Pomegranate Seeds — Cups to Grams
1 cup fresh pomegranate arils = 174 grams — 1 medium pomegranate yields approximately 1 cup of arils (174g)
1 cup Pomegranate Seeds = 174 grams
Quick Conversion Table — Pomegranate Seeds
| Cups | Grams | Tablespoons | Teaspoons |
|---|---|---|---|
| ¼ | 43.5 g | 3.99 tbsp | 12.1 tsp |
| ⅓ | 58 g | 5.32 tbsp | 16.1 tsp |
| ½ | 87 g | 7.98 tbsp | 24.2 tsp |
| ⅔ | 116 g | 10.6 tbsp | 32.2 tsp |
| ¾ | 130.5 g | 12 tbsp | 36.3 tsp |
| 1 | 174 g | 16 tbsp | 48.3 tsp |
| 1½ | 261 g | 23.9 tbsp | 72.5 tsp |
| 2 | 348 g | 31.9 tbsp | 96.7 tsp |
| 3 | 522 g | 47.9 tbsp | 145 tsp |
| 4 | 696 g | 63.9 tbsp | 193.3 tsp |
Measuring Pomegranate Arils
Pomegranate arils are small, jewel-like, and slightly irregular — they fill a measuring cup without significant air pockets, producing consistent measurements. Fresh and frozen arils measure very similarly; the 4g/cup difference between fresh (174g) and frozen (170g) is negligible in most recipes.
Fresh arils (174g/cup): Spoon freshly extracted arils into a dry measuring cup and level the top. The natural juice from the arils provides enough moisture that they settle into the cup without significant gaps. Do not press down — this would crush arils and release juice, making the measurement inaccurate and messy.
Frozen arils (170g/cup): Measure directly from frozen. Frozen arils are slightly denser per cup because freezing causes cell damage that releases some internal liquid, making arils less plump and slightly more compact. When thawed, frozen arils release approximately 1–2 tablespoons of juice per cup, which is useful for salad dressings or smoothies but can waterlog delicate dishes if not accounted for.
| Measure | Fresh arils (g) | Frozen arils (g) | Pomegranates needed |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 tablespoon | 10.9g | 10.6g | — |
| ¼ cup | 43.5g | 42.5g | ¼ pomegranate |
| ½ cup | 87g | 85g | ½ pomegranate |
| 1 cup | 174g | 170g | ~1 medium pomegranate |
| 2 cups | 348g | 340g | ~2 medium pomegranates |
The Water Submersion Deseeding Method
Pomegranates are notoriously messy to deseed — the deep red juice stains hands, clothing, and counters almost instantly. The water submersion technique solves this problem entirely by containing the work underwater, where the juice cannot splatter.
Equipment needed: A large bowl (at least 4-quart / 3.8L capacity), filled with cold water. A fine-mesh strainer. No other specialized tools required.
Step 1 — Score the crown: Cut off the crown (the blossom end) of the pomegranate with a sharp knife, removing about 1cm of flesh. You will see the internal sections (arils) separated by white membrane. Score the skin along each visible membrane line — typically 6–8 vertical cuts from crown to base, stopping about 1.5cm from the base so the pomegranate stays intact.
Step 2 — Submerge and break: Hold the scored pomegranate under the water surface in the bowl. Gently break apart along the scored lines into sections. Work your thumbs and fingers around each section to push arils out of the membrane, all while completely submerged. The cold water prevents the juice from spraying.
Step 3 — Skim and drain: The white membrane floats; the arils sink. Use your hands or a slotted spoon to skim off all the floating membrane and discard. Pour the remaining bowl contents through a fine-mesh strainer. The arils are ready to use.
Antioxidant Content: The Food Science Behind Pomegranate's Reputation
Pomegranate has one of the most validated antioxidant profiles of any commonly consumed fruit. The primary active compounds are unique to pomegranate and not found in appreciable quantities in other foods.
Punicalagins: The dominant antioxidants in pomegranate juice and peel — ellagitannins unique to pomegranate (Punica granatum). A single cup (174g) of fresh arils contains approximately 430–520mg punicalagins. These compounds are hydrolyzed in the gut to ellagic acid and then to urolithins — metabolites studied for their role in cellular health. The concentration in arils is lower than in the peel (which is not typically consumed), but meaningful amounts reach the bloodstream after aril consumption.
Anthocyanins: The pigments responsible for the deep ruby-red color — cyanidin, delphinidin, and pelargonidin glycosides. 1 cup of fresh arils contains approximately 15–25mg total anthocyanins, comparable to ½ cup of blueberries. Anthocyanins are water-soluble and degrade with heat — fresh or raw consumption preserves them better than cooking.
Vitamin C: 1 cup (174g) of pomegranate arils provides approximately 17.7mg vitamin C — about 20% of the US Daily Value. This is lower than citrus fruits (a medium orange provides 70mg) but still a meaningful contribution for a garnish-quantity fruit.
ORAC comparison: Pomegranate juice scores approximately 2,860 μmol TE/100ml ORAC — approximately 3× green tea (1,128 μmol TE/100ml) and approximately 2× red wine (1,800 μmol TE/100ml). Fresh arils score somewhat lower than juice because the processing of juice extracts more polyphenols from the rind than aril eating alone provides.
Culinary Applications: Salad, Yogurt, and Cooking Ratios
Pomegranate arils are primarily used as a garnish, topping, or accent ingredient — rarely as a primary ingredient by volume. The following portion guidance reflects typical usage quantities:
Salad garnish: 2–3 tablespoons (22–33g) per individual salad serving provides visual impact and a burst of sweetness without dominating other flavors. Classic applications: mixed green salad with goat cheese and candied walnuts (3 tbsp / 33g arils); roasted beet and arugula salad (2 tbsp / 22g); fattoush or Middle Eastern grain salads (¼ cup / 43.5g for more prominent fruit presence).
Yogurt and oatmeal topping: ¼ cup (43.5g) per serving provides approximately 80 calories of fruit plus 4.5g of dietary fiber. This is a commonly recommended portion in dietitian-designed breakfast bowls.
Grain dishes: Persian-style rice dishes (jeweled rice, zereshk polo) use approximately ½ cup (87g) of arils per 4-serving batch — added at the end of cooking so they don't burst from heat. Moroccan couscous or quinoa pilaf: ¼ cup (43.5g) arils per 4 servings, added just before serving.
Desserts: Pavlova topping — ½ cup (87g) arils per 8-inch pavlova; cheesecake or tart garnish — ¼ to ½ cup (43.5–87g) distributed across a 9-inch tart. The tartness of arils cuts richness in cream-based desserts.
Common Questions About Pomegranate Seeds
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Arils can be cooked but lose their structural integrity quickly under heat — they burst and become part of the sauce or cooking liquid within 2–3 minutes. This is used intentionally in Persian cooking to make pomegranate molasses and in the classic dish fesenjan (walnut and pomegranate stew), where arils are pressed for juice or slow-cooked until they dissolve. For dishes where you want intact, jewel-like arils with visual appeal (salads, grain dishes, dessert garnishes), add them raw just before serving. For sauces, marinades, and slow-cooked dishes, cooking is appropriate — the flavor concentrates and the anthocyanins produce a beautiful deep-red color.
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Arils contain more fiber and slightly fewer concentrated antioxidants per gram than commercial pomegranate juice. 1 cup (174g) of arils: 144 calories, 3.5g fiber, 17.7mg vitamin C, approximately 25g sugar. 8 oz (236ml) of pomegranate juice: approximately 134 calories, 0.2g fiber, 0.25mg vitamin C, approximately 33g sugar. Commercial pomegranate juice concentrates polyphenols during processing (often including peel extraction), giving it higher antioxidant values per ml than eating arils alone. However, arils provide significantly more fiber — important for slowing sugar absorption — making arils the nutritionally preferable choice for regular consumption. Juice is more convenient for concentrated flavor in cooking.
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The Wonderful variety (also known as Red Wonderful) accounts for approximately 95% of pomegranate production in California and a large portion of global commercial production. Its dominance stems from horticultural traits: it is a vigorous grower, bears heavily (a mature tree can produce 100–150 lb of fruit per year), stores exceptionally well (whole fruit keeps 2–3 months refrigerated), and has large, deeply red arils with a balanced tart-sweet flavor. The deep red color makes it photogenic for marketing. The Ariana, Granada, and Parfianka varieties offer softer seeds and different flavor profiles but are less commercially available.
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Unlike most fruit, pomegranate does not continue ripening after harvest — color and softness of the skin are unreliable ripeness indicators. The best selection method: choose heavy pomegranates (heavy = more juice-filled arils vs air pockets) with a slightly flattened, angular shape (ripe pomegranates develop flat sides where the arils press against the skin from inside). Knock the pomegranate — a hollow thud indicates dry or underdeveloped arils; a denser, less resonant sound indicates full, plump arils. Deep red color throughout the skin is a good indicator for Wonderful variety, but some varieties (Grenadine, Mollar de Elche) are pink-red even when fully ripe.
- USDA FoodData Central — Pomegranate, raw
- Lansky EP, Newman RA — Punica granatum (pomegranate) and its potential for prevention and treatment of inflammation and cancer, Journal of Ethnopharmacology 2007
- Seeram NP et al. — Pomegranate juice ellagitannin metabolites, Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry 2004
- University of California ANR — Pomegranate production in California