Green Plantain (Unripe) — Cups to Grams

1 cup raw sliced green plantain = 155g — mashed cooked = 225g — MUST be cooked, never eaten raw

Variant
Result
155grams

1 cup Green Plantain (Unripe) = 155 grams

Tablespoons16
Teaspoons48.4
Ounces5.47

Quick Conversion Table — Green Plantain (Unripe)

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

Measuring Green Plantain: Raw vs. Cooked

Green plantain measurement must account for significant changes between raw and cooked states. The raw starch density and the moisture loss during cooking create a notable difference that affects recipe accuracy when scaling up.

Raw sliced rounds, 1/2-inch (155g/cup): The standard cut for tostones preparation. Green plantain is significantly denser than banana at the same stage because of its higher starch content. Peeled green plantain yields approximately 75-80% of the whole fruit weight — a 300g whole plantain provides approximately 225-240g peeled.

Mashed cooked (225g/cup): After boiling or frying until tender and mashing, the plantain compresses into a dense, starchy mass with no air gaps. This is the reference measurement for fufu and mofongo recipes. Starting from raw sliced: 1 cup (155g) raw yields approximately 0.65-0.7 cups (147-154g) mashed — slightly less than 1 cup because moisture loss during cooking reduces weight.

Cubed raw, 1-inch (160g/cup): Used in Caribbean stews, African groundnut soups, and Indian raw banana curry. The slightly higher per-cup weight compared to rounds reflects more efficient packing of cube shapes.

MeasureRaw Sliced (g)Mashed Cooked (g)Whole Plantain equiv.
1 tablespoon9.7g14.1g
¼ cup39g56g~1/5 plantain
½ cup78g113g~1/3 plantain
1 cup155g225g~2/3 medium plantain
1 medium plantain (300g)~1.5 cups sliced~1 cup mashedserves 2 (tostones)

Green Plantain Across Global Cuisines

Unripe green plantain is a foundational starchy staple in three distinct global culinary traditions: Caribbean/Latin American, West and Central African, and South Asian (particularly South Indian and Sri Lankan cooking as raw banana). Each tradition exploits the dense, starchy, versatile nature of the unripe fruit in different ways.

Caribbean and Latin American: Tostones (Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico, Cuba) and patacones (Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador) are twice-fried discs — the defining preparation. Mofongo (Puerto Rico): fried plantain mashed with garlic and chicharrones in a wooden mortar. Fufu de platano (Cuba): boiled and mashed with olive oil, garlic, and citrus — the Cuban cousin of West African fufu. Green plantain soup (sancocho): 1-inch cubes simmered in hearty meat broths for 20-30 minutes, absorbing the surrounding flavors while maintaining a distinct starchy presence.

West and Central African: Plantain fufu: boiled and pounded to a smooth, sticky, elastic dough used as a utensil-free eating vehicle — scooped into balls and used to pick up soup or stew. Standard preparation: 500g peeled plantain boiled until very soft, drained, and pounded in a wooden mortar until completely smooth. Served with groundnut soup (egusi), palm soup, or jollof. Some West African cooks mix pounded plantain with cassava (yuca) fufu for a blended texture.

South Indian (raw banana / vazhakkai): Green plantain (or its botanical cousin, the cooking banana) is used extensively in Tamil Nadu and Kerala cooking. Vazhakkai poriyal: raw banana curry with mustard seeds, curry leaves, grated coconut, and green chilies. The banana is cubed 1/2-inch and cooked in coconut oil with the standard South Indian tarka base.

Peeling green plantain: Green plantain peel is far tougher than ripe banana peel and does not strip easily by hand. Score the peel lengthwise in 3-4 lines (cutting just through the skin, not into the flesh) with a knife, then pry the sections off. Alternatively, cut off both ends, then slide the knife under the peel and rotate around the fruit.

Tostones and Patacones: Full Technique Guide

The twice-fried method is essential to achieving the crispy exterior and tender interior that defines a proper tostone. Single-frying at either temperature produces an inferior result — the first low-temperature fry cooks the starch; the second high-temperature fry creates the crust.

Oil temperature control is critical. Use a deep-fry or candy thermometer. First fry at 165°C (325°F): the rounds should bubble gently and turn pale gold. If they brown too quickly (above 180°C), the outside darkens before the interior cooks through, leaving a raw starchy center. Second fry at 190°C (375°F): the flattened rounds must go into hotter oil to achieve the rapid surface crisping that gives tostones their signature crunch. The total frying time per batch (2 fries combined) is 8-12 minutes for 1/2-inch thick rounds cut from medium plantain.

The smashing step is non-negotiable. Before the second fry, each partially cooked round is pressed flat to approximately 1/4 inch. This step: increases surface area for crisping, breaks the starch structure slightly to improve texture, and creates the ragged edges that become extra-crispy in the second fry. Use a flat heavy object (plate, cutting board, heavy-bottomed glass) — or a tostonera if available. Press firmly but don't crumble the round.

Substitutes for Green Plantain

Green plantain substitutes depend heavily on the application. For tostones and twice-fried preparations: green banana (the closest starchy relative) can substitute but is smaller (producing smaller tostones) and has slightly less starch, so the texture will be less dense. Use slightly thicker slices (3/4 inch instead of 1 inch) to compensate. Yuca (cassava) is a reasonable substitute for boiled or mashed preparations (stews, fufu) as it is similarly starchy and dense, though the texture is more cohesive and gummy when mashed.

For Indian raw banana curry (vazhakkai): mature green banana (the small, starchy cooking banana sold at Indian grocery stores) is a more precise substitute than a standard large plantain, which is usually larger and has a slightly different starch composition. Taro root can substitute in boiled applications, but requires longer cooking (25-30 minutes vs. 15-20 for plantain) and has a different, slightly gummy cooked texture.

There is no good substitute for the specific combination of properties that make green plantain ideal for tostones — its thickness, starch type, and fiber structure allow it to be smashed and re-fried in a way that green banana and yuca cannot fully replicate. When possible, use the real ingredient.