Black Rice — Cups to Grams

1 cup uncooked black rice = 195 grams — 1 cup cooked = 170g — water ratio 1:2, cook 35–40 minutes

Variant
Result
195grams

1 cup Black Rice = 195 grams

Tablespoons16
Teaspoons48.8
Ounces6.88

Quick Conversion Table — Black Rice

CupsGramsTablespoonsTeaspoons
¼48.8 g4 tbsp12.2 tsp
65 g5.33 tbsp16.3 tsp
½97.5 g7.99 tbsp24.4 tsp
130 g10.7 tbsp32.5 tsp
¾146.3 g12 tbsp36.6 tsp
1195 g16 tbsp48.8 tsp
292.5 g24 tbsp73.1 tsp
2390 g32 tbsp97.5 tsp
3585 g48 tbsp146.3 tsp
4780 g63.9 tbsp195 tsp

Measuring Black Rice: Dry vs Cooked

Black rice is an unhulled grain — only the outermost hull is removed, leaving the dark purple-black bran layer intact. This bran layer increases density relative to white rice (where both hull and bran are removed) and brown rice (where only the hull is removed, leaving a beige bran layer).

Dry measurement (195g/cup): Scoop directly into a dry measuring cup and level with a straight edge. Black rice's intact bran gives each grain a slightly irregular surface compared to polished white rice, which means it packs slightly more densely — hence the 195g/cup versus white long-grain's 185g/cup. Weighing is recommended for precise nutritional tracking or large-batch cooking.

Cooked measurement (170g/cup): Cooked black rice grains are larger and softer than dry, with a plump, slightly sticky texture. Scoop cooked rice without pressing or packing — the grains have a natural tendency to clump from bran starch, and pressing adds 15–25g per cup above the 170g norm.

MeasureDry/Uncooked (g)Cooked (g)
1 teaspoon4g
1 tablespoon12.2g
¼ cup48.75g42.5g
½ cup97.5g85g
1 cup195g170g
2 cups dry390g dry → ~680g cooked

The Antioxidant Profile of Black Rice

Black rice derives its color from anthocyanins — a class of flavonoid polyphenols concentrated in the bran layer. The primary anthocyanin is cyanidin-3-glucoside (C3G), the same compound responsible for the deep colors of blueberries, blackberries, black currants, and purple sweet potatoes.

Concentration by weight: Dry black rice bran contains approximately 200–400mg of anthocyanins per 100g of bran. The intact whole grain (as eaten) contains approximately 1–3mg anthocyanins per gram of dry rice — meaning 1 cup (195g) dry black rice contains approximately 195–585mg total anthocyanins before cooking. Cooking reduces anthocyanin content by approximately 30–50% due to heat degradation and leaching into cooking water.

Comparison to blueberries: Fresh blueberries contain approximately 1.6–3.8mg anthocyanins per gram. One cup of raw blueberries (148g) = 237–562mg anthocyanins. The comparison is context-dependent — by serving weight, they are broadly similar. The "more than blueberries" claim (often cited from a 2010 American Chemical Society study) refers to black rice bran extract vs blueberry extract by equivalent serving size, and holds up for bran-to-berry comparisons at equivalent small serving weights.

Health note: Anthocyanins in black rice are not significantly absorbed into the bloodstream in the same concentrations as from fresh berries — cooking, digestion, and the rice matrix affect bioavailability. The nutritional benefits are real but should not be compared directly to equivalent weights of fresh blueberries.

Preserve the anthocyanins: Do not rinse black rice before cooking — rinsing washes away 20–30% of the water-soluble anthocyanin pigments into the drain. The purple cooking water should be consumed as part of a congee or pudding, not discarded.

Cooking Black Rice: Method and Timing

Black rice requires more water and a longer cook time than white rice because the bran layer acts as a barrier to water absorption. The intact bran also means the grain requires more heat exposure to fully gelatinize the interior starch.

Standard stovetop method: Combine 1 cup (195g) dry black rice with 2 cups (473ml) water in a medium saucepan. Optionally add ½ teaspoon salt. Bring to a boil over high heat, stirring once. Reduce heat to the lowest possible setting, cover tightly, cook 35 minutes. Check — the water should be fully absorbed. If not, cover and continue cooking in 5-minute increments. Once absorbed, remove from heat and rest covered 10 minutes. Fluff gently with a fork.

Optional soaking (reduces cook time): Soak black rice in cold water for 30–60 minutes before cooking. Drain and use the standard 1:2 water ratio. Cooking time reduces to 25–30 minutes. Soaking also produces a slightly more evenly cooked grain with a more consistent texture throughout.

Rice cooker method: Use the "brown rice" setting if available (longer cook cycle). Ratio: 1 cup (195g) dry to 1.75 cups water (the sealed environment retains some moisture, requiring slightly less water than stovetop). The cooker's pressure and sustained heat effectively cooks the bran-intact grain.

Instant Pot: 1 cup (195g) black rice + 1.25 cups water (310ml). High pressure 20 minutes, natural release 10 minutes. The pressure cooks the bran-intact grain significantly faster than stovetop. Result is slightly softer than stovetop-cooked black rice.

Black Rice in Recipes: Practical Quantities

Black rice's dramatic visual impact and robust flavor make it a signature ingredient in both traditional Asian and contemporary Western cooking. Quantities matter because of its significant coloring effect on all surrounding ingredients.

Black rice congee (jook): Chinese-style congee uses a 1:10 ratio of rice to water for a porridge consistency. 1 cup (195g) dry black rice to 2 liters water, simmered 60–90 minutes until fully broken down. The result is a thick, deeply purple-black porridge. Serve with toppings: century egg, ginger, scallion. Serves 4–6 as a breakfast dish.

Indonesian black rice pudding (Bubur Ketan Hitam): Soak ½ cup (97.5g) black glutinous rice overnight. Simmer in 3 cups (710ml) water with 3 tablespoons palm sugar (40g) and 2 pandan leaves for 45–60 minutes until thick and porridge-like. Top with thick coconut milk (3 tablespoons / 45ml per serving). The pudding turns a striking dark purple-black.

Black rice grain bowl: Cook ¾ cup (146g) dry black rice (yields approximately 1.5 cups / 255g cooked) for 2 servings as a base. Top with roasted vegetables, a protein, and dressing. The black rice base visually dominates the bowl — pair with bright colored toppings (mango, edamame, red cabbage) for maximum visual contrast.

Mixed black and white rice: Cooking black rice alongside white rice in the same pot is not recommended — the cook times differ by 20 minutes. Instead, cook separately and combine after cooking. A 50:50 blend produces a beautiful marbled purple-white effect. For mixed grain cooking, use a rice cooker with a brown rice setting, which accommodates both.

Common Questions About Black Rice