Fiber in Barley Calculator

🌾 Fiber in Barley Calculator

Estimate total barley fiber, fiber per serving, cooked yield, and daily fiber contribution for hulled, pearled, quick, pot, rolled, or black barley.

🍚Barley Fiber Presets
🧮Fiber Inputs

Enter the barley you measured, choose cooked or dry form, and select how the barley will be served. Soup settings keep the fiber tied to the grain amount rather than the broth volume.

Controls result wording while allowing cups, grams, ounces, or pounds as inputs.
Each style uses its own fiber, cup weight, and dry-to-cooked yield.
Cooked entries use ready-to-eat cup weights.
Cups are converted using the selected barley style.
Use only the barley amount, not broth, sauce, vegetables, or toppings.
Dry barley keeps the same fiber, but cooked cup yield changes portion math.
Splits the batch fiber across bowls, ladles, or side portions.
Used to compare your serving volume with a practical barley portion.
Result card shows one barley serving as a share of this target.
Used only when the custom daily target option is selected.
Use conservative when matching a lower packaged nutrition label.
Whole grams work well for menus; decimals help nutrition tracking.
Total Fiber
0 g
in the barley batch
Fiber Per Serving
0 g
per planned portion
Daily Fiber Share
0%
of 28 g target
Cooked Yield
0 cups
ready barley
Barley Fiber Breakdown
Barley style and basisHulled barley
Measured input2 cups cooked
Cooked cup equivalent2.00 cups
Cooked weight equivalent370 g
Dry barley equivalent0.57 cups
Dry weight equivalent105 g
Yield used3.50x cooked cups
Fiber density used4.7 g per 100 g cooked
Serving volume0.50 cup cooked
Meal use comparisonSide dish target
Soup or bowl noteCompact barley serving
Servings to reach daily target0 servings
📊Quick Barley Fiber Markers
6.0 g
Pearled Cooked Cup
8.7 g
Hulled Cooked Cup
3.0x
Pearled Dry Yield
28 g
Daily Fiber Value
Cooked FormBest for leftovers, grain bowls, chilled salads, and plated sides where the barley is already hydrated.
Dry FormBest for pantry planning because the calculator expands dry cups into expected cooked yield.
Soup UseBest entered as cooked barley cups or dry barley added to the pot, not total soup volume.
📖Nutrition and Yield Tables
Barley styleFiber per 100 g cookedFiber per cooked cupFiber per dry cup
Hulled barley4.7 gAbout 8.7 gAbout 31.8 g
Pearled barley3.8 gAbout 6.0 gAbout 31.2 g
Pot barley4.1 gAbout 7.2 gAbout 30.4 g
Quick pearled barley3.5 gAbout 5.6 gAbout 28.1 g
Black barley5.0 gAbout 9.0 gAbout 33.3 g
Rolled barley flakes4.0 g preparedAbout 6.2 gAbout 15.4 g
Scotch barley3.6 gAbout 5.8 gAbout 28.5 g
Sprouted barley4.5 gAbout 7.9 gAbout 26.5 g
Dry barley amountDry weight guideTypical cooked yieldTotal fiber range
1/4 cup dry pearledAbout 50 g3/4 cup cookedAbout 7.5 to 8 g
1/2 cup dry pearledAbout 100 g1 1/2 cups cookedAbout 15 to 16 g
1 cup dry pearledAbout 200 gAbout 3 cups cookedAbout 31 g
1 cup dry hulledAbout 184 gAbout 3 1/2 cups cookedAbout 32 g
500 g dry barley500 g7 1/2 to 9 1/2 cupsAbout 74 to 87 g
Serving useBarley per servingTypical fiberPlanning note
Brothy soup ladle1/3 to 1/2 cup cooked barleyAbout 2 to 4 gMeasure grain, not broth
Side dish scoop1/2 cup cooked barleyAbout 3 to 4.5 gClassic plate portion
Cold barley salad2/3 cup cooked barleyAbout 4 to 6 gDrain before measuring
Grain bowl base1 cup cooked barleyAbout 6 to 9 gStrong fiber foundation
Breakfast barley bowl3/4 cup cooked barleyAbout 4.5 to 6.5 gOften rolled or tender style
Meal prep container3/4 to 1 cup cooked barleyAbout 4.5 to 9 gSplit the cooked pot evenly
Daily comparisonTarget fiber1 cup pearled barley1 cup hulled barley
FDA daily value28 gAbout 21%About 31%
Common women target25 gAbout 24%About 35%
Lower men target31 gAbout 19%About 28%
Higher men target38 gAbout 16%About 23%
10 g meal fiber aim10 gAbout three fifthsAlmost one serving goal
🍛Grain Fiber Comparison Grid
Hulled Barley
8.7 g
Per cooked cup, bran-intact and strong for high-fiber bowls.
Pearled Barley
6.0 g
Per cooked cup, common in soups and still fiber-rich.
Bulgur
8.2 g
Per cooked cup, a close high-fiber grain salad option.
Wheat Berries
8.0 g
Per cooked cup, chewy and similar to hulled barley.
Oat Groats
6.0 g
Per cooked cup, comparable to pearled barley portions.
Quinoa
5.2 g
Per cooked cup, useful but generally lower than hulled barley.
Brown Rice
3.5 g
Per cooked cup, lighter fiber than most barley servings.
Couscous
2.2 g
Per cooked cup, much lower fiber than barley bowls.
Soup measuring tip: For soup, count the cooked barley in the pot or the dry barley added at the start. Total soup cups include broth, so they can make fiber per ladle look lower than the grain actually provides.
Yield planning tip: Hulled barley often expands more than pearled barley. If your batch is softer or brothier, adjust the yield so cooked cups and per-serving volume stay realistic.

Barley come in several different forms. Each of these different forms of barley contains a different amount of fiber then the other forms of barley. For example, whole grains that contains the bran layer will have more fiber than those forms of barley that have had the bran layer (and the fiber within that layer) removed.

Thus, barley that contains the bran layer will have more fiber than barley that has had that layer removed (also known as pearled barley). Similarly, barley that has been lightly polished (also known as pot barley), barley that has been processed for quick cooking (quick-cooking barley), barley that has been flattened into flakes (barley flakes), and black barley all contains different amounts of fiber than the other forms of barley. Because each of these forms of barley contain different amount of fiber, it is impossible to use the same rule to measure each type of barley.

How Barley Type and Cooking Affect Fiber

Barley contains a different amount of fiber when it is dry versus when it is cooked. Dry barley is more denser than cooked barley, and contains more fiber per cup of dry barley than cooked barley contains per cup. This is due to the fact that cooked barley contains water, and thus weighs more than dry barley.

Therefore, the cook should measure dry weight of the barley for the most accurate in determining the fiber content, though the volume of the cooked barley can also be measured (if the barley is cooked prior to measuring the volume). The tool allows for the type of barley and the state of the barley to be enter to calculate the amount of fiber that barley will contain. The way that barley is used in a meal can change the amount of fiber that is consumed from that meal.

For instance, if barley is used in a soup, the total volume of the soup may be large, but the amount of barley in that soup may be small. The fiber that is consumed from this soup will come from the barley in the soup, not the liquid portion of the soup. Thus, the cook should measure the amount of barley in the soup rather than the total volume of the soup.

Similarly, if barley is used in a grain bowl, the amount of cooked barley that is consumed will be larger than the amount of barley that is consumed in a portion of soup. Thus, the amount of fiber from a grain bowl will be higher than the amount of fiber from a portion of barley soup. Each individual have different targets for the amount of fiber that should be consumed each day.

However, it is important for each individual to understand the fiber that is contained in barley. Small portions of barley contain small amounts of fiber, but large portions of barley contain large amounts of fiber. For instance, if an individual switches from pearled barley to hulled barley, the fiber content of the same portion of barley will increase.

The estimate-style options can be used for those who would like to account for differences in the fiber content of barley products and who would like to use the higher-bran setting to account for barley that contains many of its outer layer intact. Many individual make mistakes with barley. For instance, an individual may believe that a cup of pearled barley contains the same amount of fiber as a cup of hulled barley, but this isnt true due to the difference in fiber content within each of these types of barley.

Another example of the mistake that many individuals make is in the fact that individuals may measure the total volume of a soup instead of the amount of barley contained within the soup. To avoid these mistakes, you can measure the cooked yield of the barley, as well as the fiber content per serving of the product that will contain the barley. By choosing the correct style of barley and correctly measuring the amount of barley products, individuals will be able to accurately track there fiber consumption throughout the day.

Fiber in Barley Calculator

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