Quinoa Protein Calculator: How Much Protein in Quinoa?

🌾 Quinoa Protein Calculator

Calculate protein content for any serving size of quinoa

Quick Presets
📊 Enter Your Quinoa Amount
🥗 Nutrition per 1 Cup Cooked Quinoa (185g)
222
Calories
8.1g
Protein
39.4g
Carbs
3.6g
Fat
5.2g
Fiber
1.2mg
Iron
118mg
Magnesium
318mg
Phosphorus
💡 Tip: Quinoa is one of the few plant foods considered a complete protein — it contains all 9 essential amino acids. One cup dry quinoa yields about 3 cups cooked.
📖 Protein by Serving Size (White Quinoa)
Serving Size Weight Protein Calories
1 Tbsp dry11g1.5g40
1/4 cup dry43g6.0g156
1/2 cup dry85g12.0g313
1 cup dry170g24.0g626
1/2 cup cooked93g4.1g111
1 cup cooked185g8.1g222
100g cooked100g4.4g120
100g dry100g14.1g368
6 oz cooked170g7.5g204
1 lb dry454g64.0g1670
🔍 Quinoa vs Other Grains — Protein Comparison (per cup cooked)
Grain Protein Calories Complete Protein?
Quinoa8.1g222Yes
Brown Rice5.5g248No
White Rice4.4g242No
Couscous6.0g176No
Bulgur Wheat5.6g151No
Millet6.1g207No
Farro7.0g220No
Oats (cooked)5.9g166No
🌱 Protein by Quinoa Variety (per 100g cooked)
Variety Protein Calories Notes
White Quinoa4.4g120Mildest flavor, fluffiest texture
Red Quinoa4.7g122Slightly nuttier, holds shape better
Black Quinoa4.8g124Earthier flavor, crunchier
Tricolor Quinoa4.5g121Blend of all three varieties
⚖️ Dry-to-Cooked Conversion Reference
Dry Amount Cooked Yield Weight (cooked) Water Needed
1/4 cup (43g)3/4 cup139g1/2 cup
1/3 cup (57g)1 cup185g2/3 cup
1/2 cup (85g)1.5 cups278g1 cup
1 cup (170g)3 cups555g2 cups
2 cups (340g)6 cups1110g4 cups
💡 Tip: Dry quinoa roughly triples in volume and increases about 3.3x in weight when cooked. So 1 cup dry (170g) becomes about 3 cups cooked (555g). The water-to-quinoa ratio is 2:1 by volume.
💪 Amino Acid Profile (per 1 cup cooked / 185g)
Amino Acid Amount (mg) % Daily Value Essential?
Leucine53019%Yes
Lysine48723%Yes
Isoleucine35025%Yes
Valine39021%Yes
Histidine25837%Yes
Threonine28027%Yes
Methionine17824%Yes
Phenylalanine37042%Yes
Tryptophan9534%Yes

One cup cooked quinoa gives around 8.1 grams of protein for 222 calories; that is about 15 percent of the calories from protein, what really is not bad for a grain. Here strictly said it is a fake grain. Raw quinoa has more protein per gram, around 14.1 g for 100 grams, but folks do not eat it raw, so the values for the cooked version are the ones that matter.

The ratio between raw and cooked quinoa surprisingly shocked me at first. One cup raw (170 g) turns into around three cups cooked, or so. About 555 grams.

How Much Protein Is in Quinoa?

That is 3.3 times growth because of soaking up water. Black quinoa a bit beats the white, with 4.8 g protein for 100 g cooked rather than 4.4 g. No big difference, but it adds up over a whole serving.

Compared to brown rice with 5.5 g per cup cooked, quinoa wins by around 47 percent. That is a big advantage. And it is among the few plant sources with all nine essential amino acids; 530 mg leucine per cup cooked, 487 mg lysine.

I did not expect that those numbers wood be this strong for something grain-like.

The info below does not come from a calculator or some converter. It is based on actual use, forum talks and experiences from cooking groups across the net.

Quinoa is said “keen-wah” and it is technically a seed, not a grain. It belongs to the same family as beetroots, chard and spinach. Although it is a seed, quinoa is commonly grouped with fake grains like amaranth and buckwheat.

During cooking, it fills the role of starchy grains, so folks treat it as if one of them.

The main benefit of protein in quinoa is that it forms complete proteins. That means it has all nine essential amino acids that the body itself can not make. That is serious for vegetarians and vegans, because getting complete proteins from plant foods can be hard.

Animal products commonly have complete proteins, but finding the same in plants is harder. Quinoa really helps with that challenge well.

Quinoa however is not packed with protein. A serving of one cup cooked quinoa carries around 222 calories, 39 grams of carbs and 8 grams of protein. English muffins have 7 grams of protein in a 172-calorie serving, what is quite alike.

Around a quarter of a cup raw quinoa gives about 6 grams of protein and 160 calories. After cooking, that small amount turns into a big portion. So the ratio of protein to calorie is not surprising.

Carbs are plenty, so quinoa alone is not a strong protein source.

Quinoa naturally does not carry gluten. It also gives good fiber. In it are healthy fats, vitamins, minerals and antioxidants.

It has a low glycemic index, although not a low glycemic load. One can easily digest it.

Native people in South America grew quinoa for more than 5,000 years. The Inca folks considered it holy. Only recently it became popular in the United States.

Even NASA used quinoa for feeding astronauts during long space trips, because of its rich nutrition. It beats in protein many likes such as rice, corn and whole wheat, what also helps during weight loss.

Quinoa cooks quickly, what gives fast joy. Its taste is very mild and it blends into many foods without strongly changing the flavor. It works well for taco bowls, salads with chickpeas and grain bowls.

Cooking quinoa in veggie broth adds extra flavor. One Mexican style grain bowl with quinoa and ground meat has 34 grams of protein per serving. Adding chickpeas to quinoa salads boosts the proteins and gives nice texture.

It also works well as food after a workout, because it fills you up and is fairly rich inplant proteins.

One thing to recall is that cooked quinoa carries fewer grains per cup than raw quinoa. The protein in every grain stays the same during cooking, but the volume grows. Also anyone that suffers stomach pain, cramps or throwing up after eating quinoa should avoid it.

Quinoa Protein Calculator: How Much Protein in Quinoa?

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