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Grains & LegumesVigna radiata

Mung Bean โ€” Nutrition Facts & Health Guide

Vigna radiata ยท Evidence-based nutritional information for Australians

347
kcal / 100g
62.6g
Carbs
23.9g
Protein
16.3g
Fibre
31
GI (low)
Full calculator โ†—
Mung beans are one of Asia's most versatile and nutritionally important legumes โ€” providing excellent protein (23.9g/100g), outstanding fibre (16.3g), exceptional folate, iron, zinc and B vitamins, at just 347 kcal per 100g. They are uniquely valued for their ability to sprout rapidly into highly nutritious mung bean sprouts (common in stir-fries, spring rolls and salads) โ€” which dramatically increases their vitamin C content (from near zero to 14mg/100g) and reduces their phytic acid, making sprouted mung beans one of the most bioavailable plant foods available. Mung beans are staples across India, China, Southeast Asia and the Philippines. They are widely available across Australia. Adjust the slider for your serving size.
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Serving size:100g
347Calories (kcal)
62.6Carbs (g)
23.9Protein (g)
16.3Fibre (g)
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๐Ÿ“Š Full nutrition facts โ€” per 100g (raw)

NutrientAmount% Daily valueLevel
Calories347 kcal17%
Carbohydrates62.6g21%
Dietary fibre16.3g58%
Protein23.9g48%
GI~31 โ€” Lowโ€”
Folate625ยตg156%
Iron6.7mg37%
Zinc2.7mg22%
Potassium1246mg27%
Magnesium189mg47%
Thiamine B10.62mg41%
Phosphorus367mg37%

Based on Australian NRV. Source: FSANZ and USDA Food Composition Databases.

๐Ÿ“ˆ Glycaemic index (GI)

31
Glycaemic IndexLow GIMung beans have a GI of approximately 31 โ€” low. Among the lowest glycaemic legumes, the GI of mung beans is further reduced by sprouting (which partially pre-digests starch) and by cooking method. Mung bean sprouts have an extremely low GI (~15). The combination of resistant starch, soluble fibre and protein makes them one of the most blood sugar-friendly legumes.
0 ยท Low (<55)Medium (56โ€“69)High (70+) ยท 100

๐Ÿ’Š Key vitamins & minerals

Folate
625ยตg
156% RDI
Protein
23.9g
48% RDI
Fibre
16.3g
58% RDI
Magnesium
189mg
47% RDI
Iron
6.7mg
37% RDI
Thiamine B1
0.62mg
41% RDI

โœ… Health benefits

๐ŸŒฑ
Sprouting transforms mung beans โ€” creating one of the most bioavailable plant foods

Sprouting mung beans is one of the most nutritionally transformative food preparations available: over 4โ€“5 days, germination reduces phytic acid by up to 80% (dramatically improving iron, zinc and mineral absorption), synthesises vitamin C from zero to 14mg/100g, reduces oligosaccharides (less flatulence), increases enzyme activity that pre-digests starch (lowering GI further to ~15), and multiplies folate content. Sprouted mung beans are genuinely more nutritious than cooked beans for several key nutrients. This transformation costs nothing but time โ€” dry beans to nutritious sprouts in 4 days with only water and a jar.

๐Ÿงฌ
Outstanding folate โ€” 156% RDI, among the highest of any food

Mung beans provide 625ยตg of folate per 100g โ€” 156% of the daily requirement, placing them among the highest folate-containing foods in the entire food supply. Only chicken liver (590ยตg) and a few other organ meats approach or exceed this level among commonly eaten foods. Folate is essential for DNA synthesis, neural tube closure in pregnancy, homocysteine metabolism and red blood cell production. Mung bean dal (split mung) is one of the most folate-dense everyday foods in South Asian cuisines and a key nutritional pillar of maternal health in India.

๐Ÿฉบ
Blood sugar management โ€” GI 31, lowest of common legumes

Mung beans have one of the lowest GI values of any legume (GI ~31), and this is reduced further in mung bean sprouts (GI ~15). The resistant starch, soluble fibre and protein content all independently slow glucose absorption. Multiple clinical studies in South and Southeast Asia have found that replacing white rice with mung bean dal significantly reduces post-meal blood glucose and improves long-term glycaemic control in people with type 2 diabetes. For countries where white rice is the dietary staple and diabetes prevalence is high, mung beans represent one of the most practical and culturally appropriate dietary interventions available.

๐Ÿ›ก๏ธ
Anti-inflammatory and antioxidant compounds

Mung beans contain vitexin and isovitexin โ€” C-glycosylflavones with documented anti-inflammatory, antioxidant and potentially anti-cancer properties. Multiple laboratory studies have found mung bean extracts inhibit pro-inflammatory cytokines (TNF-ฮฑ, IL-6) and reduce oxidative stress markers. Mung bean polyphenols have demonstrated specific antihypertensive effects in cell and animal studies. Traditional Chinese medicine has used mung beans specifically for 'clearing heat' (reducing fever and inflammation) for over 2,000 years โ€” a traditional use with increasingly plausible biochemical mechanisms.

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โš ๏ธ Who should limit or avoid

๐Ÿ’จ
Flatulence โ€” oligosaccharides

Mung beans contain raffinose and stachyose oligosaccharides that cause flatulence via colonic fermentation. However, mung beans cause significantly less flatulence than most other legumes โ€” their relatively lower oligosaccharide content compared to chickpeas, black beans and kidney beans makes them one of the more 'digestible' legumes. Sprouting reduces oligosaccharides by 50โ€“80% and virtually eliminates flatulence from mung sprouts. Soaking dried beans 8 hours and discarding soaking water reduces oligosaccharide content further.

๐ŸŒฟ
Phytic acid โ€” reduces mineral absorption (mitigated by sprouting or soaking)

Like all legumes, dried mung beans contain phytic acid that reduces iron and zinc bioavailability. This is largely mitigated by soaking (reduces phytate ~25%), cooking (additional reduction) and especially sprouting (reduces phytate up to 80%). For maximum mineral absorption from mung beans, either sprout them or soak overnight before cooking, and consume with vitamin C-containing foods to enhance iron absorption.

๐ŸŒก๏ธ
Food safety โ€” mung bean sprouts bacterial risk

Mung bean sprouts (commercially produced) have been implicated in multiple foodborne illness outbreaks from Salmonella and E. coli contamination globally, because the warm, moist conditions required for sprouting also favour bacterial growth. Commercial sprouts should be stored cold and consumed promptly. Home-sprouted mung beans: use clean equipment, rinse twice daily, ensure good airflow, and refrigerate once sprouted. People with compromised immune systems should either cook sprouts briefly before eating or avoid raw commercial sprouts.

โœ… For most healthy adults, mung beans are one of the most versatile and digestible legumes for daily consumption โ€” particularly valuable for folate, plant protein, iron and blood sugar management. Sprouting transforms them into one of the most bioavailable plant foods available and removes most flatulence concerns.
โš•๏ธ General nutritional information only โ€” not a substitute for professional medical or dietary advice.

๐Ÿ›’ How to source & use mung bean

1
Whole mung beans vs split mung dal โ€” choosing the right form

Whole green mung beans: vivid green, intact skin โ€” use for sprouting, dal with skin, curries and soups. Excellent for sprouting (4โ€“5 days to sprouts). Split mung dal (moong dal): yellow, split without skin โ€” cooks faster (20โ€“25 minutes without soaking), creamier texture, milder flavour. The most-used dal in South Asian cooking for quick everyday meals. Split mung dal with skin (green moong dal): split but green skin on โ€” intermediate between whole and split for nutrition and cooking time. For sprouting: always use whole green mung beans.

2
How to sprout mung beans โ€” 4 days to fresh nutritious sprouts

Equipment: a clean jar, piece of muslin or sprout lid. Day 1: rinse 3 tbsp mung beans, soak in 3ร— water volume overnight (8โ€“12 hours). Day 2: drain, rinse, drain again. Cover jar with muslin or sprout lid. Store upside-down at 45ยฐ angle for drainage and airflow at room temperature (20โ€“25ยฐC). Days 2โ€“4: rinse and drain twice daily. Sprouts are ready when 2โ€“3cm long with a small root tail. Day 5: refrigerate. Yield: 3 tbsp dry โ†’ 300โ€“400g sprouts. Use within 3โ€“4 days.

3
Moong dal โ€” the fastest, most versatile Indian dal

Split mung dal (moong dal) cooks faster than any other legume โ€” no soaking needed, ready in 20โ€“25 minutes. Tadka moong dal: boil 1 cup dal in 3 cups water with turmeric 20 minutes. Separately fry cumin seeds, garlic, ginger, tomato, chilli in ghee or oil 3 minutes. Combine, add salt, finish with lemon juice and coriander. Moong dal khichdi: cook dal with rice, vegetables and spices together. Moong dal soup: lighter texture suitable for digestive recovery and illness. Mung bean vermicelli noodles: transparent glass noodles from mung bean starch, used in Asian dishes.

๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡บ Australian tip: Mung beans are among the most widely available legumes in Australia. Whole dried green mung beans and split yellow moong dal are stocked at virtually all Indian grocery stores, Chinese and Asian supermarkets, and most health food bulk stores. Mainstream supermarket brands (Coles and Woolworths) stock canned mung beans and some carry dried product. Asian grocery stores in all capital cities stock excellent quality mung beans at very affordable prices ($2โ€“5/kg). Mung bean sprouts (fresh, commercially grown) are widely available in the fresh produce section of Coles, Woolworths and Asian grocers โ€” typically $1.50โ€“2.50 for 250g. For home sprouting, whole dried mung beans from Asian or Indian grocers are ideal. Glass noodles (mung bean vermicelli) are available at all Asian grocery stores. Brands: Pride of India, Eastern, TRS, Laxmi for dried beans; various Asian brands for glass noodles.

๐ŸงŠ Storage tips & shelf life

Pantry (dried)
Whole: 2 years / Dal: 1โ€“2 years
Sealed airtight container, cool dark

Dried mung beans store extremely well โ€” sealed at room temperature in a cool pantry for up to 2 years. After this they remain edible but take longer to cook and lose some nutritional quality. Store in glass or hard plastic away from light and heat. Older beans may require longer soaking and cooking times.

๐ŸŒฑ
Sprouts (refrigerator)
3โ€“4 days once sprouted
In sealed container, cold

Once mung bean sprouts reach desired length (2โ€“3cm), transfer to the refrigerator in a covered container. Use within 3โ€“4 days for best quality and safety. Rinse once more before eating. Home-sprouted beans kept cold are safer than commercial sprouts and have superior freshness. Discard if any off smell or sliminess develops.

โ„๏ธ
Cooked (refrigerator/freezer)
Fridge: 4โ€“5 days / Freezer: 6 months
Sealed container with cooking liquid

Cooked mung beans and dal refrigerate well for 4โ€“5 days. Dal thickens considerably when chilled โ€” reheat with a splash of water. Cooked mung beans freeze well in portions for 6 months โ€” ideal for making large batches of dal for the week. The high folate content is well-preserved in refrigeration and freezing.

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๐Ÿ“– About mung bean โ€” complete guide

Mung beans (Vigna radiata) were domesticated on the Indian subcontinent approximately 3,500โ€“4,500 years ago, with the oldest archaeological evidence from Mehrgarh in what is now Pakistan. From India they spread eastward to Southeast Asia and China, becoming one of the most widely cultivated legumes across tropical and subtropical Asia. They are known by dozens of names reflecting their culinary centrality across cultures: moong (Hindi/Urdu), mung (English, from Hindi), green gram (Indian English), lรผdou (Mandarin), monggo (Filipino), kacang hijau (Malay/Indonesian). The Chinese name lรผdou (green bean) reflects the bean's vivid colour, while mung bean sprout dishes appear in Chinese culinary records dating to the Han dynasty (206 BCEโ€“220 CE). The bean's rapid sprouting โ€” visible results within 24 hours โ€” and its nutritional transformation during germination were observed and valued in traditional medicine systems across Asia for millennia before modern nutritional science confirmed the biochemical mechanisms.

The nutritional story of mung bean sprouting is one of the clearest examples of food preparation transforming nutritional value. When a mung bean germinates, it activates multiple enzyme systems that decompose anti-nutritional factors: phytase enzymes break down phytic acid (improving mineral absorption), oligosaccharide-degrading enzymes reduce the flatulence-causing sugars, proteases partially digest protein (improving digestibility), and starch-processing enzymes reduce the GI. Simultaneously, the germinating seed synthesises new nutrients โ€” most strikingly, vitamin C (from near zero to 14mg per 100g in sprouts) and additional B vitamins. The net effect: sprouted mung beans are significantly more bioavailable in iron, zinc and folate, cause much less flatulence, have a dramatically lower GI (~15 vs ~31), and contain vitamin C that the dry bean entirely lacks. This is why mung bean sprouts have been a valued food in scurvy-prevention during long sea voyages, and why they remain nutritionally important in populations with limited access to fresh vegetables.

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๐Ÿ’ก Interesting facts about mung bean

๐ŸŒฑ
1
Mung bean sprouts were used to prevent scurvy on long sea voyages โ€” they can generate vitamin C from nothing in 4 days
The ability to sprout mung beans at sea provided sailors and their ships with fresh vitamin C when citrus fruit was unavailable. Captain James Cook and other explorers documented sprouting legumes as a scurvy prevention strategy. A dry mung bean contains essentially zero vitamin C; 4 days of sprouting produces 14mg/100g of vitamin C โ€” enough to prevent clinical scurvy from a modest daily serving. This nutritional transformation from a dry seed to a vitamin C source using only water and air is a remarkable property that made mung bean sprouting one of the earliest practical solutions to the vitamin C deficiency problem that plagued long sea voyages.
๐Ÿฎ
2
Glass noodles (cellophane noodles) are made from mung bean starch and have been a staple of Chinese cuisine for over 2,000 years
Mung bean vermicelli (fensi in Mandarin โ€” 'flour threads') are transparent noodles produced by extruding gelatinised mung bean starch into thin noodles, then drying. They have been produced in China for over 2,000 years, with records dating to the Han dynasty. Unlike wheat noodles, glass noodles become completely transparent when cooked, absorb flavours powerfully and have a distinctive slippery, chewy texture. They are essential ingredients in Korean japchae, Filipino sotanghon, Vietnamese miแบฟn, Chinese hot and sour soup, and pad woon sen in Thailand โ€” representing a pan-Asian ingredient appearing independently in multiple culinary traditions as a demonstration of mung bean starch's unique properties.
๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ณ
3
Moong dal is India's most widely consumed dal โ€” its simplicity, digestibility and nutritional completeness made it Ayurvedic medicine's recommended food for the sick and recovering
In Ayurvedic medicine, moong dal (split mung bean soup with turmeric and ghee) is classified as sattvic food โ€” pure, light, easy to digest and nourishing โ€” and is specifically recommended as the ideal food for convalescence, fever recovery, digestive weakness and postnatal recovery. Khichdi (moong dal cooked with rice) is the go-to comfort and therapeutic food across India. The scientific rationale for Ayurveda's preference for moong dal over other dals is sound: split mung dal has lower oligosaccharide content than chickpeas or lentils, cooks quickly without soaking, and has an excellent protein-to-digestibility ratio.
๐Ÿ’š
4
The mung bean is one of the most environmentally sustainable crops available โ€” it fixes nitrogen, requires little water and improves soil for subsequent crops
Mung beans are grown as a summer legume across tropical and subtropical Asia specifically for their environmental benefits alongside nutritional value: they fix 60โ€“100 kg of atmospheric nitrogen per hectare (reducing fertiliser needs), improve soil structure through root activity, provide ground cover that reduces erosion, and complete their growing cycle in 60โ€“90 days โ€” making them ideal for short fallow periods between main crops. In India and Southeast Asia, mung beans are widely grown as a 'break crop' between rice and wheat seasons, providing both soil improvement and food. Their relatively low water requirements compared to soybeans, chickpeas and lentils makes them climate-resilient.
๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡บ
5
Mung beans are grown commercially in Queensland and the Northern Territory โ€” Australia exports mung beans to Asia where they are highly valued for sprouting
Australia grows mung beans commercially in Queensland (particularly the Darling Downs, Burnett and Lockyer Valley regions) and the Northern Territory (Katherine and Kununurra areas) as a summer crop. Australian mung bean production of 30,000โ€“60,000 tonnes annually is primarily exported to Asian markets โ€” particularly Vietnam, Indonesia, Thailand and China โ€” where they are highly valued for both direct consumption and commercial sprouting. Australian mung beans are prized in Asian markets for their reliability, size and cleanliness. The domestic Australian market for mung beans is smaller but growing, driven by the large South and Southeast Asian diaspora communities in Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane.
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