Edamame — Cups to Grams

1 cup shelled edamame (cooked) = 155 grams | in-pod = 85g/cup | 16 oz frozen shelled bag = 3 cups

Variant
Result
155grams

1 cup Edamame = 155 grams

Tablespoons16
Teaspoons48.4
Ounces5.47

Quick Conversion Table — Edamame

CupsGramsTablespoonsTeaspoons
¼38.8 g4 tbsp12.1 tsp
51.7 g5.33 tbsp16.2 tsp
½77.5 g7.99 tbsp24.2 tsp
103.3 g10.6 tbsp32.3 tsp
¾116.3 g12 tbsp36.3 tsp
1155 g16 tbsp48.4 tsp
232.5 g24 tbsp72.7 tsp
2310 g32 tbsp96.9 tsp
3465 g47.9 tbsp145.3 tsp
4620 g63.9 tbsp193.8 tsp

Understanding the Pod-to-Shelled Yield Ratio

The 50% pod-to-bean yield ratio is the single most important measurement fact for anyone working with in-pod edamame. The edamame pod itself is fibrous and inedible — only the inner beans are consumed. Each pod typically contains 2–3 beans, and the pod weight is approximately equal to the bean weight inside it. This means if your recipe calls for 1 cup (155g) of shelled edamame and you are starting from in-pod, you need to buy and cook approximately 2 cups (170g) of in-pod edamame to yield that shelled amount.

The discrepancy between in-pod cup weight (85g/cup) and shelled cup weight (155g/cup) is dramatic — nearly a 2:1 ratio. This occurs because in-pod edamame pods are hollow-ish structures with air inside them, packing very loosely in a measuring cup. When you measure in-pod edamame, you are measuring mostly air. The shelled beans pack more densely because you are measuring only the dense legume seeds.

In-pod edamameIn-pod weightShelled yield (cups)Shelled yield (grams)
1 cup in-pod85g~½ cup shelled~77g shelled
2 cups in-pod170g~1 cup shelled~155g shelled
16 oz bag in-pod454g~1.5 cups shelled~227g shelled
32 oz bag in-pod907g~3 cups shelled~454g shelled

Commercial shelling is consistent — frozen shelled edamame from a bag is ready to measure and use directly without any yield calculation. The 16 oz (454g) bag of frozen shelled edamame = approximately 3 cups is the most useful kitchen reference for this ingredient.

Traditional Salt-Water Pod Technique

Edamame in Japan is categorized as a zensai (appetizer) or sakizuke (small dish before a meal) and eaten before or alongside drinks, particularly beer. The traditional preparation requires specific salting levels both in the cooking water and as a finish — this is not casual seasoning but a deliberate technique that affects both flavor and the pod-eating experience.

The correct water salinity for cooking edamame is 2% by weight — 20g salt per 1 liter of water. This is twice the salt concentration used for cooking pasta (1%). The high salinity serves two functions: it seasons the beans inside the pod through osmosis during cooking, and it seasons the outside of the pod for the eating process (since the lips and tongue touch the pod when extracting the beans).

Many recipes call for rubbing the pods with salt before cooking — a step with a genuine functional purpose. The mechanical friction breaks down the outer skin of the pod very slightly, allowing salt from the cooking water to penetrate more effectively to the inner beans. Rub 1 teaspoon of coarse salt per 2 cups of in-pod edamame and let rest 5 minutes before plunging into the salted boiling water.

After draining, the traditional finishing step is tossing the hot pods with additional flaky sea salt immediately. The heat causes the salt crystals to adhere to the pods and partially dissolve, creating a lightly salty exterior that deposits flavor when the beans are pulled out. The timing matters — add finishing salt when the pods are still steaming hot, not after they have cooled.

Buddha Bowl, Poke, and Stir-Fry: Edamame Portions by Dish Type

Edamame appears as a component across multiple distinct dish types, each with its own appropriate portion size. The 18g protein per cup (155g) makes it a nutritionally meaningful addition rather than a garnish — understanding the right quantity per dish type maximizes its contribution.

Dish typeShelled edamame per servingWeight
Buddha bowl (grain bowl)½ cup shelled78g
Poke bowl¼–⅓ cup shelled39–52g
Stir-fry (component)½–¾ cup shelled78–116g
Salad topping¼ cup shelled39g
Edamame hummus (per batch)2 cups shelled310g
In-pod appetizer (per person)¾–1 cup in-pod64–85g
Edamame fried rice (4 servings)1 cup shelled155g

Stir-fry timing: Frozen shelled edamame can be added directly to a hot stir-fry pan without thawing — the high heat of the wok cooks them in 3–4 minutes. Add them at the middle stage of cooking, after aromatics but before delicate vegetables. They should be heated through and slightly browned at the edges for best flavor. Pre-cooked shelled edamame needs only 1–2 minutes in the pan to heat through.

Poke bowl integration: In Hawaiian-style poke bowls, edamame is a textural contrast component alongside the silky raw fish. The ideal poke bowl edamame is cooked and chilled, served cold, providing a firm pop against the tender fish. Do not season edamame for poke separately — the poke sauce (soy, sesame, scallion) will coat all components and provide adequate seasoning.

Nutritional Density: Why 155g Matters

The specific measurement of 1 cup (155g) of shelled cooked edamame is a useful anchor because it represents a practical single-portion serving that can function as a protein source, not just a vegetable. The nutritional breakdown at this weight is distinctive.

NutrientPer cup / 155g cooked% Daily Value (2,000 cal diet)
Calories224 kcal11%
Protein18.5g37%
Total fat12g15%
— Polyunsaturated fat5.7g
— Monounsaturated fat2.7g
Carbohydrates13g5%
Dietary fiber8g29%
Folate482mcg121%
Vitamin K41mcg34%
Iron3.5mg19%
Calcium98mg8%

The folate content (121% DV) is particularly notable — edamame is one of the highest folate sources in the plant kingdom. Folate is critical for DNA synthesis and cell division, making edamame especially important for pregnant women (who need 600mcg/day folate). The combination of complete protein, high fiber, and significant micronutrient density makes 1 cup of edamame nutritionally comparable to a small serving of lean meat or fish, with the added benefit of the fiber and folate that animal proteins lack.

Common Questions About Edamame