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Nuts & SeedsBrassica juncea / Sinapis alba

Mustard Seeds โ€” Nutrition Facts & Health Guide

Brassica juncea / Sinapis alba ยท Evidence-based nutritional information for Australians

508
kcal / 100g
28.1g
Carbs
26.1g
Protein
36.2g
Fat
35
GI (low)
Full calculator โ†—
Mustard seeds are among the world's oldest used spices โ€” referenced in ancient Sanskrit texts, mentioned in the New Testament as a parable of faith, and used medicinally across Indian Ayurveda, Chinese medicine and European herbalism for over 3,000 years. Nutritionally they are exceptional: the highest fibre content of any common spice-seed (12.2g/100g), outstanding protein (26.1g/100g), significant selenium, calcium and magnesium, and the unique glucosinolate compounds that make all Brassica family plants medicinally potent. Used in Indian tempering (tadka), pickles, curries and the global condiment prepared mustard. Adjust the slider for your serving size.
๐Ÿงฎ
Serving size calculator
Drag the slider โ€” all values update instantly
Serving size:30g
152Calories (kcal)
8.4Carbs (g)
7.8Protein (g)
3.7Fibre (g)
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๐Ÿ“Š Full nutrition facts โ€” per 100g

NutrientAmount% Daily valueLevel
Calories508 kcal25%
Carbohydrates28.1g9%
Dietary fibre12.2g44%
Protein26.1g52%
Total fat36.2gโ€”
GI~35 โ€” Lowโ€”
Selenium208ยตg378%
Calcium266mg27%
Magnesium370mg93%
Iron9.21mg51%
Glucosinolateshigh โ€” anti-cancerโ€”
Omega-3 (ALA)5.9gโ€”

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

๐Ÿ“ˆ Glycaemic index (GI)

35
Glycaemic IndexLow GIMustard seeds have a GI of approximately 35 โ€” low. Despite meaningful carbohydrate content, the combination of very high fibre (12.2g/100g), protein (26.1g/100g) and the glucosinolates that slow digestion result in a modest blood glucose response. Mustard as a condiment has essentially zero GI impact.
0 ยท Low (<55)Medium (56โ€“69)High (70+) ยท 100

๐Ÿ’Š Key vitamins & minerals

Selenium
208ยตg
378% RDI per 100g
Magnesium
370mg
93% RDI
Protein
26.1g
52% RDI
Iron
9.21mg
51% RDI
Fibre
12.2g
44% RDI
Calcium
266mg
27% RDI

โœ… Health benefits

๐Ÿงฌ
Glucosinolates โ€” anti-cancer compounds shared with broccoli and kale

Mustard seeds contain glucosinolates โ€” the same class of sulphur-containing phytochemicals that make broccoli, kale, cabbage and all Brassica family plants medicinally potent. When cells are damaged (by chewing or grinding), the enzyme myrosinase converts glucosinolates to isothiocyanates (including sinigrin โ†’ allyl isothiocyanate in brown/black mustard, and sinalbin โ†’ p-hydroxybenzyl isothiocyanate in yellow mustard). These isothiocyanates have demonstrated anti-cancer activity against breast, colon, lung, prostate and bladder cancer cell lines in extensive laboratory research, primarily via induction of Phase II detoxification enzymes and apoptosis. Regular Brassica family consumption is one of the most consistently cancer-protective dietary patterns in epidemiological research.

๐Ÿ›ก๏ธ
Extraordinary selenium density โ€” 378% RDI per 100g

Mustard seeds provide 208ยตg of selenium per 100g โ€” 378% of the daily requirement, making them one of the richest plant-based selenium sources after Brazil nuts. At typical culinary serving sizes (5โ€“15g), mustard seeds contribute 10โ€“25% of daily selenium โ€” meaningful when accumulated over daily use. Selenium is essential for thyroid function, glutathione peroxidase antioxidant defence, DNA repair and immune cell function. The selenium in mustard is primarily in the organic selenomethionine form with high bioavailability.

๐Ÿ’Š
High omega-3 ALA content โ€” 5.9g per 100g

Mustard seed oil contains significant alpha-linolenic acid (ALA omega-3) โ€” approximately 5.9g per 100g of whole seed (or 5โ€“11% of mustard oil depending on variety). Brown and oriental mustard varieties have higher ALA content than yellow. Regular use of mustard seeds and mustard oil as a cooking medium (common in Bengali, Kashmiri and Punjabi cooking) provides a meaningful plant-based omega-3 contribution that supports heart health and reduces the omega-6:omega-3 ratio in diets heavy in other cooking oils.

๐ŸŒก๏ธ
Thermogenic effect โ€” metabolism boost from isothiocyanates and sinigrin

Mustard's characteristic heat comes from allyl isothiocyanate, which has a well-documented thermogenic effect โ€” temporarily raising metabolic rate and heat production. This has driven research into mustard compounds for weight management. A small UK clinical trial found that consuming 5g of mustard seeds daily for 3 months was associated with meaningful metabolic benefits. The traditional use of mustard poultices for respiratory conditions and mustard baths for muscle soreness reflects the compound's vasodilatory and thermogenic properties.

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โš ๏ธ Who should limit or avoid

๐ŸŒบ
Mustard allergy โ€” one of the 14 major food allergens in the EU

Mustard is classified as a major food allergen in the European Union, the UK and Canada โ€” meaning it must be declared on food labels. Mustard allergy can cause anaphylaxis and is more prevalent than commonly recognised in Australia, where it is not yet in the mandatory declaration list. People who react to mustard condiment or spice should treat mustard seeds with the same caution as peanuts or tree nuts and read ingredient labels carefully. Mustard cross-reacts with other Brassica family plants in some individuals.

๐Ÿฆ‹
Thyroid effect โ€” goitrogens in large amounts

Mustard seeds (like all Brassica family plants) contain goitrogenic compounds that can interfere with thyroid iodine uptake in very large quantities. At culinary use levels (5โ€“15g per meal), this is not a concern for people with adequate iodine intake. People with diagnosed hypothyroidism consuming very large daily quantities of mustard seeds or mustard oil should discuss with their endocrinologist, particularly if iodine intake is low.

๐ŸŒถ๏ธ
Irritant โ€” excess causes digestive discomfort

The allyl isothiocyanate in brown/black mustard seeds (the compound responsible for the sharp, sinus-clearing heat) is a genuine mucous membrane irritant at high doses. Eating very large quantities of whole mustard seeds can cause gastric irritation, diarrhoea and oesophageal burning. Culinary amounts (up to 20g) are well-tolerated by most people. The heat is released by grinding and contact with water โ€” whole toasted mustard seeds are much milder than ground or wet mustard.

โœ… For most healthy adults, mustard seeds at culinary amounts (5โ€“20g per serving) are safe, healthy and contribute genuine nutritional benefit through selenium, fibre, protein and glucosinolates. The EU allergy warning applies to known mustard-allergic individuals only.
โš•๏ธ General nutritional information only โ€” not a substitute for professional medical or dietary advice.

๐Ÿ›’ How to source & use mustard seeds

1
Yellow vs brown vs black mustard seeds โ€” different heat and flavour

Yellow/white mustard (Sinapis alba): largest, mildest heat, used in American yellow mustard, pickling, European whole-grain mustard. Lowest glucosinolate content. Brown mustard (Brassica juncea): medium size, much sharper and more pungent heat, used in Indian tadka (tempering), Bengali cooking, English and Dijon mustard. The most common variety in Indian grocery stores. Black mustard (B. nigra): smallest, most pungent, most traditional Indian variety โ€” harder to find commercially as the plant shatters when harvested by machine. For Australian home cooking, brown mustard seeds from Indian grocery stores provide the best flavour-to-price ratio.

2
Tadka/tempering โ€” unlocking flavour by toasting in oil

The fundamental Indian cooking technique of tadka (tempering) unlocks mustard seed flavour by frying whole seeds in hot oil until they pop and release their aroma. Heat 1โ€“2 tablespoons of oil in a heavy pan until very hot. Add mustard seeds โ€” they will sputter and pop loudly within 20โ€“30 seconds. As soon as most seeds have popped and the popping slows, add other aromatics (curry leaves, dried chilli, onion). The popped mustard seeds add a nutty, slightly pungent base note to any dish. This technique is essential for South Indian dal, sambar, chutneys and vegetable dishes.

3
Making your own whole-grain mustard

Home-made whole-grain mustard takes 5 minutes and is superior to commercial products. Soak 3 tablespoons yellow mustard seeds and 2 tablespoons brown mustard seeds in 80ml apple cider vinegar overnight. Add 1 teaspoon honey, 1/2 teaspoon salt. Blend to desired consistency (rough for whole-grain, smooth for Dijon-style). The flavour develops over 24โ€“48 hours as glucosinolates convert to isothiocyanates. Store refrigerated for up to 3 months. The heat compounds are fully released by grinding and moisture contact โ€” adjust water or vinegar for heat intensity.

๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡บ Australian tip: Mustard seeds are widely available across Australia at Indian grocery stores (as sarson/rai โ€” the most affordable source, typically $3โ€“6/kg for brown mustard), Middle Eastern and Mediterranean stores (for yellow mustard seeds used in pickling), and mainstream supermarkets in the spice aisle. Australia is a major producer of mustard seed for export โ€” particularly SA and Victoria's Wimmera region grow significant quantities of yellow/brown mustard as a break crop in cereal rotations. Mainstream supermarket spice aisle mustard seeds are typically yellow and fine for pickling but brown mustard from Indian grocery stores is better for tempering. Mustard oil (cold-pressed brown mustard seed oil) is available at Indian grocery stores and is widely used in north and eastern Indian cooking โ€” it has a pungent, distinctive flavour quite different from prepared mustard. Note: mustard oil sold in some Asian grocery stores may be labelled 'for external use only' due to erucic acid content regulations โ€” check labels if purchasing for cooking.

๐ŸงŠ Storage tips & shelf life

Pantry
Whole seeds: 2โ€“3 years
Sealed jar, cool dark place

Whole mustard seeds are among the most shelf-stable spices โ€” the intact seed coat protects the glucosinolates and oils from degradation. Store in a sealed glass jar away from heat and light. Quality check: crush a few seeds between fingers โ€” they should release a sharp, pungent smell immediately. Seeds that have lost their aroma have lost most of their glucosinolate potency. Whole seeds keep far longer than ground mustard powder.

๐ŸŒฟ
Ground/powder
3โ€“6 months in pantry / 12 months refrigerated
Sealed, cool and dry

Ground mustard powder degrades far more rapidly than whole seeds โ€” the glucosinolates become isothiocyanates on grinding (when moisture is added) and the volatile compounds dissipate. Store in a sealed container away from heat. The familiar sharp smell when mixing mustard powder with water confirms active glucosinolates are still present. Stale mustard powder has almost no heat or flavour.

๐Ÿซ™
Prepared mustard (condiment)
1โ€“2 years sealed / 6โ€“12 months opened (refrigerated)
Refrigerate after opening

Prepared mustard (condiment) is preserved by its acidity and salt content and keeps well. Refrigerate after opening to maintain flavour โ€” unrefrigerated prepared mustard gradually loses its heat. Home-made whole-grain mustard: refrigerate and use within 3 months for peak flavour.

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๐Ÿ“– About mustard seeds โ€” complete guide

Mustard (Brassica juncea, B. nigra, Sinapis alba) is one of humanity's oldest cultivated plants, with evidence of use as food and medicine dating to at least 3000 BCE in the Indus Valley civilisation. The Sanskrit text Charaka Samhita (approximately 600 BCE) describes mustard in detail as a medical remedy. Mustard appears in the New Testament in the parable of the mustard seed (Matthew 17:20, Mark 4:30โ€“32) โ€” 'the kingdom of heaven is like a mustard seed, which is the smallest of all seeds on earth' โ€” a passage reflecting the seed's cultural ubiquity in 1st-century CE Palestine. The Greek word for mustard (sinapi) and Latin (sinapis) are the origin of the genus name Sinapis for white mustard. Prepared mustard as a condiment was documented in ancient Rome โ€” the recipe of mixing mustard seed paste with wine appears in the Roman cookbook Apicius. French Dijon mustard production began in the 14th century CE and remains the world's most prestigious prepared mustard category.

The global mustard market is driven predominantly by the condiment industry โ€” prepared mustard is one of the world's highest-volume spice condiments by value after black pepper and chilli. Canada is the world's largest mustard seed producer (approximately 35% of global supply), followed by Nepal and Russia, with Australia as a significant secondary producer. The Dijon mustard industry in France imports most of its mustard seed from Canada and Eastern Europe, while the yellow mustard industry in the US sources primarily from domestic production (North Dakota, Montana). Australia's mustard seed production is centred in South Australia, Victoria and Western Australia, where it serves as a valuable break crop in wheat and barley rotations โ€” fixing nitrogen, breaking disease cycles and diversifying farm income. Australian mustard seed is exported primarily to Europe for the food industry. The glucosinolate content of Australian-grown mustard seed is regulated โ€” varieties with very high erucic acid content (from the oil fraction) are subject to food safety controls similar to those applied to early rapeseed varieties.

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๐Ÿ’ก Interesting facts about mustard seeds

๐Ÿ“–
1
The mustard seed parable in the New Testament made mustard seeds the most biblically famous botanical specimen โ€” despite the parable containing a botanical inaccuracy
Jesus's parable in Mark 4:30โ€“32 describes the mustard seed as 'the smallest of all seeds on earth' that grows into 'the largest of all garden plants, with such big branches that the birds can perch in its shade.' Botanists have noted that mustard seeds are not the smallest seeds (orchid seeds are far smaller) and mustard plants don't typically provide bird-perching shade. Theologians have long debated whether Jesus was making a technical botanical error, using colloquial language for 'very small,' or describing a specific local variety. Regardless, the parable made mustard seed one of the most recognised plants in Western cultural consciousness for 2,000 years.
๐Ÿบ
2
Dijon mustard does not legally need to use mustard seeds from Dijon โ€” most French Dijon mustard is made from Canadian seeds
'Dijon mustard' is a style of prepared mustard (smooth, sharp, made with verjuice or white wine) rather than a Protected Designation of Origin product. Under French and EU law, any manufacturer anywhere in the world can call their product 'Dijon mustard' if it meets the style requirements. Most major Dijon mustard brands (Maille, Grey Poupon, Amora) use mustard seeds imported primarily from Canada, where yields are larger and prices lower than French-grown alternatives. In a remarkable irony, the very success of Dijon mustard as a global brand has reduced the agricultural significance of Burgundy (the Dijon region) as an actual mustard-growing area.
๐ŸŒก๏ธ
3
Mustard gas in World War I was named after mustard not because it contains mustard but because it smells faintly like mustard or garlic
Mustard gas (sulfur mustard, dichlorodiethyl sulfide) was the most feared chemical weapon of World War I โ€” causing horrific blistering to skin, lungs and eyes, and responsible for approximately 80,000 deaths. It was named 'mustard gas' by British soldiers because its faint yellow-brown colour and garlic/mustard-like odour resembled the plant. The chemical structure of mustard gas is actually unrelated to the glucosinolates in edible mustard โ€” the naming is coincidental. Interestingly, the vesicant (blister) properties of mustard gas led to research that eventually contributed to the development of nitrogen mustards as the first chemotherapy drugs in the 1940s.
๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ณ
4
India is the world's largest consumer of mustard seeds and mustard oil โ€” the two together are central to Bengali, Punjabi and Rajasthani cooking
India produces approximately 6โ€“7 million tonnes of mustard seed annually, making it the second largest global producer after Canada, and consumes almost all of it domestically. Mustard oil is the primary cooking fat across Bengal, Bihar, Jharkhand, Rajasthan and Punjab โ€” an enormous population representing perhaps 500 million people who cook in mustard oil daily. Bengali cuisine in particular uses raw mustard oil as a finishing condiment, mustard paste (kasundi) as a flavouring, and whole seeds in tempering for virtually every savoury dish. The distinctive sharp, pungent flavour of authentic Bengali food is inseparable from mustard.
๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡บ
5
South Australia and Victoria's Wimmera region grow significant mustard for export โ€” mostly yellow mustard for the European condiment industry
Australia produces approximately 80,000โ€“120,000 tonnes of mustard seed annually, primarily yellow and oriental mustard varieties, from SA's mid-north and Eyre Peninsula and Victoria's Wimmera grain belt. Australian mustard is exported primarily to Europe for use in condiment manufacturing and some goes to Japan for its food industry. For Australian farmers, mustard serves as a valuable break crop in cereal rotations โ€” it has different disease pressures than wheat and barley, its deep roots improve soil structure, and it provides diversity in marketing channels. GRDC (Grains Research and Development Corporation) research has improved Australian mustard varieties' yield and glucosinolate profiles for food-grade markets over the past two decades.
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