetables soak up all that flavor. See more slow cooker ideas here.

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14

Mint Pea Stuffed Lean Beef Tenderloin

Approx. 470 calories per serving

An elegant presentation that looks way harder than it actually is. The mint and pea stuffing is fresh, seasonal, and keeps the inside of the tenderloin moist and interesting.

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15

Herbed Lamb Meatballs in Light Tomato Sauce

Approx. 400 calories per serving

A less traditional Easter option but one that gets demolished at the table every time. The lamb meatballs are herb-heavy and satisfying, and the light tomato sauce keeps things bright rather than heavy.

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Quick Win

Use a digital meat thermometer when cooking lamb or tenderloin — it eliminates the guesswork entirely and means you pull the protein at exactly the right moment every single time. A genuinely life-changing purchase for about fifteen dollars.

Plant-Based & Vegetarian Mains

16

Spring Vegetable Frittata with Goat Cheese and Peas

Approx. 280 calories per serving

A gorgeous brunch-to-dinner option. The goat cheese melts into pockets of creaminess throughout, and the spring vegetables make it look like something from a magazine shoot without the effort.

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17

Lemon Ricotta Stuffed Portobello Mushrooms

Approx. 320 calories per serving

The portobello acts as a natural bowl for a bright lemon-herb ricotta filling. Serve two per person with a simple arugula salad and you have a complete, beautiful meal that surprises even the most committed meat-eaters.

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18

White Bean and Roasted Garlic Soup with Crusty Herb Toast

Approx. 350 calories per serving

Silky, deeply savory, and filling in the best way. White beans and cannellini are brilliant for protein and fiber — a natural alternative to both chickpeas and lentils when you want something creamier. More vegetarian high-protein ideas here.

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19

Quinoa-Stuffed Bell Peppers with Feta and Spring Herbs

Approx. 380 calories per serving

Colorful, satisfying, and very forgiving to make ahead. The quinoa-feta filling is protein-rich and the roasted peppers develop a natural sweetness that makes this dish genuinely crave-worthy.

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20

Asparagus and Ricotta Tart on a Light Whole Wheat Crust

Approx. 410 calories per serving

This one looks absolutely spectacular on a table. Asparagus spears laid over a silky ricotta filling in a golden crust — it is genuinely show-stopping and comes in under your calorie target without any compromise.

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I made the lemon herb salmon and the stuffed portobellos last Easter for a mixed crowd — meat eaters and vegetarians. Both dishes were completely gone before I even sat down. My sister-in-law asked me to write down the salmon recipe three separate times. Nobody mentioned calories once.

— Rachel M., community member from Colorado

Light Sides That Make the Whole Menu Work

21

Roasted Lemon Garlic Asparagus with Parmesan

Approx. 120 calories per serving

The simplest, most reliable Easter side dish. Ten minutes in the oven, a little shaved Parmesan on top, done. Spring on a plate.

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22

Cauliflower Gratin with Light Béchamel

Approx. 200 calories per serving

The comfort food side that doesn’t destroy the rest of your calorie budget. The light béchamel uses low-fat milk and a moderate amount of cheese rather than heavy cream — you genuinely cannot tell the difference.

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23

Shaved Radish and Snap Pea Salad with Champagne Vinaigrette

Approx. 90 calories per serving

A crunchy, bright, completely refreshing salad that cuts through the richness of any main. The champagne vinaigrette is light and slightly sweet. A recipe worth having in your permanent rotation. More spring salad ideas here.

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24

Minted New Potato Salad with Greek Yogurt Dressing

Approx. 175 calories per serving

A smart swap on the classic mayo-heavy potato salad. Greek yogurt has a similar creaminess with far more protein and far fewer calories. The mint keeps it tasting unmistakably spring-like.

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25

Spring Pea and Lemon Risotto (Lighter Version)

Approx. 390 calories per serving

IMO this is the most impressive dish on the whole list. A proper risotto, made lighter by using less butter and more stock, finished with bright spring peas and lemon. It is as good as any restaurant version and comes in just under 400 calories.

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How to Build a Complete Easter Menu Under 500 Calories Per Plate

One thing I want to be upfront about: the 500-calorie figure in this list refers to each individual recipe as a serving. If you’re building a complete Easter dinner plate with a main, a side, and a salad, the trick is pairing wisely. A heavier main (like the slow-cooked lamb at 480 calories) pairs perfectly with the snap pea salad at 90 calories. A lighter main like the garlic butter shrimp at 290 calories gives you real room for the cauliflower gratin and the potato salad.

According to Healthline’s research on calorie management, a 300–500 daily calorie deficit supports steady, sustainable weight loss without triggering the compensatory hunger that comes with more aggressive restriction. That means a well-planned Easter dinner around 500 calories actually fits beautifully within a healthy approach to eating — and you get to celebrate properly.

The keys to making the whole menu work are simple. Use fresh herbs generously — they add massive flavor with zero calories. Build your plates with volume from vegetables first, then add your protein, then the starchier elements last. And lean hard into citrus: lemon and lime juice add brightness to almost everything on this list and cost you almost nothing calorie-wise.

Meal Prep Essentials for These Easter Recipes

The gear and resources that actually make light cooking easier — not a sales pitch, just genuinely useful stuff.

Physical Kitchen Tools

Enameled Cast Iron Roasting Pan

The single best tool for roasting proteins and vegetables together at high heat. Nothing browns quite the same way, and cleanup is genuinely easy. Mine has lasted seven years and counting.

Digital Instant-Read Meat Thermometer

Takes all the anxiety out of cooking lamb chops or tenderloin. Know exactly when to pull — no more cutting into meat and hoping for the best. Under fifteen dollars and worth every cent.

Silicone Baking Mat Set (2-Pack)

I use these on everything that goes in the oven. Zero sticking, zero scrubbing, and vegetables roast more evenly than they do on a bare sheet pan. A small upgrade that makes a real difference.

Digital Resources

Weekly High-Protein Low-Calorie Meal Prep Guide

A structured weekly guide with shopping lists, prep schedules, and complete calorie breakdowns. Exactly what you need if the Easter recipes have you wanting to carry this momentum into the rest of the month.

30-Day Clean High-Protein Low-Calorie Meal Plan

A full month of structured eating with complete macros and grocery lists. A lot of our community members use this as their post-Easter reset and genuinely love the results.

14-Day Low-Calorie High-Protein Meal Prep Plan

Perfect if a full month feels overwhelming. Two weeks of clean eating, fully structured and ready to follow. Great for getting back on track after a holiday weekend.

Making the Most of Spring Ingredients

Here’s a thing that gets overlooked in most Easter recipe content: the ingredient itself does most of the work when you’re cooking seasonally. Asparagus in April is in a completely different category from asparagus in October. The same goes for spring peas, radishes, fresh herbs, and new potatoes. When you cook with ingredients at their peak, you need far less butter, cream, or salt to make them taste exceptional.

This is one of the reasons these 25 recipes stay under 500 calories without tasting like they’re trying to. The lemon and fresh dill on that salmon would be overwhelming in winter. In spring, it’s exactly right. The snap pea salad needs almost no dressing because snap peas in May are sweet enough to carry the dish on their own.

If you have access to a farmers market, Easter weekend is one of the best times of year to visit. You’ll find local asparagus, fresh radishes, pea shoots, spring onions, and herbs that are leagues ahead of anything in the grocery store. Worth the extra trip, genuinely. And while you’re there, pick up extra herbs — parsley, dill, mint, and chives are used in probably fifteen of the twenty-five recipes on this list.

Pro Tip

When roasting vegetables for Easter dinner, arrange them in a single layer with space between each piece. Crowded vegetables steam rather than roast, and you lose the caramelization that makes them taste so good. Use two sheet pans if you need to — it makes a real difference in the final result.

Light Protein Swaps That Work Brilliantly for Easter

Easter traditionally centers on ham, which can run 400+ calories for a modest portion once you factor in the glazing sugars and the fat content. That doesn’t mean you have to skip it entirely — but it’s worth knowing that there are swaps that deliver the same festive feeling with far fewer calories doing nothing for you.

Turkey tenderloin is the best direct swap for ham if you want something that looks and feels like a centerpiece. It roasts quickly, stays lean, and takes on glazes and herb rubs beautifully. Pork tenderloin is another excellent option — a four-ounce serving with a simple Dijon and herb crust comes in around 165 calories, giving you room for generous sides.

For a complete protein comparison: chicken breast delivers 31 grams of protein for about 165 calories (plain, 4oz), while salmon delivers 22 grams for around 180 calories and throws in omega-3 fatty acids that chicken simply can’t match. Both are miles ahead of a thick slice of glazed ham in terms of the protein-to-calorie ratio. Worth thinking about when you’re planning your main.

We switched from glazed ham to the lemon herb roasted chicken thighs two years ago and honestly never looked back. My kids didn’t even notice at first — they were too busy eating. My husband lost twelve pounds in the two months after Easter using the recipes from this site, and this meal was where it all started for us.

— Jess T., community member from Tennessee

Keeping It Festive Without Blowing Your Budget or Your Calories

Easter dinner doesn’t have to be an elaborate six-course production. Some of the best Easter tables I’ve seen are built on three or four well-executed dishes that share a seasonal theme. Pick one impressive main — the stuffed tenderloin, the baked salmon, the ricotta tart — and then let two or three simple vegetable sides do the supporting work.

The 30 low-calorie high-protein sheet pan dinners collection is worth bookmarking for this reason: most of those recipes can be adapted for a holiday table with minimal effort. Sheet pan cooking also means less cleanup on a day when you’d rather be spending time with your people than standing at the sink.

One more thing worth mentioning: if you’re cooking for guests who aren’t necessarily watching calories, none of these recipes will feel like “diet food” to them. The lemon herb chicken thighs taste like something from a bistro. The lamb chops with Brussels sprouts look and taste like a proper special occasion meal. The spring pea risotto is genuinely luxurious. Nobody needs to know the calorie count — they just need to enjoy the food.

Quick Win

Use a good quality citrus press juicer for these recipes. Fresh lemon juice makes a measurable difference compared to bottled in every dish on this list, and having a proper juicer means you’ll actually use it rather than settling for the plastic squeeze bottle hiding in the back of the fridge.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you really make Easter dinner under 500 calories without it tasting like diet food?

Absolutely, and the key is seasonal ingredients and smart technique rather than restriction. Spring produce — asparagus, peas, fresh herbs, citrus — is naturally flavorful and low in calories. Cooking methods like roasting, grilling, and braising concentrate flavors without needing added fats. When the ingredients are at their best, the food tastes extraordinary regardless of the calorie count.

What is the best low-calorie protein for an Easter dinner centerpiece?

Salmon and lamb chops are the two strongest choices for a festive centerpiece that stays under 500 calories. Salmon has deep flavor, looks beautiful on a platter, and comes in well under 400 calories for a generous portion. Lamb chops are traditionally Easter-associated, and two chops with a simple herb crust and a vegetable side land around 450 calories — impressive and satisfying.

How do I make sure low-calorie Easter dishes are still filling for guests?

Build volume with vegetables first. Asparagus, Brussels sprouts, roasted cauliflower, snap peas, and spring salads are high in fiber and water content, which means they fill up the plate and the stomach without spending many calories. Pair these with a lean protein and a moderate starch, and guests will consistently leave the table satisfied. Fiber and protein together drive satiety far more effectively than fat or simple carbohydrates alone.

Can I prep most of these Easter dinner recipes ahead of time?

Most of them, yes. Marinades for chicken, lamb, and fish can be prepared one to two days ahead. Frittatas and tarts can be made the morning of and served at room temperature. Salads like the snap pea and radish version can be prepped (components kept separate) the night before and dressed just before serving. The risotto and the white bean soup both reheat beautifully with a small splash of stock or water.

Are these recipes suitable for the whole family, including kids?

Most of them translate very well for families. The lemon herb chicken thighs, the Dijon honey glazed chicken, the herb-crusted cod, and the quinoa stuffed peppers consistently go over well with kids. For the younger crowd, keep the spice levels moderate and lean on the naturally sweet spring vegetables — roasted carrots and snap peas especially tend to be big hits. The minted new potato salad is also reliably popular with kids who find regular potato salad too sharp.

Go Celebrate — Without the Regret

Easter is one of those holidays that hands you every excuse to eat well in the truest sense of the phrase. The season gives you incredible ingredients. The occasion gives you good company. And this list gives you 25 genuinely satisfying ways to bring it all together without the post-dinner calorie guilt that doesn’t serve anyone.

None of this is about restriction. It’s about cooking in a way that respects what spring actually offers — bright flavors, lean proteins, vegetables at their absolute best. Whether you pick the lemon herb salmon as your centerpiece, go all-in on the lamb chops, or build your whole meal around the spring vegetable frittata and a couple of simple sides, you’re going to eat well on Easter. That’s the whole point.

Pick two or three recipes from this list, do a bit of prep the night before, and enjoy the holiday properly. The table will look good, the food will taste better, and you won’t be undoing a week of good choices in one afternoon. That’s a pretty solid Easter by any measure.

Content is for informational purposes only. For personalized nutrition advice, consult a registered dietitian.

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