Amy's Cheese Tortellini Bowl: Nutrition & Labelgrade B- (73/100)

B- 73 / 100 — A rare frozen pasta bowl that actually carries protein — 20g per bowl, almost entirely from real cheese. Organic and recognizable ingredients. The trade-off is that cheese also brings the saturated fat (7g) and a chunk of the sodium, so it grades a B- rather than higher.

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Protein
61/100
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Ingredients
75/100
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Sat fat
83/100
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Sodium
72/100
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Sugar
100/100
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Fiber
41/100

The short answer

Amy’s Cheese Tortellini Bowl delivers 20 g of protein per 9.6 oz (272 g) bowl at 419 calories (USDA FDC 2061301) — about 7.4 g per 100 g. For a frozen pasta dish that is genuinely high: it doubles the 10 g in Amy’s own Black Bean Enchilada and clears the FDA “high in protein” line, which is the main reason to reach for this bowl over the rest of the frozen-pasta shelf. But read it for what it is — a carb-forward comfort meal, not a protein source. The bowl is 51 g of carbohydrate built on organic wheat tortellini, and the 20 g of protein comes almost entirely from cheese: parmesan, white cheddar, ricotta and Monterey Jack stacked across both the filling and the sauce. That four-cheese stack is the whole story. It is why the protein is high, why the calcium hits 400 mg (a third of the Daily Value), and why 7 g of saturated fat and 661 mg of sodium ride along. The Labelgrade is B- (73 / 100): a clean, recognizable, organic ingredient panel and strong protein for the category, held back by the saturated fat that is inseparable from a cheese-built dish.

Why the B-

DimensionGradeScoreWhy
Protein densityC61 / 1007.4 g per 100 g — modest by density. The 20 g per bowl is the real win; per-gram, cheese can’t match lean meat
Ingredient qualityB75 / 100A long panel (~38 sub-ingredients), but the components are real: organic wheat pasta, four cheeses with non-animal rennet, organic milk, mushrooms, peas, olive oil
Saturated fat loadB+83 / 1007 g per bowl (~35% of a day) — the built-in cost of four cheeses. Moderate, not extreme
Sodium loadB-72 / 100661 mg per bowl (~29% of the limit) — moderate, and the watch-item for a frozen meal, though lower than many
Sugar loadA+100 / 100~7 g total, all naturally occurring lactose from the dairy — zero added sugar
FiberD41 / 100~4 g per bowl — low, as a cheese-and-pasta dish will be. The organic peas and mushrooms add a little

The grade is honest about the central tension: the same cheese that earns the protein and the A+ sugar score also drives the saturated fat and a meaningful share of the sodium. Nothing here is a formula artifact. The fiber “D” is real (white-flour pasta is the bulk of the bowl), and the protein “C” reflects density, not the per-meal total — which is why the headline still leads with 20 g.

The cheese is the entire engine

Most frozen pasta tops out near 8–12 g of protein. This bowl hits 20 g, and it does it without any added protein isolate, soy crumble, or “high-protein pasta” gimmick — just real dairy, used heavily. Count the cheeses on the label: parmesan, white cheddar and ricotta are folded into the tortellini filling; parmesan again, plus Monterey Jack and more white cheddar, go into the sauce; organic lowfat milk binds it. That is four distinct cheeses across two components, and it is doing three jobs at once. It is the protein (20 g). It is the calcium (400 mg — genuinely high, a third of a day from a pasta bowl). And it is the saturated fat (7 g, ~35% of a day). You cannot separate them. Anyone choosing this for the protein should go in knowing they are also choosing the saturated fat; the two are the same ingredient.

Sodium is the number to watch — and Amy’s keeps it in check

For a frozen meal, sodium is the dimension that usually goes wrong, so it is worth singling out: this bowl lands at 661 mg, about 29% of the daily limit. That is moderate, and notably restrained for a cheese-forward entree — Amy’s leans on garlic, onion salt and spices rather than dumping salt to carry flavor. Put it against the verified neighbors and the picture is clear: Amy’s own Black Bean Enchilada actually runs higher at 791 mg, and the Healthy Choice Mango Edamame bowl sits at 431 mg. So 661 mg is not the bowl’s weak point the way it would be for a typical frozen dinner — the saturated fat is. Still, it is the figure to keep an eye on if you eat frozen meals often, and it is the second reason (after the 7 g saturated fat) the grade stops at B-.

The Amy’s clean-label angle

Amy’s whole identity is “food you’d make at home if you had time,” and the panel mostly earns it. The pasta is organic unbleached wheat and semolina; the milk, mushrooms, peas, garlic and several other components are organic; there are no artificial colors, no preservatives, and — the A+ sugar score confirms it — no added sugar, with the ~7 g of sugar being lactose that comes free with the dairy. The catch is honesty about length: this is a ~38-item ingredient list, because four cheeses each drag in their own sub-list (milk, culture, salt, enzymes). Long does not mean processed here — every line is a recognizable food — but it is why ingredient quality grades a B rather than an A. The standout callout is the rennet-free cheese: Amy’s specifies “without animal enzymes or rennet,” which is what makes a cheese-heavy dish genuinely vegetarian-safe.

How it compares

ProductProteinCaloriesSat fatSodiumNotes
Amy’s Cheese Tortellini Bowl (this product)20 g4197 g661 mgOrganic, vegetarian, four-cheese
Amy’s Black Bean Vegetable Enchilada (269 g)10 g3311.5 g791 mgVegan, lighter, more fiber, more sodium
Healthy Choice Power Bowls Mango Edamame (255 g)10 g3701.5 g431 mgVegetarian grain bowl, but 20 g sugar (17 g added)

Within Amy’s own freezer set, the Tortellini Bowl is the protein pick — it doubles the Black Bean Enchilada’s 10 g. The Enchilada answers back with less than a quarter of the saturated fat (1.5 g vs 7 g) and a vegan, more-fiber profile, but more sodium. The Healthy Choice bowl matches the Enchilada on protein (10 g) and is also low in saturated fat, but it carries 20 g of sugar (17 g added) where the tortellini has none added. The trade across the three is consistent: the tortellini buys you double the protein and a clean sugar line, and you pay in saturated fat. If a high-protein frozen meal with a genuinely clean label is the goal, this is the one of these three that delivers it.

Ingredients

Tortellini pasta (filtered water, organic unbleached wheat flour, organic semolina flour, parmesan cheese [pasteurized part-skim milk, culture, salt, enzymes — without animal enzymes or rennet], organic bread crumbs [organic wheat flour, water, yeast, sea salt], white cheddar cheese [pasteurized milk, culture, salt, enzymes], ricotta cheese [pasteurized whole milk, salt, vinegar], organic wheat gluten, spices, onion salt, organic garlic, sea salt), organic lowfat milk, organic mushrooms, organic peas, parmesan cheese, monterey jack and white cheddar cheese, organic sweet rice flour, extra virgin olive oil, sea salt, spices.

Verbatim source: USDA Branded Foods entry, FDC 2061301. Four cheeses (parmesan, white cheddar, ricotta, Monterey Jack), all made without animal rennet — the source of both the 20 g protein and the 7 g saturated fat.

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Quick Facts

Per serving · 1 bowl (272 g)

Size 9.6 oz (272 g) bowl
UPC 042272011308
Verified 2026-05-28 · checked monthly
419
Calories
20g
Protein 40% DV
51g
Carbs 19% DV
15g
Fat 19% DV
per 100 g
7.4g protein · 154 cal ·2.6g sugar ·243mg sodium
per oz (1 oz)
2.1g protein · 44 cal ·0.73g sugar ·69mg sodium
Sugar 6.99g
Fiber 4.08g · 15% DV
Saturated fat 6.99g
Trans fat 0g
Sodium 661mg · 29% DV
Cholesterol 29.9mg
Calcium 400mg · 31% DV
Iron 1.8mg · 10% DV
Full nutrition facts
Nutrition Facts
Nutrient Per Serving (1 bowl (272 g))
Calories419
Protein20g
Total Fat15g
Saturated Fat6.99g
Trans Fat0g
Total Carbohydrates51g
Dietary Fiber4.08g
Total Sugars6.99g
Sodium661mg
Cholesterol29.9mg
Calcium400mg
Iron1.8mg

Scope: This page applies specifically to Amy's Cheese Tortellini Bowl (9.6 oz (272 g) bowl) · UPC 042272011308. Other sizes, flavors, or formulations may differ.

How this fits each diet

Each score is computed from the same USDA nutrition + ingredient data, against the published rules of each diet. They tell you "does this food fit this diet" — not whether the diet is right for you.

Vegan
F 0/100

contains animal-derived ingredients

Vegetarian
A+ 100/100

contains no listed meat or fish

Gluten-free
F 0/100

contains a gluten-bearing ingredient

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Frequently Asked Questions

How much protein is in Amy's Cheese Tortellini Bowl?

20 g of protein per 9.6 oz (272 g) bowl (USDA FDC 2061301), about 7.4 g per 100 g. That is high for a frozen pasta dish — double the 10 g in Amy's own Black Bean Enchilada — and it clears the FDA 'high in protein' threshold. The protein is dairy-based, from the parmesan, white cheddar, ricotta and Monterey Jack.

Where does the protein come from?

Cheese, mostly. Four cheeses appear across the tortellini filling and the sauce — parmesan, white cheddar, ricotta and Monterey Jack — plus organic lowfat milk. That stack is what lifts a 51 g-carb pasta dish to 20 g of protein. It is also why the saturated fat (7 g) and calcium (400 mg, a third of the Daily Value) run as high as they do: the protein and the saturated fat ride in on the same cheese.

Is this a high-protein meal, or just high-protein for pasta?

High for pasta, moderate in absolute terms. At 7.4 g per 100 g the protein density only earns a C — a chicken or beef entree is denser. But 20 g in one tray is a real meal's worth, and it is the headline number that separates this bowl from the 10-g vegetable bowls it sits next to in the freezer. This is comfort food that happens to carry protein, not a lean protein source.

Is it vegetarian? Vegan? Gluten-free?

Vegetarian yes, vegan and gluten-free no. The cheeses are made with non-animal enzymes (no rennet), which Amy's states explicitly, so it suits vegetarians who avoid rennet. But it is built on dairy (cheese and milk), so it is not vegan, and the tortellini is organic wheat flour plus added wheat gluten, so it is not gluten-free.

How much saturated fat and sodium does it have?

About 7 g of saturated fat (~35% of a day) and 661 mg of sodium (~29% of the 2,300 mg limit) per bowl. Both trace back to the cheese and added sea salt. These two numbers are the reason it grades B- instead of higher — the protein is genuinely good, but you cannot get four cheeses' worth of protein without their saturated fat coming along.

Why does the sodium look low for a frozen meal?

Because Amy's leans on cheese and aromatics (garlic, onion salt, spices) for flavor rather than a heavy sodium load. At 661 mg the bowl is actually lower in sodium than Amy's own Black Bean Enchilada (791 mg) and only moderately above the Healthy Choice Mango Edamame bowl (431 mg). For a cheese-forward frozen entree, 661 mg is restrained.

Cheese Tortellini Bowl vs the Black Bean Enchilada?

Different jobs. The Tortellini Bowl gives you 20 g of protein but is dairy-rich — 419 cal, 7 g saturated fat. Amy's Black Bean Enchilada is vegan, lighter (331 cal, 1.5 g saturated fat) and has more fiber (6 g vs 4 g), but only 10 g of protein and more sodium (791 mg). Choose the tortellini for a filling, protein-forward comfort meal; choose the enchilada for lighter and plant-based.