Frozen Cauliflower — Cups to Grams
1 cup frozen cauliflower florets = 150 grams. Riced = 115g. Pureed/mashed = 230g. 12 oz bag = 2.27 cups frozen.
1 cup Frozen Cauliflower = 150 grams
Quick Conversion Table — Frozen Cauliflower
| Cups | Grams | Tablespoons | Teaspoons |
|---|---|---|---|
| ¼ | 37.5 g | 3.99 tbsp | 12.1 tsp |
| ⅓ | 50 g | 5.32 tbsp | 16.1 tsp |
| ½ | 75 g | 7.98 tbsp | 24.2 tsp |
| ⅔ | 100 g | 10.6 tbsp | 32.3 tsp |
| ¾ | 112.5 g | 12 tbsp | 36.3 tsp |
| 1 | 150 g | 16 tbsp | 48.4 tsp |
| 1½ | 225 g | 23.9 tbsp | 72.6 tsp |
| 2 | 300 g | 31.9 tbsp | 96.8 tsp |
| 3 | 450 g | 47.9 tbsp | 145.2 tsp |
| 4 | 600 g | 63.8 tbsp | 193.5 tsp |
Frozen Cauliflower Weight by Form
Cauliflower's weight per cup varies dramatically across its forms — from the relatively light riced frozen product at 115g/cup to the dense, water-compressed puree at 230g/cup. Understanding which form a recipe specifies is essential because these forms are not interchangeable by volume.
Frozen florets (150g/cup): The baseline commercial product. Ice glaze and partial cell collapse from freezing pack the curd-like florets more densely than fresh. A quality IQF (individually quick-frozen) product should flow freely from the bag without clumping.
Thawed (135g/cup): Thawing releases approximately 10% of the frozen weight as water. Drain thoroughly. Thawed cauliflower is the correct starting point for recipes requiring coatings (buffalo cauliflower, tempura) — frozen surface ice prevents batter adhesion and causes splattering in hot oil.
Riced frozen (115g/cup): Pre-riced product is sold separately and is much finer than florets — uniform 3-5mm particles resembling coarse bread crumbs. The fine, uniform grind creates air gaps that reduce the per-cup weight below whole florets. This is the standard form for low-carb rice replacement.
Cooked (165g/cup): Steaming or boiling collapses the curd structure. The florets compact tightly in the measuring cup after cooking, increasing per-cup weight above the frozen starting point. 2 cups (300g) frozen yields approximately 1.5 cups (248g) cooked by volume once water is drained.
Pureed/mashed (230g/cup): Fully processed cauliflower fills a cup with virtually no air gaps. The 230g/cup figure assumes well-drained mash with no excess water. Wet mash made without pressing the cauliflower before processing can approach 270-280g/cup with retained water adding further weight.
| Measure | Frozen florets (g) | Riced frozen (g) | Pureed (g) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 tablespoon | 9.4g | 7.2g | 14.4g |
| 1/4 cup | 37.5g | 28.75g | 57.5g |
| 1/2 cup | 75g | 57.5g | 115g |
| 1 cup | 150g | 115g | 230g |
| 12 oz bag | ~2.27 cups | ~2.96 cups | ~1.48 cups |
Low-Carb Cauliflower Rice: 1:1 Substitution Guide
Frozen riced cauliflower is one of the most practical low-carbohydrate ingredient substitutions available: at approximately 5g net carbohydrates per 100g (versus 28g for cooked white rice), it reduces carbohydrate content by approximately 82% in rice-based dishes. The 1:1 by volume substitution rule holds well across most applications.
The no-water rule: The single most important technique for riced cauliflower is to cook it in a dry pan with no added water. Frozen riced cauliflower already contains significant surface ice that will release during cooking. Adding water traps this released moisture and produces a wet, clumped, rice-grain-sized paste. Method: cold dry skillet or wok, medium-high heat, add frozen riced cauliflower, cook stirring frequently for 5-7 minutes until all visible steam has stopped rising and the particles have dried and separated. At this point, the cauliflower rice is ready for seasoning and mix-ins.
Applications and ratios:
- Burrito bowl: 1 cup (115g) frozen riced cauliflower per serving, cooked as above, seasoned with cumin, lime, and salt
- Fried cauliflower rice: Use in place of day-old cooked rice at 1:1 volume. Pre-cook and dry the riced cauliflower before adding to the wok — it should be dry before the egg and soy sauce are added
- Stuffed peppers: Mix 1 cup (115g) cooked riced cauliflower into the meat and tomato filling per 2 peppers. The smaller volume compensates naturally for the lower carbohydrate density
- Sushi-style cauliflower rice: Season cooked, dried riced cauliflower with rice wine vinegar, sugar, and salt in the same ratios as traditional sushi rice. The texture is slightly more crumbly but rolls adequately in nori sheets
Comparison with broccoli rice: Frozen riced broccoli (130g/cup) and frozen riced cauliflower (115g/cup) cook identically but differ in flavor profile. Cauliflower is neutral and absorbs surrounding flavors without contributing its own, making it the more versatile rice substitute. Broccoli rice has a more assertive vegetable flavor that pairs better with bold preparations (stir-fries, teriyaki) than delicate ones.
Cauliflower Mash: Method and Technique
Cauliflower mash is the most texture-sensitive preparation from frozen cauliflower. The goal is a smooth, creamy puree that holds on a plate rather than spreading like soup — and achieving this requires removing excess water at two stages of the process.
Stage 1 — Cooking: Steam rather than boil. Boiling introduces additional water that the cauliflower absorbs during cooking, increasing the water load before pureeing. Steam 3 cups (450g) frozen florets in a covered skillet with 3 tablespoons of water for 10-12 minutes until completely tender when pierced with a knife. Drain through a colander.
Stage 2 — Press to remove water: Spread the drained hot cauliflower on a clean kitchen towel or several layers of paper towels. Fold the towel over and press firmly for 30 seconds. This step removes the remaining surface water that steaming left behind. It is the single most important step for mash that holds its shape.
Stage 3 — Puree, not blend: Use a food processor for 45-60 seconds, not a blender. A blender creates too much shear force, breaking down the cell structure excessively and producing a gluey, elastic texture. A food processor creates a smooth but slightly textured mash similar to potato mash. Add 2 tablespoons (28g) butter and 2 tablespoons (30ml) warm cream or milk per 3-cup batch. Process, taste, adjust salt and white pepper.
Yield from 3 cups (450g) frozen florets: approximately 1.5 cups (345g) finished mash, enough for 2-3 servings as a side. Scale linearly — for 4-6 servings use 6 cups (900g) frozen, producing about 3 cups (690g) mash.
Buffalo Cauliflower: Why Drainage Is Non-Negotiable
Buffalo cauliflower wings — whether baked or fried — require dry cauliflower surfaces for two critical reasons: batter adhesion and crisping. Surface water creates a barrier between the cauliflower and the coating, causing the batter to slide off during baking or to spit violently in hot oil. Steam generated by water trapped under the coating prevents the crisp browning that makes the dish worth eating.
Thaw-and-dry method: Remove frozen florets from the bag and spread in a single layer on a sheet pan lined with paper towels. Let stand at room temperature for 30-45 minutes. Blot the tops with additional paper towels. The florets should feel completely dry to the touch before coating. Do not rush with microwave thawing — uneven thawing creates partially frozen, partially wet florets that behave inconsistently during cooking.
Batter recipe for 3 cups (450g) dried thawed cauliflower:
- 1/2 cup (63g) all-purpose flour + 1/2 cup (60g) cornstarch (the 50/50 blend is critical for crispness — pure flour batters are too soft)
- 3/4 cup (180ml) cold sparkling water or cold beer
- 1 teaspoon garlic powder, 1 teaspoon smoked paprika, 1/2 teaspoon salt
- Dip dried florets, shake off excess, bake at 425°F (220°C) on oiled parchment for 20 minutes until golden
- Toss in 1/3 cup (80ml) hot sauce + 2 tablespoons (28g) melted butter while hot
The batter-to-cauliflower ratio by weight is approximately 1:2 (batter:vegetable), producing a thin, crispy coating rather than a thick pub-style batter. Serve immediately — buffalo cauliflower softens quickly as the steam from the interior migrates outward into the coating.
- USDA FoodData Central — Cauliflower, frozen, unprepared
- USDA FoodData Central — Cauliflower, raw
- Green Giant Foods — Frozen riced cauliflower product specifications
- Cook's Illustrated — Low-carb cooking techniques, cauliflower rice (2022)