How Many Seeds in a
Cardamom Pod?
How many seeds are inside a cardamom pod? The exact green cardamom seeds count, black cardamom seed count, pod-to-ground conversions, and the interactive calculator every home cook needs.
Green cardamom pod: 10–20 seeds, averaging 12 per pod. Black cardamom pod: 25–40 seeds. Seed count varies by variety (Mysore averages 12–15; Malabar 10–12), harvest timing, and growing conditions. In the kitchen: 1 green pod = ⅛ tsp ground cardamom. 10 pods = approximately 1½ tsp ground.
“Your recipe says ‘seeds from 3 cardamom pods.’ You crack them open. Seeds go everywhere. The pod has 8 seeds — or is it 18? Now you have no idea if you’re using the right amount.”
Normal variation, not a mistake. A green cardamom pod naturally holds 10–20 seeds. Both are correct — seed count depends on variety, growing conditions, and harvest timing.
Practical kitchen rule: Don’t count individual seeds. Use 1 pod = ⅛ tsp ground as your conversion. For chai — crack 2–3 pods and steep whole. This page has the full calculator below.
How many seeds are inside a cardamom pod?
A green cardamom pod — called elaichi (إلایچی) in Urdu, Hindi, and Pakistani cooking — contains 10 to 20 seeds. So how many seeds in elaichi? The practical answer: 12 seeds on average per pod (Elettaria cardamomum), with Malabar pods averaging 10–12 and premium Mysore pods averaging 12–15. The seeds are arranged in 2–3 rows inside the tri-lobed capsule, each seed roughly 3–4mm long, dark brown to black, with an intensely aromatic outer coat.
A black cardamom pod (Amomum subulatum) is significantly larger and contains 25–40 seeds — but these are coarser, less aromatic, and used exclusively in savory cooking.
Quick cardamom pod to ground ratio reference:
How Many Seeds in Green vs Black Cardamom — By Variety & Grade
The two commercially important cardamom species have dramatically different seed counts — and mixing them up is one of the most common cooking errors. Here is the complete breakdown by species, grade, and origin. (Note: white cardamom is simply green cardamom bleached with sulfur dioxide — same pod, same seed count, just milder aroma.)
“The number of seeds in a cardamom pod isn’t just botanical trivia. In the kitchen, a well-filled pod with 14–15 dense seeds will deliver measurably more aromatic oil than a shrivelled pod with 8. That difference shapes your dish — especially in delicate preparations like chai or crème brûlée where cardamom is the primary flavour note.” — Dr. Michael Bennett, Ph.D., Botanical Reviewer · Zingiberaceae Specialist
Inside a Cardamom Pod — Anatomy & Seed Arrangement
A cardamom pod is a three-lobed capsule — technically a fruit. Understanding its internal structure explains why seed count matters, and why the husk and seeds have completely different culinary roles.
Thick leathery green shell. Protects volatile oils from air and UV light. Reduces oxidation by ~90% vs ground powder. Not eaten — removed during or after cooking.
Thin papery layer separating the three internal lobes. Contributes minor bitterness if ground — one reason to separate seeds from husk before grinding for baking.
Central connective tissue holding seeds in their rows. The number of rows (2–3) and seeds per row (4–5) determines total pod count. Poor pollination means empty lobes.
Dark brown–black, 3–4mm long. Volatile oils (1,8-cineole and α-terpinyl acetate) are concentrated in the seeds’ oleoresin glands. The husk contains almost none of the flavour.
Exactly 3 carpels per pod. Each lobe typically bears 4–5 seeds in ideal conditions — giving the biological optimum of 12–15. Poor pollination = empty or partial lobes = fewer seeds.
Why Cardamom Pod Seed Count Varies — 6 Biological Factors
Not all pods of the same variety contain the same number of seeds. Six biological and agricultural factors determine seed density — and understanding them helps you buy better cardamom and judge quality at a glance.
Mysore cardamom (larger pods, bred for density) consistently averages 12–15 seeds. Malabar varieties average 10–12. Guatemalan cultivars sit at 10–14 depending on altitude.
Cardamom flowers are self-incompatible — they require cross-pollination by native bees. Fields with low bee diversity show 22% higher rates of underfilled pods with fewer than 9 seeds.
Pods harvested at 75–80% physiological maturity (just before natural pod splitting) have the maximum seed fill. Premature harvesting reduces count; delayed harvest causes pod splitting and seed loss.
Cardamom thrives in humid, shaded, high-altitude environments. Kerala’s monsoon-fed Western Ghats produce denser seeds than drier growing regions. Soil potassium levels directly affect seed density.
Slow sun-drying over 3–4 days preserves seed structure. Mechanical drying above 45°C causes rapid desiccation — seeds shrink, adhere together, and appear fewer during visual inspection.
Old or poorly stored pods lose moisture over time. This causes the pod shell to constrict, which can crack the seeds inside and reduce apparent count. A light, hollow-feeling pod almost always has fewer viable seeds.
Cardamom Pod Conversion Calculator — Pods to Ground & Back
Enter your pods, seeds, or ground amount — get the exact equivalent in all other units instantly.
Cardamom Pod to Ground Conversion Table — Measurements & Equivalents
Cardamom pod to ground ratio — also called elaichi measurement guide. 1 cardamom pod equals ⅛ teaspoon of freshly ground cardamom. Full table based on 12 seeds per pod average. For pre-ground open >1 month, increase quantity by 20–30%.
| Whole Pods | Approx. Seeds | Ground (tsp) — Fresh | Ground (tbsp) — Fresh | Weight (g seeds) | Common Use |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 pod | 10–15 | ⅛ tsp | — | ~0.15g | Single cup of chai |
| 3 pods | 30–45 | ⅜ tsp | — | ~0.45g | Small pot of chai |
| 5 pods | 50–75 | ⅝ tsp | — | ~0.75g | Cardamom rice (2 servings) |
| 8 pods | 80–120 | 1 tsp | ⅓ tbsp | ~1.2g | Biryani (4 servings) |
| 10 pods | 100–150 | 1¼ tsp | ~½ tbsp | ~1.5g | Garam masala batch |
| 12 pods | 120–180 | 1½ tsp | ½ tbsp | ~1.8g | Cardamom cake / bread |
| 16 pods | 160–240 | 2 tsp | ⅔ tbsp | ~2.4g | Large biryani / kheer |
| 24 pods | 240–360 | 3 tsp | 1 tbsp | ~3.6g | Spice blend / large batch |
| 48 pods | 480–720 | 6 tsp | 2 tbsp | ~7.2g | Commercial chai concentrate |
Cardamom Pods vs Seeds — When to Use Which Form
This is the question that trips up most home cooks — especially when a recipe says “cardamom seeds” and you only have whole pods (or vice versa). The answer is simple once you understand what each form does during cooking. In South Asian cooking, elaichi seeds and whole elaichi pods are used interchangeably in different situations.
Making chai or tea — crack and steep whole. Flavour infuses slowly, no gritty texture. Remove before serving.
Cooking biryani or pilaf — drop whole pods into hot oil at the start. They bloom slowly, remove before serving.
Slow-cooked curries and stews — long cooking extracts oils gradually. Whole pods won’t overpower.
Infusing milk for kheer or custard — pods in hot milk release sweetness slowly without bitterness.
Long-term storage — whole pods last 12 months vs 6 for extracted seeds. Always store as pods, crack only when needed.
Baking (cakes, cookies, buns) — ground seeds distribute evenly in batter. Husk is fibrous and won’t grind properly.
Garam masala or spice blends — extract, dry-toast, then grind with other spices. Husk would dilute the blend.
Quick dishes under 15 minutes — ground seeds release flavour immediately. Whole pods need time to infuse.
Spice rubs and dry coatings — seeds only ensures no texture disruption from husk fragments.
Qahwa coffee — seeds ground with coffee beans give precise, clean cardamom flavour without pod bitterness.
How to Extract Cardamom Seeds from a Pod — 4 Steps
Most recipes that call for “seeds from X pods” assume you know the right technique. If you’ve ever wondered how to count cardamom seeds — or how to get them out without losing the volatile oils — here is the correct method used by professional spice blenders.
Select Fresh, Plump Pods
Choose vibrant green, plump pods that feel heavy for their size. Squeeze gently — you should feel solid seeds inside and get an immediate sweet-floral aroma. Avoid yellowing, shrivelled, or light-feeling pods.
Crack With the Flat of a Knife
Place the pod on a cutting board and press firmly with the flat side of your knife. The pod splits cleanly along its seam. Do not crush — you want the pod open, not the seeds broken. Breaking seeds prematurely releases and loses volatile oils.
Extract the Seeds
Pull the pod halves apart and tip the seeds onto your work surface. You will see 10–20 dark brown to black seeds in two or three rows. Discard the fibrous outer husk — it contributes very little aroma and can add unwanted bitterness if ground.
Grind Immediately Before Use
Use seeds whole for infusions (chai, syrups, rice), or grind immediately in a mortar for baking and spice blends. Never grind in advance. Ground cardamom begins losing potency within hours — within 3 months it has lost 60%+ of its aromatic oils.
Cardamom Pod Quality Test — Are Your Seeds Still Good?
Low-quality pods have fewer seeds, lower volatile oil content, and contribute almost nothing to your dish. This quick assessment tells you whether your pods are worth extracting before you commit them to a recipe.
What Poor Seed Quality Means for Cooking
How Many Cardamom Seeds (Pods) Per Recipe — Quick Reference
Recipe quantities for cardamom are often given in pods — but knowing the seed count helps you measure more precisely and substitute correctly when all you have is ground cardamom.
How Many Seeds in a Cardamom Pod — Frequently Asked Questions

Culinary writer specialising in spices, herbal teas, and plant-based ingredients. Emily writes extensively about spice botany, kitchen technique, and evidence-based cooking guidance.
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Ph.D. in Nutritional Sciences, University of Michigan. Specialises in Zingiberaceae phytochemistry. Reviews all botanical and food science claims against peer-reviewed primary literature.
View full profile →Sources & References
- Indian Institute of Spices Research (IISR), Kozhikode — Cardamom Cultivar Seed Density Studies. spices.res.in
- Ravindran P.N. & Madhusoodanan K.J. (2002). Cardamom: The Genus Elettaria. Taylor & Francis, London.
- Kew Gardens POWO — Elettaria cardamomum. powo.science.kew.org
- USDA FoodData Central — Spices, cardamom. fdc.nal.usda.gov
- Spice Board India — Post-harvest handling and grading standards for cardamom. spiceboard.gov.in
