Farro — Cups to Grams

1 cup dry farro (semi-pearled) = 190 grams | cooked = 180g/cup

Variant
Result
190grams

1 cup Farro = 190 grams

Tablespoons16
Teaspoons47.5
Ounces6.7

Quick Conversion Table — Farro

CupsGramsTablespoonsTeaspoons
¼47.5 g3.99 tbsp11.9 tsp
63.3 g5.32 tbsp15.8 tsp
½95 g7.98 tbsp23.8 tsp
126.7 g10.6 tbsp31.7 tsp
¾142.5 g12 tbsp35.6 tsp
1190 g16 tbsp47.5 tsp
285 g23.9 tbsp71.3 tsp
2380 g31.9 tbsp95 tsp
3570 g47.9 tbsp142.5 tsp
4760 g63.9 tbsp190 tsp

Whole, Semi-Pearled, and Pearled: What the Label Actually Means

The processing level of farro has a larger effect on cooking behavior than on dry weight per cup, but it matters significantly for how you plan a recipe. The terms refer to how much of the outer bran layer has been removed during milling:

Whole farro (farro integrale) retains the complete bran and germ. It has the most fiber and nutrients, the most assertive flavor, and requires overnight soaking or pressure cooking. Unsoaked whole farro takes 45–75 minutes to cook in simmering water. The density is slightly lower (approximately 185g/cup) because the intact bran creates a rougher surface that doesn't pack quite as tightly.

Semi-pearled farro has had some, but not all, bran removed. It cooks in 25–30 minutes without pre-soaking and strikes a balance between nutrition and convenience. This is the form labeled simply "farro" at most US grocery retailers. At 190g/cup, it is the reference measurement for this page and most recipes.

Pearled farro (farro perlato) has the entire bran removed. It cooks fastest (15–20 minutes), has the mildest flavor, and loses most of its fiber in processing. At approximately 193–198g/cup, it packs slightly more densely due to the smoother, bran-free grain surface. If your recipe specifies "quick-cooking farro," it is likely pearled.

Label check: Italian packaging often specifies "semiperlato" (semi-pearled). US packaging frequently does not disclose the processing level — if the cooking time listed on the package is 15–20 minutes, it is pearled. 25–35 minutes indicates semi-pearled. Over 45 minutes without pre-soaking means whole.

Dry-to-Cooked Expansion: Getting Your Volumes Right

Farro expands approximately 2.5-fold in volume and absorbs water during cooking, but the cooked weight per cup (180g) is lower than the raw weight per cup (190g). This apparent paradox resolves easily: cooked farro grains are swollen and irregular, creating more air space when measured in a cup. The total cooked yield is heavier because it contains water, but the cooked weight per cup is lower.

Dry farroDry weightCooked yield (cups)Cooked yield (grams)
¼ cup48g~⅔ cup~120g
½ cup95g~1¼ cups~225g
1 cup190g~2½ cups~450g
1½ cups285g~3¾ cups~675g
2 cups380g~5 cups~900g

These ratios assume the standard method: rinse dry farro, combine with 2.5× its volume of water (or stock), bring to a boil, reduce to a gentle simmer with the lid slightly ajar, cook until tender with a slight chew (al dente for farro means a distinct, pleasant resistance — not mushy). Drain any excess liquid. If you cook farro in a large volume of water like pasta and drain it, the expansion ratio remains similar but the grains will be slightly less sticky.

Soaking semi-pearled farro overnight in cold water reduces cook time to 15–20 minutes and produces a more evenly hydrated grain. The expansion ratio remains approximately 2.5:1. Some recipes specify a 1:2 farro-to-liquid ratio for a pilaf method (where all liquid is absorbed); this works reliably for pearled and semi-pearled, but whole farro may need a splash more liquid.

Farro in Soups, Salads, and Farrotto

Farro's starch release during cooking is the critical variable across different cooking methods. It releases enough starch to thicken a soup without making it gluey — this is why Italian minestrone and ribollita recipes often call for farro rather than white beans alone. A 2-quart soup with ½ cup dry farro (95g) added during the last 25 minutes of simmering gains body and substance without a pasty texture.

For grain salads (the use case where farro excels), cooking to al dente is non-negotiable. Overcooked farro becomes soft and shapeless, losing its characteristic chewy texture. The target is a grain that gives resistance when bitten but shows no white, starchy center. At that point, spread on a sheet pan to cool rapidly — piling cooked farro in a bowl while hot results in steam-softening from retained heat, which continues cooking the grains past the ideal texture.

Farrotto — risotto made with farro instead of Arborio — exploits farro's moderate starch release. Unlike Arborio (which releases amylopectin starch aggressively for a creamy sauce), farro releases less starch per gram of grain. To compensate, add 2–3 tablespoons more butter or a higher ratio of finishing Parmesan than a standard risotto recipe calls for. The result has more texture and a nuttier flavor than traditional risotto.

RecipeDry farroDry weightServings
Farro grain salad (side)1 cup190g4 sides
Farro soup (4-qt pot)½–¾ cup95–143g6–8
Farrotto (main)1½ cups285g4 mains
Breakfast farro porridge½ cup95g2
Stuffed peppers (4 peppers)¾ cup143g4

Nutritional Density: Why the Weight Matters

Farro is often cited as a high-protein ancient grain. In context: 1 cup dry semi-pearled farro (190g) contains approximately 26–28 grams of protein and 130 grams of carbohydrates. This is meaningfully higher than brown rice (5g protein per cooked cup) but similar to whole wheat pasta. The protein in farro is not complete — it lacks sufficient lysine — but combining farro with legumes or dairy provides a full amino acid profile.

The fiber content varies dramatically by processing level. Whole farro delivers approximately 7–8g fiber per dry cup (190g). Semi-pearled runs 4–6g per dry cup. Pearled farro drops to 2–3g per dry cup — similar to white rice. If fiber is the reason you are choosing farro over white rice, verify you are buying whole or semi-pearled, not pearled.

Farro contains gluten and is not suitable for those with celiac disease or gluten sensitivity. It is sometimes tolerated by individuals with non-celiac gluten sensitivity due to lower levels of the specific gliadin proteins implicated in gut irritation, but this tolerance varies by individual and is not guaranteed.

Common Questions About Farro