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FruitArtocarpus heterophyllus

Jackfruit โ€” Nutrition Facts & Health Guide

Artocarpus heterophyllus ยท Evidence-based nutritional information for Australians

95
kcal / 100g
23.2g
Carbs
1.7g
Protein
1.5g
Fibre
50
GI (low)
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Jackfruit is the world's largest tree fruit โ€” individual fruits can weigh up to 35kg โ€” and has extraordinary significance as a plant-based meat substitute. Unripe green jackfruit has a fibrous, pulled-pork-like texture that absorbs marinades and spices remarkably well, making it one of the most popular whole-food vegan protein sources globally. Nutritionally, ripe jackfruit provides meaningful B vitamins, vitamin C, potassium, magnesium and antioxidant compounds. It grows prolifically in tropical Queensland and northern Australia. Adjust the slider for your serving size.
๐Ÿงฎ
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Serving size:100g
95Calories (kcal)
23.2Carbs (g)
1.7Protein (g)
1.5Fibre (g)
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๐Ÿ“Š Full nutrition facts โ€” per 100g

NutrientAmount% Daily valueLevel
Calories95 kcal5%
Carbohydrates23.2g8%
Dietary fibre1.5g5%
Sugars19.1gโ€”
GI~50 โ€” Low boundaryโ€”
Vitamin C13.7mg15%
Vitamin B60.33mg20%
Potassium448mg10%
Magnesium29mg7%
Niacin B30.92mg6%
Thiamine B10.09mg6%
Carotenoidspresentโ€”

Based on Australian NRV. Source: FSANZ Australian Food Composition Database.

๐Ÿ“ˆ Glycaemic index (GI)

50
Glycaemic IndexLow GIJackfruit has a GI of approximately 50 โ€” low boundary. Fresh ripe jackfruit has a moderate GI due to its natural sugars, but the significant fibre content slows absorption. Unripe green jackfruit used as a meat substitute has an even lower effective GI. Canned jackfruit in syrup has a much higher GI due to added sugar.
0 ยท Low (<55)Medium (56โ€“69)High (70+) ยท 100

๐Ÿ’Š Key vitamins & minerals

Potassium
448mg
10% RDI
Vitamin B6
0.33mg
20% RDI
Vitamin C
13.7mg
15% RDI
Carotenoids
present
Antioxidant
Magnesium
29mg
7% RDI
Niacin B3
0.92mg
6% RDI

โœ… Health benefits

๐ŸŒฑ
The world's most remarkable plant-based meat substitute

Unripe green jackfruit has a uniquely fibrous, meaty texture when cooked that closely mimics pulled pork, chicken and beef in both texture and its ability to absorb flavours. This has made it the most successful whole-food meat substitute globally โ€” used in tacos, pulled 'pork' sandwiches, curries and stir-fries. Unlike processed meat substitutes, jackfruit is a whole food with no additives, processing or synthetic ingredients. Its neutral flavour when unripe means it takes on whatever marinade or spice blend is applied.

๐ŸŒ
Food security crop โ€” produces prolifically in hot, drought-prone conditions

Jackfruit is emerging as an important food security crop: a single mature jackfruit tree produces 100โ€“200 fruits per year, each weighing 5โ€“35kg, providing extraordinary caloric yield per tree. It tolerates drought, poor soils and high heat that would kill most fruit crops. In South and Southeast Asia and parts of Africa, jackfruit is recognised by the FAO as a climate-change resilient food security tree crop. In tropical Australia, jackfruit trees grow with minimal management and produce enormous quantities of fruit.

๐Ÿ’Š
B vitamins and potassium for energy and blood pressure

Jackfruit provides 20% of daily vitamin B6 (essential for neurotransmitter synthesis and homocysteine regulation), meaningful niacin B3 and thiamine B1, and 448mg of potassium per 100g โ€” nearly 3ร— the potassium of a banana per gram of fruit. This potassium content supports blood pressure regulation and fluid balance. The B vitamin profile makes jackfruit a useful energy-metabolism supporter for active people.

๐Ÿ›ก๏ธ
Antioxidants โ€” carotenoids, flavanones and lignans

Ripe jackfruit contains carotenoids (including beta-carotene in yellow-flesh varieties), flavanones (naringenin) and lignans (isoflavones) that contribute to its antioxidant activity. Traditional use of jackfruit in Ayurvedic medicine for inflammation and digestive health has biological plausibility from these compounds. The seeds of jackfruit โ€” often discarded โ€” are nutritionally exceptional, containing 6โ€“7g of protein per 100g and significant resistant starch.

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โš ๏ธ Who should limit or avoid

๐ŸŒบ
Birch pollen and latex-fruit syndrome cross-reactivity

Jackfruit is in the Moraceae (mulberry/fig) family. People with birch pollen allergy or latex-fruit syndrome can cross-react with jackfruit, experiencing oral allergy syndrome (tingling, itching in mouth and throat). The reaction is more common with raw jackfruit and is often reduced by cooking. Introduce cautiously if you have known birch pollen, latex, banana or avocado allergy.

๐Ÿฉธ
Blood sugar โ€” high natural sugar content in ripe fruit

Ripe jackfruit contains 19.1g of sugar per 100g โ€” high for a fruit. Despite a GI of ~50, the glycaemic load of a large serving is significant. People with diabetes should be aware that large servings of ripe jackfruit can affect blood glucose meaningfully. Green (unripe) jackfruit is a much safer option for people managing blood sugar.

๐Ÿ’Š
Pre-surgery caution โ€” possible blood-thinning properties

Jackfruit has been reported to have mild antiplatelet (blood-thinning) properties in some traditional medicine literature. While this is not definitively established in clinical research, some surgeons recommend limiting jackfruit in the weeks before elective surgery. Discuss with your doctor if you are scheduled for surgery and eat jackfruit regularly.

โœ… For most healthy adults, jackfruit is a nutritious and versatile tropical fruit โ€” particularly valuable as a whole-food plant-based meat substitute (unripe) and as a flavourful tropical fruit (ripe). It is particularly well-suited for plant-based diets seeking meat texture alternatives.
โš•๏ธ General nutritional information only โ€” not a substitute for professional medical or dietary advice.

๐Ÿ›’ How to select & buy jackfruit

1
Ripe vs unripe โ€” completely different uses

Ripe jackfruit: yellow-orange flesh, very sweet and fragrant (smells like a blend of banana, pineapple and vanilla), eaten fresh or in desserts and smoothies. The skin should be slightly soft, yellow-green to yellow, with a sweet tropical smell. Unripe green jackfruit: white flesh, essentially flavourless, fibrous and meaty when cooked โ€” used as a meat substitute in savoury dishes. Available canned in brine or fresh at Asian grocery stores. For cooking as a meat substitute, choose young green jackfruit.

2
Opening a whole fresh jackfruit โ€” the sticky challenge

Fresh whole jackfruit releases a white latex sap when cut that is extremely sticky. Oil your knife and hands with vegetable oil before cutting. Cut into quarters, then remove the fibrous core. Pull out the yellow arils (fleshy seed pockets) โ€” these are the edible ripe flesh. Remove the seed from each aril (seeds are edible when boiled or roasted). The white fibrous strands around the arils are edible but have a bland, stringy texture. For a first experience, canned jackfruit (in brine for savoury use, in syrup for sweet use) removes all this complexity.

3
Jackfruit as pulled 'pork' โ€” the basic technique

Use canned young green jackfruit in brine (not syrup). Drain and rinse well. Pull apart the fibres with your hands or two forks โ€” the texture should resemble shredded pork. Sautรฉ with BBQ sauce, cumin, smoked paprika, garlic and onion. Cook until slightly caramelised, 10โ€“15 minutes. The result is almost indistinguishable from slow-cooked pulled pork in texture. Serve in tacos, sandwiches or rice bowls. The protein content is lower than meat (2g vs 25g per 100g) โ€” combine with legumes or tofu for protein completeness.

๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡บ Australian tip: Jackfruit is grown commercially and in home gardens throughout tropical Queensland (particularly Cairns, Townsville, Rockhampton, Bundaberg and the Daintree region), the Northern Territory (Darwin region) and northern Western Australia. In tropical Queensland, jackfruit trees can become enormous and produce prodigious quantities of fruit โ€” often so much that fruit is given away freely or left to fall. Fresh ripe jackfruit is available at tropical Queensland roadside stalls and markets year-round. In southern cities, fresh jackfruit can occasionally be found at Asian grocery stores in Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane (particularly in the Cabramatta and Springvale Vietnamese shopping precincts). Canned jackfruit โ€” both young green in brine (for cooking) and ripe in syrup (for sweet use) โ€” is available at all Asian grocery stores and increasingly at mainstream supermarkets (Woolworths and Coles carry several brands). The Source Bulk Foods and health food stores carry organic canned jackfruit. Asian grocery stores offer the best prices.

๐ŸงŠ Storage tips & shelf life

Room temperature (uncut)
3โ€“7 days (unripe) / 1โ€“2 days (ripe)
Cool, ventilated, away from direct sun

Whole uncut jackfruit: store at room temperature. Unripe green jackfruit keeps 3โ€“7 days while slowly ripening. Ripe jackfruit deteriorates rapidly โ€” use within 1โ€“2 days of full ripeness. The characteristic strong tropical smell indicates ripeness. In tropical Australian conditions, ripe jackfruit can deteriorate within a day in hot weather.

โ„๏ธ
Refrigerator (cut)
3โ€“5 days
Sealed container or wrap

Cut ripe jackfruit keeps 3โ€“5 days refrigerated in a sealed container. The smell is very strong and will permeate other refrigerator contents โ€” always seal completely. Cooked jackfruit (pulled jackfruit preparation): refrigerates well for 4โ€“5 days. Rinse canned jackfruit before storing โ€” brine can become slimy.

๐ŸงŠ
Freezer
Up to 3 months
Seal tightly; ripe arils or cooked jackfruit

Ripe jackfruit arils freeze well โ€” portion into bags, seal and freeze. Cooked pulled jackfruit (prepared with seasonings) also freezes excellently for up to 3 months. Thaw in the fridge overnight or reheat directly in a pan. Batch-cooking pulled jackfruit and freezing in burrito-sized portions is an efficient meal prep approach.

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๐Ÿ“– About jackfruit โ€” complete guide

Jackfruit (Artocarpus heterophyllus) is native to the Western Ghats of India, where it has been cultivated for at least 3,000โ€“6,000 years. It spread through South and Southeast Asia, becoming a staple food in South India (where it is called kathal or chakka), Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, the Philippines, Indonesia, Thailand and Malaysia. The Portuguese brought jackfruit to Brazil via their Indian Ocean trade routes in the 16th century, where it became naturalised in the Atlantic forest regions. In Kerala, India, jackfruit is considered the state fruit and is deeply embedded in the culinary tradition โ€” eaten ripe, cooked unripe as a curry, made into chips, and used in every stage of ripeness. The tree is extraordinarily productive and longevous โ€” mature trees can produce for over 100 years.

The global vegan pulled jackfruit trend, which began around 2015โ€“2016 in the United States and the UK, transformed jackfruit from a largely unknown tropical curiosity in Western markets to one of the most widely available plant-based products in mainstream supermarkets. The trend was driven by food bloggers and vegan YouTubers demonstrating that canned green jackfruit in brine, when seasoned and cooked with BBQ spices, produced a texture almost identical to slow-cooked pulled pork. This was genuinely surprising to mainstream food culture โ€” a fruit that behaves like meat. The commercial response was rapid: by 2018, major UK supermarkets (Sainsbury's, Tesco) had jackfruit products on shelves. Australian supermarkets followed by 2019โ€“2020. The limitations โ€” jackfruit's low protein content relative to meat (1.7g vs 25g per 100g) meaning it works best combined with legumes โ€” do not diminish its value as a whole-food ingredient for texture and flavour absorption.

โš–๏ธ Compare jackfruit to similar fruits

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๐Ÿ’ก Interesting facts about jackfruit

๐Ÿ“
1
Jackfruit is the world's largest tree fruit โ€” individual fruits can weigh up to 35kg and grow directly from the trunk
Unlike most fruits that grow on branches, jackfruit grows directly from the main trunk and large branches (cauliflory โ€” a reproductive strategy that allows large animals to access the fruit and disperse seeds). The largest recorded jackfruit weighed 42.7kg. Average fruits weigh 5โ€“20kg. The tree's trunk can simultaneously carry dozens of fruits at different stages of development, from very small to enormous, creating a visually dramatic spectacle. A single large jackfruit contains hundreds of individual arils (seed pockets), each containing one seed.
๐ŸŒฟ
2
Unripe jackfruit has 3g of protein per 100g and a meaty texture โ€” it is the most widely eaten whole-food vegan meat substitute in the world
In India, jackfruit has been eaten as a meat substitute by vegetarian communities for thousands of years โ€” jackfruit curry (kathal curry) closely mimics lamb or chicken curry in texture. What the global vegan movement rediscovered in 2015โ€“2016 was a traditional practice from South Asian vegetarian cooking. The texture comes from jackfruit's unique fibre structure โ€” the pods pull apart into long, stringy fibres identical in structure to slow-cooked meat fibres. Nutritionally it falls short of meat in protein, but combined with lentils or chickpeas in a curry provides a complete, satisfying meal.
๐Ÿ‡ง๐Ÿ‡ฉ
3
Bangladesh made jackfruit its national fruit in 2020 โ€” it is called 'the poor man's food' but is now a major agricultural export
Bangladesh officially designated jackfruit (kathal) as the national fruit in 2020, reflecting its cultural and economic significance. With over 100 varieties grown across the country and production exceeding 800,000 tonnes annually, Bangladesh is one of the world's largest jackfruit producers. The fruit is called 'the poor man's food' in Bangladesh because it was traditionally eaten by rural communities during lean seasons โ€” the tree requires minimal care and produces abundantly. This perception is changing rapidly as international demand for jackfruit products grows and export revenue increases.
๐ŸŒฑ
4
Jackfruit seeds are as nutritious as potatoes โ€” they are eaten boiled, roasted or ground into flour across South and Southeast Asia
Jackfruit seeds (typically discarded in Western consumption) contain 6โ€“7g of protein, 25g of carbohydrates and meaningful amounts of B vitamins, iron and zinc per 100g โ€” a nutritional profile comparable to potato but with more protein. In South India, Bangladesh and Southeast Asia, jackfruit seeds are boiled and eaten as a starchy food, roasted as a snack, or ground into flour for flatbreads. The seeds contain tannins that cause a slightly astringent flavour when raw but are eliminated by cooking. Using the seeds significantly increases the nutritional and caloric yield from each fruit.
๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡บ
5
Tropical Queensland has so much jackfruit that it is given away free โ€” community groups collect fallen fruit to reduce waste
In Cairns and the Daintree region, jackfruit trees planted in the 1980s and 1990s are now enormous and producing far more fruit than residents can consume. Community food-sharing apps and Facebook groups in Cairns regularly post jackfruit giveaways โ€” entire trees available for picking. The strong smell of ripe jackfruit is a navigational tool in some tropical Queensland neighbourhoods. Sustainable food groups in Queensland have begun developing jackfruit processing operations to convert the vast surplus into commercially viable products โ€” jackfruit chips, dried jackfruit and canned preparations โ€” creating a potential Queensland agricultural industry from what is currently a nuisance crop.
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