Pearl Couscous — Cups to Grams
1 cup dry pearl couscous = 180 grams — 1 cup cooked = 230g (absorbs significant water weight)
1 cup Pearl Couscous = 180 grams
Quick Conversion Table — Pearl Couscous
| Cups | Grams | Tablespoons | Teaspoons |
|---|---|---|---|
| ¼ | 45 g | 4 tbsp | 12 tsp |
| ⅓ | 60 g | 5.33 tbsp | 16 tsp |
| ½ | 90 g | 8 tbsp | 24 tsp |
| ⅔ | 120 g | 10.7 tbsp | 32 tsp |
| ¾ | 135 g | 12 tbsp | 36 tsp |
| 1 | 180 g | 16 tbsp | 48 tsp |
| 1½ | 270 g | 24 tbsp | 72 tsp |
| 2 | 360 g | 32 tbsp | 96 tsp |
| 3 | 540 g | 48 tbsp | 144 tsp |
| 4 | 720 g | 64 tbsp | 192 tsp |
Measuring Pearl Couscous: Dry vs Cooked
Pearl couscous presents an interesting measurement challenge: cooked pearl couscous is heavier per cup than dry (230g vs 180g), which is the opposite expectation most cooks have. The reason is that pearl couscous absorbs approximately 1.28× its own dry weight in water during cooking, and this water weight is retained in the swollen spheres — but because the swollen spheres pack into a cup more efficiently than dry ones (dry spheres have more air gaps between them), you end up with more grams per cup cooked.
Dry measurement (180g/cup): Scoop into a dry measuring cup and level. The uniform sphere shape means pearl couscous measures very consistently — manufacturer calibration to standard sphere size ensures predictable packing density across brands.
Cooked measurement (230g/cup): Scoop cooked pearl couscous gently without compressing. When cooked al dente, the spheres are firm enough to measure accurately without deformation. Overcooked couscous (beyond 12 minutes) becomes soft and compressible, increasing measured weight per cup significantly.
| Measure | Dry (g) | Cooked (g) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 teaspoon | 3.75g | — |
| 1 tablespoon | 11.25g | — |
| ¼ cup | 45g | 57.5g |
| ½ cup | 90g | 115g |
| 1 cup | 180g | 230g |
| 2 cups dry | 360g | ~460g cooked |
Pearl Couscous in Classic Applications
Pearl couscous's toasted flavor and distinctive spherical shape make it one of the most versatile grains in Mediterranean and Middle Eastern cooking. Its texture is firmer and more pleasant than rice when cold, making it especially valuable for prepared salads and meal-prep cooking.
Pearl couscous pilaf: The foundational technique. Heat 2 tablespoons (30ml) olive oil in a saucepan over medium heat. Add 1 cup (180g) dry pearl couscous and toast 2–3 minutes until golden. Add 1.25 cups (296ml) hot chicken or vegetable broth plus ½ teaspoon salt. Bring to a boil, reduce to a low simmer, cover, cook 10 minutes until liquid is absorbed. Fluff with fork, fold in herbs (parsley, mint), a squeeze of lemon, and toasted pine nuts. Serves 4 as a side.
Lemon herb grain salad: Cook 2 cups (360g) dry pearl couscous in boiling salted water for 8 minutes, drain, toss immediately with 3 tablespoons (45ml) olive oil and 2 tablespoons (30ml) lemon juice. Cool to room temperature. Add diced cucumber, cherry tomatoes, crumbled feta (80g), fresh mint, and parsley. Serves 6–8 as a side. This is a meal-prep staple — keeps refrigerated for 4 days with no texture degradation.
Soup applications: Add pearl couscous dry to soups in the final 8–10 minutes — it cooks directly in the broth, releasing surface starch that thickens the soup slightly. Use 2 tablespoons (22.5g) per serving; for 6 servings of minestrone or chicken soup, add ¾ cup (135g) dry. Remove from heat immediately when the couscous reaches al dente — it continues cooking in the residual heat and can become mushy if left in hot soup too long.
Stuffed vegetables: Pearl couscous is excellent stuffed into bell peppers or zucchini. Mix ½ cup (90g) dry couscous with 1 cup (237ml) broth, salt, and spices — the mixture is raw and will cook inside the vegetable during baking (30–35 minutes at 180°C / 350°F). The enclosed vegetable environment acts like a sealed pot, steaming the couscous evenly.
Pearl Couscous vs Moroccan Couscous: A Technical Comparison
Despite sharing the name "couscous," pearl and Moroccan varieties are technically different products with different manufacturing processes, textures, and best uses:
Particle size: Pearl couscous spheres average 3mm diameter; Moroccan couscous granules average 0.5–1mm. The size difference is 3–6×, producing completely different textural experiences — pearl couscous has a distinct bite and chew; Moroccan couscous is fluffy and almost dissolves on the tongue.
Manufacturing: Pearl couscous is extruded semolina that is then toasted in industrial ovens. The toasting step gives it a naturally nutty flavor and slightly chewy texture. Moroccan couscous is moistened semolina that is hand- or machine-rolled into tiny granules, then steam-cooked and dried — no toasting occurs.
Cooking method: Pearl couscous requires active cooking (8–10 minutes boiling or absorption simmering). Moroccan couscous requires only 5 minutes of steaming or soaking in boiling water — it is a convenience food by design. Pearl couscous cannot be quickly reconstituted; Moroccan couscous cannot produce the chewy, al dente texture of pearl.
Weight per cup (dry): Pearl couscous = 180g; Moroccan couscous = 170–175g. The difference is due to the denser sphere packing of pearl vs the fluffy granule packing of Moroccan.
Common Questions About Pearl Couscous
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No — pearl couscous is made from semolina wheat and contains gluten. It is not suitable for celiac disease or gluten sensitivity. Gluten-free pearl couscous alternatives made from corn or rice flour are available in specialty stores, but they weigh slightly differently per cup (typically 165–175g/cup dry) and tend to be less firm when cooked. The texture of GF pearl couscous is softer and less chewy than wheat-based pearl couscous.
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Yes, with minor adjustments. Pearl couscous (180g/cup) and orzo (200g/cup) can substitute for each other at a 1:1 volume ratio — you will get 10% less by weight with pearl couscous. Cook time is approximately the same (8–10 minutes). The main difference is visual: pearl couscous produces uniform spheres while orzo produces elongated grains. Flavor-wise, pearl couscous's toasted nuttiness adds more character than plain orzo. Both work equally well in pilafs, salads, and soups — the substitution is clean in most recipes.
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Three strategies: (1) Do not overcook — 8 minutes gives a firm, al dente texture; 12+ minutes produces soft, mushy pearls that compress easily. (2) If cooking by absorption, use exactly 1.25× the volume of liquid — too much liquid leaves excess moisture that continues to soften the couscous. (3) After cooking, spread on a baking sheet to cool rather than leaving in the warm pot — residual heat in the pot continues cooking the couscous for several minutes after the heat is off.
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Per 100g cooked: pearl couscous contains approximately 112 calories, 3.8g protein, 0.2g fat, 23g carbohydrate, 1.4g fiber. White rice (per 100g cooked): approximately 130 calories, 2.7g protein, 0.3g fat, 28g carbohydrate, 0.4g fiber. Pearl couscous has fewer calories per gram cooked, slightly more protein, and substantially more fiber than white rice. Both are made from refined grain with the bran removed — neither is a high-fiber whole grain. Whole wheat pearl couscous (available from some specialty brands) adds approximately 2–3g fiber per 100g cooked, comparable to brown rice.
- USDA FoodData Central — Couscous, cooked
- Osem Group — Ptitim product history and manufacturing
- Claudia Roden, A New Book of Middle Eastern Food — Regional couscous varieties
- Journal of Food Science — Particle size and packing density in semolina-based pasta