What are Cardamom Pods?

Cardamom Pods: Complete Guide — What They Are, Types, Uses & How to Open Them
Fresh green cardamom pods split open showing black aromatic seeds spilling out on wooden surface
CardamomNectar · Complete Spice Guide

Cardamom Pods — Complete Guide to Types, Uses & How to Open Them

Everything about cardamom pods: green, black and white types, how to open them, cooking uses, conversion ratios, and how to buy the best quality pods.

3 Types Explained 15–20 seeds per pod How to open + use Conversion chart Botanist reviewed
Quick Answer — what are cardamom pods?

Cardamom pods are the dried seed capsules of the Elettaria cardamomum plant. Each small, oval green pod contains 15–20 aromatic black seeds — the actual spice. Pods are used whole in cooking to infuse flavour, or cracked open to extract seeds for grinding. Also called elaichi in Hindi and Urdu, they are the third most expensive spice in the world.

Definition

What Are Cardamom Pods?

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Alt: “Whole green cardamom pods arranged on white surface showing oval shape, pale green colour and papery texture — Elettaria cardamomum”
Show 10–15 whole pods, clear texture visible, clean white or wooden background
Scientific nameElettaria cardamomum (green) · Amomum subulatum (black)
Also calledElaichi (Hindi/Urdu) · Cardamom capsule · Elaichi pods · Grains of Paradise
ShapeOval to spindle-shaped · triangular cross-section
Seeds per pod15–20 (green) · 30–40 (black)
Pod huskPaper-thin · tasteless · not eaten · protects seeds from oxidation
Flavour sourceSeeds — packed with 1,8-cineole and α-terpinyl acetate
Price rank3rd most expensive spice — after saffron and vanilla
OriginWestern Ghats, India & Sri Lanka · now grown in Guatemala (largest exporter)

Cardamom pods are the harvested fruits of the cardamom plant — a perennial herb in the ginger family (Zingiberaceae). The plant produces small pods at ground level on prostrate flowering stems. Pods are hand-picked just before full ripeness, then dried — either sun-dried or in curing rooms — to preserve their bright green colour and concentrated aroma.

The pod itself is a protective container. Its paper-thin green shell is odourless and has almost no flavour — it exists purely to protect the seeds from air, light, and moisture. The seeds inside are where all the flavour lives. This is why cracking the pod open just before use is so important — once the seal breaks, the volatile aromatic oils in the seeds begin to evaporate.

🌿 Botanist’s note (Dr. Bennett): The cardamom pod is technically a trilocular capsule — a three-chambered fruit. Each chamber (locule) holds 5–7 seeds. The outer pericarp (pod wall) is deliberately thin to allow the seeds to absorb minimal moisture while blocking most air — nature’s own vacuum packaging for its aromatic oils.

Botanical Anatomy

Pod Anatomy — How Many Seeds in a Cardamom Pod?

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Alt: “Green cardamom pod cut open cross-section showing three chambers with black aromatic seeds inside — pod anatomy diagram”
Best if showing: 1 whole pod + 1 pod split lengthwise + 1 pod cross-section + seeds spilled out
Seeds per green pod
15–20
Arranged in 3 chambers (locules), 5–7 per chamber. Larger pods from Kerala average 18; Guatemalan pods average 22 due to drier climate conditions.
Seeds per black pod
30–40
Black cardamom pods are 3–4× larger than green. Their seeds are coarser, less immediately aromatic, but develop deep flavour during slow cooking.
Ground yield per pod
⅛ tsp
One green pod, freshly ground, yields ⅛ teaspoon. This is significantly more potent than pre-ground cardamom from a jar, which loses 40–60% of oils during storage.
Pod size (green)
8–25mm
Standard green pods measure 8–13mm. Premium AGEB grade (Alleppey Green Extra Bold) measures 7mm+ in diameter — the grading is by diameter, not length.

Why Seed Count Varies Between Pods

Not all pods have the same seed count. Three main factors affect how many seeds a pod holds: growing conditions (Kerala’s high-rainfall zone produces fuller pods than Guatemala’s drier climate), pod maturity at harvest (pods picked early have fewer developed seeds), and the variety of cardamom plant. For consistent cooking, it is better to measure cardamom by weight or teaspoon than by pod count alone.

Complete Guide

3 Types of Cardamom Pods — Green, Black & White

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Alt: “Green cardamom pods Elettaria cardamomum — small oval bright green pods with papery texture — choti elaichi”
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Alt: “Black cardamom pods Amomum subulatum — large dark brown ribbed pods on wooden surface — badi elaichi moti elaichi”
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Alt: “White cardamom pods — bleached pale cream green pods showing colour difference from green cardamom”
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Green Cardamom
Elettaria cardamomum
Choti elaichi

The most common and versatile cardamom. Sweet, floral, and citrusy — used in both sweet and savoury dishes. This is what all recipes mean when they say “cardamom.”

FlavourSweet, floral, citrusy
Pod sizeSmall, 8–25mm long
Seeds15–20 per pod
Best forTea, desserts, chai, rice, coffee
PriceRs 2,200–3,300/kg (2026)
Black Cardamom
Amomum subulatum
Badi / Moti elaichi

A completely different plant — NOT a substitute for green. Smoky, earthy, camphor-like flavour from open-fire drying. Used exclusively in savoury dishes.

FlavourSmoky, earthy, camphor
Pod sizeLarge, 25–35mm long, ribbed
Seeds30–40 per pod
Best forBiryani, nihari, dal, curries
PriceRs 1,400–1,600/kg (2026)
White Cardamom
Elettaria cardamomum (bleached)
Bleached green cardamom

Not a different plant — white pods are green cardamom pods that have been chemically bleached. Milder, less aromatic. Rarely used today. Avoid if flavour is important.

FlavourMild, muted, less complex
Pod sizeSame as green
Seeds15–20 per pod
Best forSome Scandinavian baking
Avoid?Yes — use green for better flavour

⚠️ Important: Green and black cardamom pods are from completely different plants with completely different flavours. They cannot be substituted for each other in any recipe. Using black cardamom in a dessert or tea will ruin it — the smoky, camphor flavour is incompatible with sweet dishes.

Deep Dive
Green vs Black Cardamom — Full Comparison Guide (Flavour, Uses, Price, Cooking)
Step-by-Step

How to Open Cardamom Pods — 3 Methods

Quick answer — how to open cardamom pods

Fastest method: Place the pod on a cutting board, press firmly with the flat side of a large knife — it will crack open instantly. Pull apart to reveal the black seeds inside. Discard the husk or save for tea. Grind seeds as needed.

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Alt: “Pressing green cardamom pod with flat side of kitchen knife on cutting board to crack it open — how to open cardamom pods”
Knife method
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Alt: “Crushing green cardamom pods in stone mortar and pestle to crack open and release seeds”
Mortar method
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Alt: “Black cardamom seeds extracted from cracked open green pod — 15 to 20 dark seeds on white surface”
Seeds extracted
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Alt: “Grinding cardamom seeds in mortar and pestle to make fresh ground cardamom powder”
Grinding seeds
1
Knife method (fastest)

Place pod on a cutting board. Lay the flat side of a large chef’s knife on top. Press firmly downward — the pod cracks open in one motion. Pull apart the husk to reveal seeds. Best for 1–3 pods quickly.

2
Mortar & pestle (most control)

Place pods in mortar. Press down once with the pestle — do not grind yet, just crack. Seeds fall out. Then grind seeds to your desired fineness. Best for fresh grinding of multiple pods.

3
Rolling pin (batch method)

Lay pods between two sheets of baking parchment. Roll firmly with a rolling pin — all pods crack at once. Shake seeds from husks through a fine mesh sieve. Best for 10+ pods.

4
For whole pod use (no opening)

Many recipes use whole uncracked pods — biryani, curries, rice dishes. Simply lightly bruise the pod by pressing once (just to fracture slightly without opening). Add to hot oil or liquid at the start of cooking. Remove before serving.

💡 Pro tip: Save the empty green husks after extracting seeds. Add them to rice while cooking for a delicate cardamom aroma, or simmer in milk for a subtle flavoured tea base. The husks retain mild aromatic compounds even after seeds are removed.

Culinary Guide

How to Use Cardamom Pods in Cooking

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Alt: “Cardamom pods used in cooking — whole pods in biryani rice dish alongside other whole spices — how to use cardamom pods in Indian cooking”
Show cardamom pods in context of cooking — ideally in a biryani or curry pot with other whole spices
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Rice Dishes (Biryani, Pilaf)
Add 2–4 whole green pods to hot oil at the start. Let them sizzle 30 seconds before adding rice. The oil extracts the aromatic compounds from the cracked husk. Always use green cardamom — black for biryani base only.
Use: Whole pods, remove before serving
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Curries & Stews
Add whole pods to oil (tarka/bhuna) at the very beginning. They will soften and release oils slowly throughout cooking. Black cardamom works for rich, slow-cooked meat curries like nihari, haleem, and paya.
Use: Whole pods, remove before serving
Chai & Tea
Crush 2–3 green pods (just crack, not grind) and add to simmering water or milk with tea leaves. Simmer 5–7 minutes. The cracked-open pod releases oils into the liquid — whole pods give almost no flavour to tea.
Use: Cracked/bruised pods, strain out
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Baking (Cakes, Biscuits)
Extract seeds from pods, grind to fine powder, add to batter. Never add whole pods to baked goods — they will not infuse in dry mix. Freshly ground from pods is dramatically more flavourful than pre-ground cardamom from a jar.
Use: Seeds extracted and freshly ground
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Milk-Based Desserts
Bruise (lightly crack) 3–4 pods and simmer in milk for 10 minutes. This “infusion” method extracts flavour beautifully for kheer, rabri, custard, and doodh elaichi. Strain out pods, use infused milk.
Use: Bruised pods, strain out before serving
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Spice Blends (Garam Masala)
Both whole pods and extracted seeds work in spice blends. Lightly toast whole pods in a dry pan for 2 minutes before grinding — this deepens flavour and makes seeds easier to extract. Both green and black cardamom appear in garam masala.
Use: Toasted pods → extract seeds → grind

Toasting Cardamom Pods — When and Why

Lightly toasting whole pods in a dry pan before use intensifies their flavour by activating and releasing the volatile oils trapped in the seeds. Place pods in a cold dry pan, heat over medium for 90 seconds to 2 minutes until you smell the aroma clearly — do not let them brown or smoke. Remove immediately and crack open while still warm. This technique is especially useful for garam masala, spice blends, and strongly flavoured rice dishes.

Forms Compared

Cardamom Pods vs Seeds vs Ground Powder — Which to Buy?

FormFlavour intensityShelf lifeBest used forBuy if…
Whole pods★★★★★ Strongest12 monthsCooking in liquid, rice, chai, infusionsYou cook regularly — most versatile
Seeds only (decorticated)★★★★ Very strong6–9 monthsGrinding fresh for baking, spice blendsYou skip the pod-opening step
Ground cardamom (jar)★★★ Medium3–6 monthsQuick baking, adding to already-open spice blendsConvenience is more important than flavour
Freshly ground from pods★★★★★ Strongest possibleUse immediatelyPremium baking, fine desserts, chaiMaximum flavour is the priority

🏆 Recommendation: For everyday use, buy whole green cardamom pods. They last 12 months, stay perfectly fresh in an airtight jar, and give you all three options — whole pod use, cracked infusion, and freshly ground. Pre-ground cardamom from a jar loses 60% of its volatile oils within weeks of opening.

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Related Guide
How to Convert Cardamom Pods to Powder — Step-by-Step with Exact Ratios
Exact Measurements

Cardamom Pod Conversion Chart — Pods to Teaspoons & Tablespoons

Featured answer — cardamom pod to teaspoon conversion

1 green cardamom pod = ⅛ teaspoon ground cardamom. For 1 teaspoon: use 6–8 pods. For 1 tablespoon: use 18–24 pods. These ratios assume freshly ground pods — jar-ground cardamom is 30–40% less potent so you may need to add slightly more.

Green podsGround cardamom (fresh)Pre-ground (jar)Cooking use
1 pod⅛ teaspoon⅛–⅙ tsp1 cup chai, light flavour in 2 portions
2–3 pods¼ teaspoon¼–⅓ tspStandard tea recipe, 1 serving dessert
4 pods½ teaspoon½–⅔ tspSmall cake batch, 2 cups chai
6–8 pods1 teaspoon1–1½ tspStandard recipe measurement
10 pods1½ teaspoons1½–2 tspBiryani (4 servings)
12–15 pods1 tablespoon1–1½ tbspLarge batch baking, garam masala

Note: 1 pod = ⅛ tsp is a standard culinary benchmark. Actual yield varies by pod size and grinding fineness.

Buying Guide

How to Buy Cardamom Pods & Check Freshness

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Alt: “Fresh high quality green cardamom pods — plump, bright green, firm and aromatic — premium AGEB grade”
Fresh pods: bright green, plump, firm
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Alt: “Old stale cardamom pods — yellowed, shrivelled and dry — what to avoid when buying cardamom pods”
Old/bad pods: yellow, shrivelled, dry

Visual Freshness Test — What to Look For

What to checkFresh pods (buy)Old/poor pods (avoid)
ColourBright or pale green — vibrantYellowed, brownish, or bleached white
TexturePlump, firm, slightly flexibleShrivelled, crinkled, papery
Aroma (scratch test)Strong, immediate spicy-sweet smellFaint, dusty, or no smell at all
Seed rattleSeeds rattle slightly when shakenNo rattle = hollow/shrunken seeds
WeightSlightly heavy for their sizeFeather-light = mostly empty husks
PackagingDark/opaque, airtight, recent dateClear bag, in sunlight, old date

Understanding Indian Cardamom Grades (AGEB, AGB, AGS)

Indian green cardamom is graded by pod diameter and weight. Higher grades have larger pods, more essential oil content, and stronger aroma. Here is what the grades mean:

Grade codeFull namePod sizeQuality levelBest for
AGEBAlleppey Green Extra Bold7mm+ diameterPremium — highest gradeExport, premium retail, tea, cooking
AGBAlleppey Green Bold6mm+ diameterVery good — export gradeGeneral cooking, export
AGSAlleppey Green Superior5mm+ diameterGood — standard gradeGrinding, spice blends
AGS-1Alleppey Green Shipment 14mm+ diameterStandard — commercialIndustrial, powder production
AGS-2Alleppey Green Shipment 24mm+ smallerBasic — lowest gradeIndustrial processing only

For home cooking, AGEB or AGB are the best choice. These are widely available as “premium green cardamom” or “extra bold” online. If the seller doesn’t mention grading, look for the visual freshness signs above.

Storage Guide

How to Store Cardamom Pods — Shelf Life by Form

FormContainerWhere to storeShelf lifeSigns it has gone stale
Whole green podsAirtight dark glass jarCool dark cupboard10–12 monthsYellow colour, no aroma when scratched
Extracted seedsAirtight glass or ceramicCool dark cupboard6–9 monthsPale colour, no spicy smell
Freshly groundSmall airtight jarUse within 2 weeks2–3 weeksFaded aroma, dull flavour
Pre-ground (jar)Original jar, sealedCool dark cupboard3–6 months openBarely any smell, weak flavour
Frozen (bulk storage)Sealed zip bagFreezerUp to 18 monthsCondensation damage if not sealed properly

⚠️ Never store cardamom pods in clear plastic bags near the stove — heat + light + oxygen is the fastest way to destroy their aromatic oils. Clear plastic also lets light through. Always use dark glass jars. The green pod shell is a natural protective barrier — once broken, the clock starts on freshness.

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Complete Guide
How to Store Cardamom — All Forms, Shelf Life & Freshness Tests
When You’re Out of Pods

Cardamom Pod Substitutes — Best Alternatives

SubstituteRatioFlavour matchBest forNot good for
Ground cardamom (jar)¼ tsp = 2–3 podsSame flavour, weakerAll recipesInfusions (add directly to liquid)
Cinnamon + nutmegEqual parts, ½ ratioWarm, sweet — differentBaked goods, dessertsChai, rice dishes
AllspiceEqual amountWarm, complex — fair matchBaking, dessertsSouth Asian savoury dishes
Cinnamon aloneEqual amountWarm but no floral noteBaking onlyChai, rice, curries
NothingSometimes the best choiceDishes where cardamom is essential (garam masala, biryani)
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Full Guide with Tool
Cardamom Substitutes — 50+ dishes, exact ratios, interactive substitute finder
Frequently Asked Questions

Cardamom Pods FAQ

Cardamom pods are the dried seed capsules of the Elettaria cardamomum plant. Each small, oval, pale green pod contains 15–20 aromatic black seeds — the actual spice. The pod shell is a paper-thin protective husk with almost no flavour of its own. Pods are used whole in cooking to slowly infuse dishes, or cracked open to extract and grind the seeds.
A green cardamom pod contains 15–20 seeds on average (range 10–20). Black cardamom pods are much larger and hold 30–40 seeds. One green pod freshly ground yields approximately ⅛ teaspoon of ground cardamom. Ten pods yield about 1½ teaspoons.
Three methods: 1) Knife: press the flat side of a chef’s knife onto the pod on a cutting board — it cracks open instantly. 2) Mortar & pestle: one press with the pestle cracks it open. 3) Rolling pin: roll over pods between baking parchment. Then pull the pod apart, shake out the seeds, discard or save the green husk.
The green pod husk is technically edible but unpleasant — it is fibrous, tough, and tasteless. You should never bite into a whole pod. Always remove whole pods from dishes before serving (like bay leaves). The black seeds inside are what you eat — they are strongly flavourful. However, the empty husks can be saved and simmered in rice or tea for a very mild cardamom aroma.
They are completely different plants. Green pods (Elettaria cardamomum) are small, sweet, floral and citrusy — used in teas, desserts, chai, rice, and coffee. Black pods (Amomum subulatum) are large, smoky, earthy, and camphor-like — used only in savoury dishes (biryani, curries, stews). They cannot be substituted for each other in any recipe.
6–8 green cardamom pods equal approximately 1 teaspoon of freshly ground cardamom. The precise conversion: 1 pod = ⅛ tsp · 4 pods = ½ tsp · 6–8 pods = 1 tsp · 12–15 pods = 1 tablespoon. Note: pre-ground jar cardamom is 30–40% weaker than freshly ground, so you may need slightly more.
Elaichi is the Hindi and Urdu name for cardamom pods. Choti elaichi (small cardamom) = green cardamom pods. Badi elaichi or moti elaichi (big/fat cardamom) = black cardamom pods. Elaichi is one of the most essential spices in South Asian cooking — used daily in chai (elaichi wali chai), biryani, desserts, and as a natural mouth freshener across Pakistan, India, and Bangladesh.
Whole green cardamom pods last 10–12 months in an airtight dark glass jar in a cool cupboard. Seeds removed from pods last 6–9 months. Freshly ground cardamom loses most of its aroma within 2–3 weeks. Do the scratch test: scratch a pod — if you smell nothing or just a faint dusty smell, the pods are past their best and should be replaced.
Best substitutes: Ground cardamom (¼ tsp = 2–3 pods) is the closest — same flavour, less intense. For baked goods: cinnamon + nutmeg in equal amounts at half quantity. For savoury dishes: allspice at equal quantity. Nothing perfectly replicates cardamom’s unique floral-spicy profile — it is genuinely one-of-a-kind among spices.
Always buy whole pods when possible. They last 12 months and stay at full flavour strength until the moment you crack them. Pre-ground cardamom from a jar loses 40–60% of its aromatic oils within weeks of opening. Whole pods give you all three options: whole pod infusion, bruised pod extraction, and freshly ground powder. They are the more economical and flavourful choice.
Sources & References
  • 1Kew Gardens POWO — Elettaria cardamomum (L.) Maton. powo.science.kew.org →
  • 2USDA FoodData Central — Spices, cardamom (ID 170919). fdc.nal.usda.gov →
  • 3Ravindran P.N. & Madhusoodanan K.J. (2002). Cardamom: The Genus Elettaria. Taylor & Francis, London.
  • 4Spices Board India — Grading standards for green cardamom (AGEB, AGB, AGS). indianspices.com →
  • 5Enciclopædia Britannica — Cardamom. britannica.com →
About the Authors
Emily RhodesER
Emily Rhodes
Culinary Writer & Spice Specialist
Author

Emily Rhodes writes about spices, culinary traditions, and flavour science for CardamomNectar. She has spent years studying South Asian, Middle Eastern, and Scandinavian spice traditions with a focus on cardamom’s role in each.

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Dr. Michael BennettMB
Dr. Michael Bennett
Botanist & Plant Scientist · Ph.D.
Botanical Reviewer

Dr. Bennett holds a Ph.D. in Nutritional Sciences specialising in Zingiberaceae phytochemistry. He reviewed all botanical claims in this article against current peer-reviewed literature and Kew Gardens taxonomy records.

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