High Protein and Actually Filling
There is a version of “eating healthy” that leaves you starving by 2pm and staring down the vending machine. This is not that. This mason jar tuna pasta salad has over 40 grams of protein per serving, takes about ten minutes to put together, and tastes good enough that you will actually want to eat it.
The Green Goddess dressing is the whole reason this works as well as it does. It’s creamy, herby, and rich enough to make canned tuna feel like something you chose on purpose rather than something you settled for. If you have the book, you already know the dressing. This is just a new way to use it.
The mason jar layering method keeps everything fresh for days. Dressing sits on the bottom away from the greens. Egg, onion, and tuna go in the middle. Pasta and lettuce go on top. Shake when ready. The lettuce stays crisp, the tuna stays moist, and the whole thing comes together in seconds when you’re ready to eat.
Meal prep four jars on Sunday and you have lunch handled Monday through Thursday without thinking about it once. That’s the version of healthy eating that actually sticks.
Why This Recipe Works
Canned tuna has a reputation problem. Most people either love it or avoid it because they’ve had it in a sad, dry context where it wasn’t doing its best. The Green Goddess dressing changes that entirely. It’s creamy and bright and herby, and it coats the tuna in a way that makes the whole jar taste intentional and good.
The hard boiled egg is doing more than adding protein. It adds a creamy, rich texture that breaks up the flakiness of the tuna and gives you something substantial to bite into. It also helps the whole jar feel more like a meal and less like a side dish someone forgot to serve with anything.
The pasta is the anchor. One cup of cooked spirals adds enough carbs to keep your energy steady without tipping the macros in a direction you don’t want. Spiral shapes are the right call here because they catch the dressing in all those little grooves and carry it through every bite.
And iceberg lettuce on top is the right call for a reason. It stays crisp for days in the jar, unlike spinach or mixed greens which start wilting almost immediately once moisture is nearby. The crunch at the end of every bite gives the whole thing texture that makes eating this feel less like a chore and more like lunch.
Let’s Talk Ingredients
Green Goddess Dressing (from the book)
This is the foundation of the whole jar. The dressing in the book is creamy, herby, and bright, and it pairs perfectly with tuna in a way that a standard vinaigrette never would. Make a batch, keep it in the fridge, and you can throw together a jar like this in under five minutes any day of the week. If you’re not sure how much to use, start with two to three tablespoons and adjust to your taste. The dressing goes on the bottom of the jar so it doesn’t hit the lettuce until you’re ready to eat.
1 hard boiled egg, chopped
Hard boiled eggs are one of the most underrated meal prep ingredients. Cook a batch at the start of the week, keep them in the fridge unpeeled, and they’re ready whenever you need them. In this jar, the egg adds protein, a creamy texture, and something solid to balance out the flaky tuna. Chop it roughly rather than finely so you get good chunks throughout. If you’re not a hard boiled egg person, you can leave it out, but the protein count will drop and the jar will feel a little lighter.
1/4 cup chopped red onion
Red onion adds sharpness and a little sweetness that cuts through the richness of the dressing and the egg. This recipe uses more onion than you might expect, and that’s intentional. It’s there to actually contribute flavor, not just be a gesture. If raw onion is too much for you, soak the chopped pieces in cold water for ten minutes before adding. It takes the edge off without losing the flavor. Green onion is a milder swap if you’d rather go that direction.
1 can tuna, drained
Standard canned tuna in water works perfectly here. Drain it well before adding it to the jar because excess water will thin out your dressing and make everything a bit watery by day two. Chunk light and solid white albacore both work. Albacore has a firmer texture and a slightly milder flavor. Chunk light is a bit more pronounced in taste and tends to be less expensive. Either is fine. If you have tuna packed in olive oil, that works too and adds a little extra richness.
1 cup cooked spiral noodles, cooled
Cook your pasta ahead of time and let it cool completely before building the jar. Warm pasta creates steam and moisture in the jar that will wilt the lettuce and make everything soggy faster. Rinse it with cold water after draining to stop the cooking and speed up the cooling. Any short pasta shape works. Rotini, penne, farfalle. Spiral shapes are the preference here because they hold onto the dressing better, but use what you have.
Shredded iceberg lettuce
Iceberg is the only lettuce that belongs in a mason jar meal prep situation. Softer greens like spinach, arugula, or mixed baby greens will wilt within a day once they’re near any moisture. Iceberg stays crisp for four days if it goes in dry and stays on top of everything else. Shred it into thin strips rather than tearing it into chunks so it integrates into the salad properly when you shake or toss. Pat it dry before it goes in. Wet lettuce is the enemy of a good jar.
The Tuna Situation: Why This Might Change Your Mind
Canned tuna is one of those foods that people either grew up eating and still love, or had one bad experience with and have been avoiding ever since. If you’re in the second camp, the thing that probably went wrong was the context. Dry tuna on plain crackers. Tuna salad with too much mayo and not enough anything else. Tuna that just tasted like the can it came in.
The Green Goddess dressing fixes all of that. It’s herby and bright and creamy in a way that gives the tuna something to work with. The flavor of the dressing carries through the whole jar and makes the tuna taste like it belongs there rather than like an afterthought.
From a nutrition standpoint, canned tuna is one of the most efficient protein sources you can buy. A standard 5 oz can has around 25 to 30 grams of protein depending on the brand, costs about a dollar, requires zero cooking, and keeps in your pantry indefinitely. Paired with a hard boiled egg and a good dressing, it’s a high-protein lunch that doesn’t require you to think very hard or spend very much.
One practical note: drain the tuna really well. Press it against the side of the strainer or squeeze it through a paper towel. Extra water in the jar dilutes the dressing and shortens how long the whole thing stays good. It’s a small step and it matters.
If you’re making multiple jars for the week, tuna is actually easier than chicken here because there’s nothing to cook. Open the can, drain it, divide it between jars. That’s it. Sunday meal prep with canned tuna takes ten minutes total including the pasta cook time if you start the water first.