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Grains & LegumesSorghum bicolor

Sorghum โ€” Nutrition Facts & Health Guide

Sorghum bicolor ยท Evidence-based nutritional information for Australians

329
kcal / 100g
72.1g
Carbs
10.6g
Protein
6.3g
Fibre
55
GI (low)
Full calculator โ†—
Sorghum is Australia's most important dryland cereal crop โ€” grown extensively across Queensland, NSW and WA in conditions too hot and dry for wheat or barley. As a food grain, sorghum is naturally gluten-free, provides meaningful protein (10.6g), fibre (6.3g) and a notably low GI of 55. It is a dietary staple for over 500 million people in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia and is gaining recognition globally as a sustainable, climate-resilient whole grain. Adjust the slider for your serving size (dry weight).
๐Ÿงฎ
Serving size calculator
Drag the slider โ€” all values update instantly
Serving size:100g
329Calories (kcal)
72.1Carbs (g)
10.6Protein (g)
6.3Fibre (g)
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๐Ÿ“Š Full nutrition facts โ€” per 100g

NutrientAmount% Daily valueLevel
Calories329 kcal16%
Carbohydrates72.1g24%
Dietary fibre6.3g22%
Sugars0.0gโ€”
Glycaemic Index55 โ€” Lowโ€”
Protein10.6g21%
Magnesium165mg41%
Phosphorus289mg29%
Iron4.4mg24%
Thiamine (B1)0.24mg16%
Niacin (B3)2.9mg18%
Antioxidants (tannins)high in dark varietiesโ€”

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

๐Ÿ“ˆ Glycaemic index (GI)

55
Glycaemic IndexLow GIWhole grain sorghum has a GI of ~55 โ€” low boundary. The intact grain structure and resistant starch content slows digestion. Sorghum flour products range from GI 52โ€“65. Dark (tannin) sorghum varieties have lower GI than white varieties due to tanninโ€“starch interactions slowing amylase digestion.
0 ยท Low (<55)Medium (56โ€“69)High (70+) ยท 100

๐Ÿ’Š Key vitamins & minerals

Magnesium
165mg
41% RDI
Iron
4.4mg
24% RDI
Phosphorus
289mg
29% RDI
Niacin B3
2.9mg
18% RDI
Protein
10.6g
21% RDI
Fibre
6.3g
22% RDI

โœ… Health benefits

๐ŸŒพ
Gluten-free whole grain โ€” safe for coeliac disease

Sorghum is naturally and completely gluten-free, making it one of the most nutritious gluten-free grain alternatives available. Unlike rice (very low protein, low fibre) or tapioca (essentially pure starch), whole grain sorghum provides meaningful protein, fibre and minerals alongside its carbohydrate. It can replace wheat in bread, porridge, flatbreads and flour blends.

๐Ÿฉธ
Blood sugar management (GI 55)

Sorghum's GI of 55 is at the low boundary โ€” significantly better than white rice (73), refined cornmeal (~70) or white bread (~75). The resistant starch content in sorghum increases further when cooked and cooled, providing prebiotic benefits and reducing the glycaemic response on reheating.

๐Ÿ›ก๏ธ
Antioxidant phenolic compounds (dark varieties)

Dark-coloured sorghum varieties (burgundy, red, brown) contain 3-deoxyanthocyanidins โ€” unique antioxidant compounds not found in any other cereal grain. These pigments have demonstrated anti-inflammatory, anti-cancer and antimicrobial properties in research studies. Black sorghum contains lutein and zeaxanthin for eye health.

๐ŸŒฑ
Sustainable Australian crop โ€” drought and heat tolerant

Sorghum requires 30โ€“40% less water than maize to produce equivalent yield and can tolerate temperatures up to 38ยฐC where wheat fails. Australia grows approximately 1โ€“2 million tonnes annually โ€” primarily in Queensland and NSW. As climate change increases heat and drought events in grain-growing regions, sorghum's resilience makes it an increasingly important food security crop.

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โš ๏ธ Who should limit or avoid

๐Ÿซ˜
Tannin-containing varieties โ€” reduce mineral absorption

High-tannin sorghum varieties (darker colour) contain condensed tannins that bind iron and zinc, significantly reducing their absorption. This is a concern in populations relying on sorghum as their primary grain. Soaking, fermenting or malting sorghum reduces tannin content substantially. Low-tannin (white/cream) sorghum varieties are more common in food products and have better mineral bioavailability.

๐Ÿ’Š
Phytic acid โ€” reduces mineral availability

Like most whole grains, sorghum contains phytic acid that reduces iron, zinc and calcium absorption. Soaking sorghum overnight before cooking reduces phytic acid by up to 50%. Consuming sorghum with vitamin C-rich foods increases iron absorption from plant sources.

โœ… For most healthy adults, sorghum is a highly nutritious gluten-free whole grain safe for regular daily consumption. It is particularly valuable for people with coeliac disease, gluten sensitivity or those seeking sustainable food choices.
โš•๏ธ General nutritional information only โ€” not a substitute for professional medical or dietary advice.

๐Ÿ›’ How to buy sorghum

1
Choose whole grain sorghum for maximum nutrition

Whole grain sorghum (pearl sorghum or whole grain flour) retains the bran and germ containing fibre, protein, B vitamins and antioxidants. Refined sorghum flour (white) has had these removed. For maximum nutrition choose whole grain sorghum flour or whole sorghum grains from health food stores. The whole grain is the size of a small ball bearing โ€” tan or reddish-brown in colour.

2
Forms available in Australia

Sorghum is available as: whole grains (cook like rice, absorb 3x their volume), sorghum flour (whole grain or white โ€” available from health food stores and gluten-free sections), sorghum flakes (pre-cooked, quicker to prepare), and popped sorghum (like tiny popcorn โ€” a nutritious snack). Health food stores and bulk food retailers carry most forms. Coles and Woolworths stock sorghum flour in gluten-free sections.

3
Check best-before and storage on flour

Whole grain sorghum flour goes rancid faster than white flour due to the oil-containing germ. Check the best-before date and buy from stores with high turnover. Fresh whole grain sorghum flour has a mild, slightly sweet, earthy smell. Rancid flour smells sour or bitter. Refrigerate after opening.

๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡บ Australian tip: Australia is one of the world's largest sorghum producers โ€” growing 1โ€“2 million tonnes annually in Queensland's Darling Downs, central Queensland and NSW's northern grain belt. However, most Australian sorghum is used for animal feed or export. Food-grade sorghum for human consumption is available from health food stores (Bob's Red Mill sorghum flour is widely stocked) and bulk food retailers. Ask specifically for "food-grade" or "human consumption" sorghum โ€” feed-grade sorghum is not processed to food safety standards.

๐ŸงŠ Storage tips & shelf life

Pantry
Whole grain: 1โ€“2 years / Flour: 3โ€“6 months
Sealed airtight container

Whole sorghum grains are very shelf-stable in a sealed container away from moisture. Whole grain sorghum flour is less stable โ€” store sealed and check for rancidity before use. In warm Australian conditions, refrigerate flour after opening.

โ„๏ธ
Refrigerator
Flour: 6 months / Cooked: 5 days
Airtight container

Refrigerate opened sorghum flour to extend freshness and prevent rancidity. Cooked sorghum grains store well in the fridge for 5 days and can be added cold to salads, soups and grain bowls โ€” resistant starch increases when cooled, improving GI.

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Freezer
Flour: 12 months / Cooked: 3 months
Zip-lock bag, air removed

Sorghum flour freezes excellently with no quality loss โ€” extends shelf life dramatically. Cooked sorghum freezes well portioned for meal prep. Add directly to hot dishes from frozen or thaw overnight for salads.

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๐Ÿ“– About sorghum โ€” complete guide

Sorghum (Sorghum bicolor) is the fifth most important cereal crop in the world by production volume โ€” yet it remains largely unknown in Australian home kitchens despite the country being a significant global producer. Its obscurity in Western diets contrasts sharply with its importance globally: sorghum is a dietary staple for over 500 million people across sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia, where it is consumed as porridge (ugali, tรด), flatbread (injera base, roti), fermented beverages and whole grain preparations that predate Western culinary traditions by thousands of years. The crop originated in northeastern Africa approximately 8,000 years ago and spread throughout Africa, India and China along ancient trade routes.

Nutritionally, sorghum's most significant property is its gluten-free status combined with a reasonable whole grain nutrient profile โ€” making it one of the few gluten-free grains that provides meaningful protein (10.6g/100g), fibre (6.3g), magnesium (41% RDI) and iron (24% RDI) alongside its carbohydrate. This stands in contrast to the typical gluten-free grain alternatives (rice, tapioca, potato starch) which provide minimal micronutrition. As a cooking ingredient, whole grain sorghum behaves like a larger, chewier version of millet โ€” it absorbs approximately 3 times its volume in water during cooking and has a pleasant, slightly nutty flavour that works in both sweet and savoury applications. Sorghum flour can replace 25โ€“50% of wheat flour in most baking recipes, significantly improving the nutritional profile of gluten-free baked goods.

โš–๏ธ Compare sorghum to similar grains

Sorghum
329 kcal
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๐Ÿ’ก Interesting facts about sorghum

๐ŸŒ
1
Sorghum is the 5th most important food crop globally โ€” a dietary staple for 500 million people in Africa and Asia
Despite being almost completely unknown in Australian home cooking, sorghum feeds more people than any other grain except wheat, rice, corn and barley. In sub-Saharan Africa alone, sorghum forms the dietary foundation for communities across Niger, Sudan, Ethiopia, Mali and Nigeria. Traditional African sorghum preparations โ€” including fermented porridges (ogi, uji) โ€” have significantly better protein bioavailability than non-fermented preparations.
๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡บ
2
Australia is one of the world's largest sorghum exporters โ€” but almost none is eaten by Australians
Queensland and NSW produce 1โ€“2 million tonnes of sorghum annually, making Australia a top-5 global exporter. However, over 95% of Australian sorghum goes to animal feed (primarily beef cattle and pigs) or is exported to Japan and South Korea for animal feed and industrial starch. Less than 1% of Australian sorghum reaches human food markets โ€” a striking contrast to its nutritional potential and global importance.
๐Ÿ’ง
3
Sorghum uses 30-40% less water than maize to produce equivalent yield โ€” it's a critical climate change crop
Sorghum's C4 photosynthesis pathway and waxy leaf coating allow it to tolerate soil moisture stress that would kill maize or wheat. In the face of increasing drought and heat frequency in Australian grain-growing regions (particularly Queensland's Darling Downs), sorghum offers a climatically resilient alternative crop with established supply chains and infrastructure already in place.
๐Ÿบ
4
Sorghum is the base grain for traditional African beers โ€” and for gluten-free craft beer production globally
Traditional African sorghum beers (pombe, chibuku, opaque beer) have been brewed from fermented sorghum for thousands of years and remain culturally and nutritionally significant across sub-Saharan Africa. In the modern craft brewing world, sorghum has become the grain of choice for gluten-free beer production โ€” it ferments similarly to barley malt but contains no gluten, making it safe for coeliac drinkers.
๐Ÿฟ
5
Sorghum can be popped like popcorn โ€” and is nutritionally superior to corn popcorn
Whole sorghum grains can be dry-popped in a pan or air-popper to create tiny round popped grains (about 1/3 the size of popcorn) with a similar flavour and texture. Popped sorghum retains its whole grain nutritional profile โ€” providing more protein and iron per gram than popped corn. It is available pre-popped from health food stores as a snack grain, and is a practical introduction to sorghum for Australian consumers.
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