Pineapple Rings — Cups to Grams

1 fresh ring (1 inch thick) = 30 grams | canned drained ring = 35g | cubed fresh = 165g/cup | 20 oz can = 10 rings

Variant
Result
30grams

1 cup Pineapple Rings = 30 grams

Tablespoons15.8
Teaspoons50
Ounces1.06

Quick Conversion Table — Pineapple Rings

CupsGramsTablespoonsTeaspoons
¼7.5 g3.95 tbsp12.5 tsp
10 g5.26 tbsp16.7 tsp
½15 g7.89 tbsp25 tsp
20 g10.5 tbsp33.3 tsp
¾22.5 g11.8 tbsp37.5 tsp
130 g15.8 tbsp50 tsp
45 g23.7 tbsp75 tsp
260 g31.6 tbsp100 tsp
390 g47.4 tbsp150 tsp
4120 g63.2 tbsp200 tsp

Pineapple Ring Weight: Fresh vs Canned

The distinction between fresh and canned pineapple rings affects more than just weight — it determines which applications each form is suited for, and the weight difference (30g vs 35g per ring) explains the structural differences.

Fresh ring, 1 inch thick (30g): Cut from a peeled, cored pineapple with a ring-shaped cross section approximately 4 inches (10cm) outer diameter, 3/4 inch (2cm) inner diameter (the core hole). Weight of exactly 30g is for a standard medium pineapple — rings from very large pineapples can weigh 40-45g. The fresh ring has active bromelain enzyme and firm cell structure, ideal for grilling, raw eating, and applications requiring structural integrity.

Canned drained ring (35g): Commercial canned pineapple rings are processed at 240-250°F (115-120°C) to achieve sterilization. This heat deactivates bromelain and causes partial cell wall breakdown, making canned rings softer and more absorbent. During canning, rings absorb approximately 10-15% of their weight in juice or syrup, which is why drained canned rings are heavier (35g) than fresh rings (30g) despite being less structurally firm. Drain thoroughly before use in baked goods.

Cubed fresh (165g/cup): When the ring shape is cut into chunks or cubes, the pieces pack more efficiently into a measuring cup. 165g per cup is the standard for fresh diced pineapple — equivalent to the weight of fresh diced mango, reflecting similar water content in both tropical fruits (approximately 86% water).

Cubed canned drained (181g/cup): The denser, more compact texture of heat-processed canned pineapple means the cubes pack more tightly per cup — 10% heavier than fresh cubed despite both being described as "pineapple."

FormPer ringPer cupPer 20 oz can
Fresh ring (1 inch)30g
Canned drained ring35g~10 rings / 350g
Cubed fresh165g
Cubed canned drained181g~2 cups cubed
Fresh pineapple (whole)6-8 rings~3 cups cubed

Pineapple Upside-Down Cake: The Definitive Layout

Pineapple upside-down cake requires specific ring placement to produce the iconic caramelized top. The arrangement is not arbitrary — ring count, spacing, and size all affect the final appearance and the caramel-to-fruit ratio.

9-inch round pan (6-8 rings): Melt 4 tablespoons (56g) unsalted butter in the pan over medium heat on the stovetop, then add 2/3 cup (145g) firmly packed light brown sugar. Stir until the sugar dissolves into the butter (approximately 2 minutes). Remove from heat. Place one ring in the center, then arrange 5-6 rings around it (or use half-rings to fill gaps). For a full single layer, you need rings of consistent diameter — slice from the widest part of the pineapple for uniform 4-inch (10cm) circles. Total pineapple per 9-inch cake: approximately 7 rings (210g fresh or 245g canned drained).

9x13 inch pan (10-12 rings): Scale caramel up to 6 tablespoons (84g) butter + 1 cup (220g) brown sugar. Arrange rings in 3 rows of 3-4 rings each, or use a combination of whole rings and half-rings to cover the bottom completely. Total pineapple: approximately 10-12 rings (300-360g fresh). The rectanglular format requires more pineapple but allows for more serving pieces of equal size.

Critical technique — inverting: Cool the finished cake in the pan for exactly 5 minutes — not longer. If you wait longer, the caramel begins to harden and the cake sticks. If you invert too soon, the cake is structurally fragile and may tear. Place a serving plate or board (slightly larger than the pan) upside-down over the pan, then flip in one confident motion. The caramel acts as a glaze that flows slightly to fill any gaps between rings.

Spiral variation: Instead of individual rings, use a single large pineapple cut into very thin rounds (3-4mm) and arranged in overlapping concentric circles like fish scales. Use approximately 12-15 thin slices (approximately 15g each at this thickness) for a 9-inch pan. This creates a more dramatic, flower-like presentation and a thinner, more caramelized pineapple layer.

Bromelain: The Enzyme That Changes Everything

Fresh pineapple contains bromelain, a group of proteolytic (protein-digesting) enzymes concentrated primarily in the core and stem but present throughout the fruit. Bromelain is the reason fresh pineapple cannot be used in gelatin desserts (it digests the gelatin protein, preventing setting) and the reason fresh pineapple acts as an effective meat tenderizer.

At practical cooking temperatures, bromelain is active from approximately 50°F to 160°F (10°C to 71°C) and is fully deactivated above 160°F (71°C). This means:

Grilling Pineapple Rings

Grilled pineapple transforms the raw fruit's sharp acidity and bright sweetness into a deeper, caramelized, almost savory character through Maillard reaction and sugar caramelization. The ring shape is ideal for grilling — the structural integrity holds the fruit together through high-heat contact, and both sides grill evenly.

Basic grilled pineapple (4 servings): 4 fresh rings (120g total), each 1 inch (2.5cm) thick. Brush lightly with neutral oil (1 teaspoon total). Grill over direct high heat (450-500°F / 230-260°C) for 2-3 minutes per side, without moving, until deep grill marks form and the cut surfaces caramelize to a deep golden-brown. The natural sugars (approximately 10g per ring) caramelize at approximately 320°F (160°C), well within grill surface temperature range.

Brown sugar-chile glaze: Combine 2 tablespoons (26g) brown sugar + 1/4 teaspoon cayenne + 1 tablespoon (15ml) lime juice. Brush over rings in the final 90 seconds of grilling per side. The chile heat and lime acid combine with the caramelized sugar for a complex flavor that works as a dessert (with vanilla ice cream) or alongside grilled pork tenderloin.

Avoiding sogginess: Moisture is the enemy of good grill marks. Pat fresh rings with paper towels before grilling, even though they appear dry. Canned rings need 10-15 minutes of draining on a rack plus thorough towel-drying before they are dry enough to grill without steaming.