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Nuts & SeedsPinus pinea / Pinus koraiensis

Pine Nuts โ€” Nutrition Facts & Health Guide

Pinus pinea / Pinus koraiensis ยท Evidence-based nutritional information for Australians

673
kcal / 100g
13.1g
Carbs
13.7g
Protein
3.7g
Fibre
15
GI (low)
Full calculator โ†—
Pine nuts are the edible seeds of pine trees โ€” most commonly the European stone pine (Pinus pinea) or Korean pine (Pinus koraiensis). They are calorie-dense (673 kcal/100g), rich in monounsaturated fat, protein and a unique omega-6 fatty acid called pinolenic acid that suppresses appetite by stimulating cholecystokinin (CCK) release. They are the essential ingredient in authentic pesto and a premium ingredient across Mediterranean and East Asian cuisines. All pine nuts sold in Australia are imported. Adjust the slider for your serving size.
๐Ÿงฎ
Serving size calculator
Drag the slider โ€” all values update instantly
Serving size:30g
202Calories (kcal)
3.9Carbs (g)
4.1Protein (g)
1.1Fibre (g)
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๐Ÿ“Š Full nutrition facts โ€” per 100g

NutrientAmount% Daily valueLevel
Calories673 kcal34%
Carbohydrates13.1g4%
Dietary fibre3.7g13%
Sugars3.6gโ€”
GI (Glycaemic Index)~15 โ€” Lowโ€”
Protein13.7g27%
Monounsaturated fat18.8gโ€”
Vitamin K53.9ยตg45%
Vitamin E9.3mg52%
Manganese8.8mg441%
Magnesium251mg63%
Zinc6.5mg54%

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

๐Ÿ“ˆ Glycaemic index (GI)

15
Glycaemic IndexLow GIPine nuts have a GI of ~15 โ€” very low. They are predominantly fat with minimal digestible carbohydrate. The high oleic acid content means they have essentially no blood sugar impact.
0 ยท Low (<55)Medium (56โ€“69)High (70+) ยท 100

๐Ÿ’Š Key vitamins & minerals

Manganese
8.8mg
441% RDI
Vitamin E
9.3mg
52% RDI
Vitamin K
53.9ยตg
45% RDI
Magnesium
251mg
63% RDI
Zinc
6.5mg
54% RDI
Pinolenic acid
unique
Appetite suppression

โœ… Health benefits

โš–๏ธ
Appetite suppression โ€” pinolenic acid triggers satiety hormones

Pine nuts are unique among nuts in containing significant quantities of pinolenic acid โ€” a rare omega-6 polyunsaturated fatty acid found almost exclusively in pine nut oil. Clinical studies have shown that pinolenic acid stimulates the release of cholecystokinin (CCK) โ€” a gut hormone that signals fullness to the brain โ€” at levels comparable to eating a full meal. A Korean study found pine nut oil significantly reduced food intake and caloric consumption over a 4-week period.

๐Ÿฆด
Extraordinary manganese (441% RDI)

Pine nuts provide 8.8mg of manganese per 100g โ€” 441% of the daily requirement โ€” the highest concentration of any commonly consumed nut by a significant margin. Manganese is essential for bone development, wound healing, carbohydrate metabolism and the antioxidant enzyme superoxide dismutase (MnSOD), which protects mitochondria from oxidative damage.

โค๏ธ
Heart health โ€” monounsaturated fats and antioxidants

Pine nuts' fat profile is dominated by oleic acid (monounsaturated) and pinolenic acid, with meaningful vitamin E (52% RDI) providing antioxidant protection for the cardiovascular system. Mediterranean populations consuming pine nuts regularly as part of traditional cuisine consistently show favourable cardiovascular disease profiles in population studies.

๐Ÿ›ก๏ธ
Immune and bone health โ€” vitamin K and zinc

Pine nuts provide 45% of daily vitamin K per 100g โ€” essential for bone mineralisation and blood clotting โ€” and 54% of daily zinc โ€” critical for immune cell function, wound healing and testosterone synthesis. This combination makes pine nuts a practical immune and bone health food, particularly for people following plant-based diets where zinc can be harder to obtain.

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โš ๏ธ Who should limit or avoid

๐Ÿ‘…
Pine mouth (dysgeusia) โ€” rare but distinctive

A small percentage of people experience 'pine mouth' (metallic or bitter taste disturbance lasting 2 weeks to 1 month) after eating certain pine nuts โ€” primarily Chinese pine nuts (Pinus armandii). This is NOT an allergy โ€” it is a metabolic reaction to specific fatty acids in certain Asian pine species. The reaction resolves completely without treatment. European pine nuts (Pinus pinea, Italian pignoli) and Korean pine nuts (Pinus koraiensis) rarely cause this reaction. Check the country of origin on packaging.

๐Ÿ’Š
Warfarin interaction โ€” high Vitamin K

Pine nuts provide 45% of daily vitamin K per 100g โ€” one of the highest of any nut. People on warfarin (anticoagulant therapy) should maintain consistent pine nut intake and inform their doctor of any significant dietary changes involving vitamin K-rich foods.

โš–๏ธ
Very calorie-dense โ€” portion awareness essential

At 673 kcal per 100g, pine nuts are the most calorie-dense nut alongside macadamias. A 30g serve provides approximately 202 calories. In culinary use (pasta, pesto, salads) small amounts (15โ€“20g) are typical and appropriate.

โœ… For most healthy adults, pine nuts are a nutritious and distinctive culinary ingredient and snack in typical serving sizes (15โ€“30g). They are particularly notable for their appetite-suppressing pinolenic acid content and extraordinary manganese concentration.
โš•๏ธ General nutritional information only โ€” not a substitute for professional medical or dietary advice.

๐Ÿ›’ How to select & buy pine nuts

1
Choose European or Korean pine nuts โ€” avoid Chinese pine nuts (pine mouth risk)

Pinus armandii (Chinese pine nut) is the primary cause of pine mouth syndrome. Look for labels indicating Italian, Spanish, Portuguese or Korean origin โ€” these species (Pinus pinea, Pinus koraiensis) rarely cause the reaction. In Australian supermarkets, the country of origin is not always clear โ€” ask at the deli or choose premium-labelled Italian pignoli for safety. Health food stores and European food importers are more likely to stock identified origin product.

2
Check freshness โ€” pine nuts go rancid very quickly

Pine nuts have a higher proportion of polyunsaturated fat than most nuts (particularly pinolenic acid) which makes them extremely susceptible to oxidation. Fresh pine nuts are ivory-white to pale cream in colour with a sweet, resinous, mild flavour. Rancid pine nuts smell sour, sharp or turpentine-like and have a bitter aftertaste. Buy small quantities from stores with high turnover โ€” avoid large bags unless you plan to freeze.

3
Toast lightly before using โ€” dramatically improves flavour

Dry-toasting pine nuts in a pan over medium heat for 2โ€“3 minutes transforms their flavour โ€” the Maillard reaction creates complex nutty, buttery, sweet notes that raw pine nuts lack. Stir constantly as they burn in seconds. Cool completely before adding to dishes. Toasted pine nuts stored at room temperature lose quality quickly โ€” toast fresh in small batches.

๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡บ Australian tip: All pine nuts sold in Australia are imported โ€” primarily from China, Korea, Italy and Spain. There is no commercial pine nut production in Australia as domestic pine species (primarily Pinus radiata plantation timber pines) do not produce edible nuts at commercial scale. For the best pine nuts: Italian delicatessens in Sydney, Melbourne and Adelaide typically stock superior-quality Italian pignoli (more expensive but better flavour and no pine mouth risk). Asian grocery stores stock Korean pine nuts at good prices. Coles and Woolworths carry standard imported product โ€” check labels for country of origin when possible.

๐ŸงŠ Storage tips & shelf life

Pantry
1โ€“2 months maximum
Sealed airtight container, cool dark

Pine nuts have the shortest pantry life of any nut due to their pinolenic acid content oxidising rapidly. Only keep small quantities at room temperature if using within a few weeks. In warm Australian summers, move to fridge immediately after purchase.

โ„๏ธ
Refrigerator
3โ€“6 months
Airtight glass jar, opaque container

Essential for pine nuts in Australian conditions. Refrigeration is the standard storage method recommended by all quality suppliers. Keep in an opaque container as light accelerates rancidity. Always smell before using โ€” the difference between fresh and rancid pine nuts is dramatic and unmistakable.

๐ŸงŠ
Freezer
Up to 12 months
Zip-lock bag, air removed

Best storage option โ€” freezing halts oxidation completely. Buy in larger quantities and freeze in 50g portions (a typical pesto recipe quantity). Use directly from frozen in cooking โ€” no thawing needed. Frozen pine nuts toast just as well as fresh-refrigerated.

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๐Ÿ“– About pine nuts โ€” complete guide

Pine nuts have been harvested from wild pine forests for at least 10,000 years across the Mediterranean basin, Central Asia and East Asia โ€” making them one of the oldest continuously gathered food sources in the human diet. Stone age cave sites in the Levant, Mediterranean Europe and the Caucasus consistently yield carbonised pine nut remains. The Romans spread Mediterranean stone pine (Pinus pinea) cultivation throughout their empire, and pine nut consumption is documented in ancient Egyptian, Greek, Roman and Chinese culinary traditions. Today the global pine nut trade is dominated by China (Korean pine, Pinus koraiensis) and the Mediterranean (stone pine, Pinus pinea) with a combined annual harvest of approximately 100,000 tonnes โ€” making pine nuts the most labour-intensive and therefore expensive nut in mainstream commerce.

Pine mouth syndrome โ€” the metallic or bitter taste disturbance lasting 2 days to 4 weeks after eating certain pine nuts โ€” was first formally described in medical literature in 2001 and has been reported in tens of thousands of cases globally since. The mechanism remains incompletely understood, but it is associated primarily with Pinus armandii (Chinese white pine) โ€” a species that entered the commercial supply chain from China after 2000 as a lower-cost alternative to Korean and European pine nuts. The syndrome is not an allergy (no immune response), not caused by toxins, and resolves completely โ€” but the bitter metallic flavour that turns all food unpalatable for weeks has generated significant consumer distress and regulatory attention. The practical advice is to buy pine nuts with identified geographic origin (Italian, Korean) from reputable sources.

โš–๏ธ Compare pine nuts to similar nuts

Pine Nuts
673 kcal
VS
Macadamia
VS
Walnut
VS
Almonds
Compare in full tool โ†’

๐Ÿ’ก Interesting facts about pine nuts

๐Ÿ‘…
1
Pine mouth syndrome โ€” eating certain pine nuts causes everything to taste bitter for up to a month
Pine mouth (dysgeusia) was first formally reported in 2001 and has since been documented in thousands of cases globally. Affected individuals experience a persistent metallic or bitter taste for 2 days to 4 weeks after consuming Chinese pine nuts (Pinus armandii). Every food and drink tastes unpleasantly bitter. The syndrome resolves completely without treatment but has no effective remedy during the episode. Italian and Korean pine nuts (Pinus pinea, P. koraiensis) rarely cause this reaction.
โฑ๏ธ
2
Pine nut trees take 25โ€“75 years to produce their first commercial harvest โ€” the most patient crop in agriculture
Pinus pinea (stone pine) takes 25โ€“75 years before producing its first commercial pine cone yield. A single mature tree takes 3 years to complete a full cone cycle from pollination to mature seed. Harvesting involves waiting for cones to fall or knocking them from trees, then laboriously cracking the hard outer shell to reach the equally hard inner shell, then cracking that to reach the tiny nut. This is why pine nuts are approximately 50โ€“100 times more expensive per kilogram than most other tree nuts.
๐Ÿƒ
3
Authentic pesto Genovese requires Italian pignoli pine nuts โ€” substitutes are nutritionally different
The UNESCO-listed recipe for traditional Pesto alla Genovese specifies Pinus pinea (stone pine) nuts โ€” the Italian pignoli variety. These have a distinctly sweeter, more resinous flavour than Chinese pine nuts and are significantly larger. While sunflower seeds, cashews or almonds are popular pesto substitutes for cost reasons, they produce a nutritionally and flavour-different product. Italian pine nuts are 5โ€“8 times more expensive than Chinese pine nuts but produce authentic pesto flavour.
๐Ÿฟ๏ธ
4
Pine nuts are harvested by both humans and animals โ€” squirrels, birds and bears compete with human collectors
In wild-harvesting regions of China, Kazakhstan and Siberia, pine nut collection is a competitive enterprise involving human collectors, Eurasian red squirrels, Siberian jays and brown bears โ€” all dependent on the mast year cycle of pine cone production. Mast years (high production) occur every 3โ€“7 years for most pine species. In years between mast production, human collectors harvest very little โ€” pine nut pricing in global markets fluctuates significantly based on mast year cycles.
๐ŸŒฟ
5
Pine nuts are the only ingredient that makes pesto an authentic Ligurian dish โ€” the name comes from the Genoese word for 'to pound'
The word 'pesto' derives from the Genoese dialect word pestรข (to pound, to crush) โ€” referencing the traditional mortar-and-pestle preparation method. Pesto alla Genovese from the Ligurian region of northwest Italy is protected under EU geographic indication rules. The original recipe combines Genovese basil, Ligurian extra-virgin olive oil, Parmigiano-Reggiano, Pecorino Sardo and Pinus pinea pine nuts. The chemical interaction between pine nut oils and crushed basil produces flavour compounds not achievable with other nut substitutes.
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