Nori Sheets — Cups to Grams

1 full nori sheet = 3g — 10-sheet pack = 30g, half-sheet = 1.5g

Variant
Result
20grams

1 cup Nori Sheets = 20 grams

Tablespoons16
Teaspoons50
Ounces0.71

Quick Conversion Table — Nori Sheets

CupsGramsTablespoonsTeaspoons
¼5 g4 tbsp12.5 tsp
6.67 g5.34 tbsp16.7 tsp
½10 g8 tbsp25 tsp
13.3 g10.6 tbsp33.3 tsp
¾15 g12 tbsp37.5 tsp
120 g16 tbsp50 tsp
30 g24 tbsp75 tsp
240 g32 tbsp100 tsp
360 g48 tbsp150 tsp
480 g64 tbsp200 tsp

Nori Sheet Weights: Count-Based Reference

Unlike most ingredients, nori is measured and purchased by sheet count rather than by weight or volume. Understanding the weight per sheet and per common pack size allows accurate recipe scaling and purchasing decisions. Standard full nori sheets measure approximately 20 cm x 19 cm and are sold in packs of 10, 20, 50, or 100 sheets for professional use.

UnitWeight (g)Common use
1 half-sheet1.5gTemaki (hand roll), small onigiri
1 full sheet3gMaki roll, large onigiri
5 sheets15g5 maki rolls (30-40 pieces)
10 sheets (standard pack)30g10 rolls — party for 4-6 people
20 sheets60gLarge batch or catering
1 cup crumbled20g~6-7 sheets loosely crumbled
1 tbsp nori powder4gShichimi togarashi, seasoning
Nutritional density per sheet: Despite weighing only 3g, one nori sheet contains approximately 10 calories, 1.1g protein, 0.1g fat, 1.1g carbohydrate, and a remarkable 1.4mg of Vitamin B12 — 58% of the adult daily value from a single 3g sheet. Nori is one of the rare plant-based B12 sources and is exceptionally rich in iodine, with approximately 45-200 mcg iodine per sheet depending on growing conditions.

Types and Grades of Nori

Commercial nori varies significantly in quality, and the difference between a premium sheet and a budget sheet is immediately apparent in taste and texture. Understanding grades helps purchasing decisions and clarifies why restaurant sushi tastes different from home-assembled rolls using supermarket nori.

Grade 1 (premium): Dark, uniform green-black color, glossy surface, no holes or thin spots, clean oceanic-umami aroma, snaps crisply. From premium cultivation areas in Ariake Sea (Saga, Fukuoka, Kumamoto prefectures) and Harima Sea. Used in high-end sushi restaurants. Expensive — premium 10-packs cost $8-15.

Grade 2-3 (standard): Slightly mottled or brownish-green coloring, still functional for rolls. Most retail and mid-range restaurant nori. Standard 10-packs cost $3-7.

Economy grade: Often used for nori in pre-packaged rice balls or snack products. May have a slightly bitter or flat flavor. Not recommended for sushi where the nori flavor is prominent.

Ajitsuke-nori (seasoned): Coated with soy sauce, mirin, and sugar before packaging. Softer, sweeter, not suitable for rolling — used as a breakfast side or snack. Cannot substitute for yaki-nori in sushi.

Nori in Sushi and Onigiri: Sheet Counts and Rice Quantities

The primary applications for nori sheets are sushi rolls and onigiri rice balls. These standard quantities produce restaurant-caliber results.

Hosomaki (thin roll, single filling): 1 full sheet + 160g cooked sushi rice (seasoned with sushi vinegar) + approximately 30g filling (tuna, cucumber, pickled daikon). Yields 6-8 pieces. The rice should cover 2/3 of the nori sheet, leaving the far edge clear for sealing.

Futomaki (thick roll, multiple fillings): 1 full sheet + 200-220g cooked sushi rice + 80-100g mixed fillings (egg tamago, cucumber, pickled gourd, crab stick). Yields 6-8 thick pieces. Rice must be spread evenly and not too thick near the edges or the roll will not seal cleanly.

Temaki (hand roll cone): 1 half-sheet (1.5g) + 80g sushi rice + 30-40g filling. Form into a cone shape and eat immediately — the nori softens within 3-4 minutes.

Onigiri (rice ball): 1 to 1.5 sheets per large onigiri. Wrap the sheet around the molded rice ball just before serving to preserve crunch, or fold strips around the base as a handle.

Beyond Sushi: Other Uses for Nori

Nori is versatile beyond the sushi roll context. Its high glutamate content makes it an effective umami booster in non-Japanese applications, and its distinctive flavor adds depth to a range of dishes.

Furikake seasoning: Ground nori is a key component of furikake rice seasoning blends — typically 2-4 tablespoons (8-16g) nori powder per 100g furikake mix, combined with sesame seeds, bonito flakes, dried shrimp, and salt. Shake over hot rice, noodles, or eggs.

Nori chips / snack: Cut nori into 4cm squares, brush lightly with sesame oil, sprinkle with sea salt and optional sesame seeds, and bake at 160 degrees C for 8-10 minutes until crisp. A 10-sheet pack makes a snack for 4 people.

Nori in pasta and risotto: Crumble 1-2 sheets of nori (3-6g) into butter-based pasta sauces or stir into risotto at the end of cooking. The glutamate in nori deepens the umami of parmesan-based dishes significantly without adding an overtly Japanese flavor profile — the nori dissolves into the sauce, leaving only flavor.

Soup stocks: Simmer 1 sheet (3g) in 500ml water or light broth for 5 minutes to add umami without the time commitment of kombu dashi.