๐ Full nutrition facts โ per 100g
| Nutrient | Amount | % Daily value | Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| Calories | 525 kcal | 26% | |
| Carbohydrates | 28.1g | 9% | |
| Dietary fibre | 19.5g | 70% | |
| Sugars | 2.99g | โ | |
| GI | ~15 โ Low | โ | |
| Protein | 17.9g | 36% | |
| Calcium | 1438mg | 144% | |
| Iron | 9.8mg | 54% | |
| Manganese | 6.7mg | 338% | |
| Phosphorus | 870mg | 87% | |
| Zinc | 7.9mg | 66% | |
| Magnesium | 347mg | 87% |
Based on Australian NRV. Source: FSANZ Australian Food Composition Database.
๐ Glycaemic index (GI)
๐ Key vitamins & minerals
โ Health benefits
Poppy seeds provide 1438mg of calcium per 100g โ 144% of the daily requirement, the highest calcium concentration of any common seed and comparable to dairy per gram. One tablespoon (9g) of poppy seeds provides approximately 130mg of calcium โ the same as a small glass of milk. Importantly, poppy seed calcium has reasonable bioavailability (approximately 40%) compared to dairy calcium, making poppy seeds a genuinely practical plant-based calcium source.
Poppy seeds provide 19.5g of dietary fibre per 100g โ one of the highest fibre concentrations of any food. A typical 2-tablespoon (18g) serving on a bread or in baking provides 3.5g of fibre. The fibre is primarily insoluble, from the seed coat, supporting bowel regularity and gut microbiome health. When used as a paste (as in Eastern European and Indian cooking), larger serving sizes make poppy seeds a genuinely significant fibre source.
At 9.8mg of iron per 100g, poppy seeds provide more iron than most meats โ 54% of the daily requirement in 100g. For plant-based diets where iron can be challenging to obtain, poppy seeds used as a flavouring ingredient in baking, dressings and cooking provide meaningful iron contribution at relatively small serving sizes. Pair with vitamin C-containing foods to maximise non-haem iron absorption.
The combination of calcium (nerve transmission), phosphorus (ATP energy production and myelin sheath integrity), magnesium (NMDA receptor regulation) and the balanced omega-6 linoleic acid in poppy seeds provides comprehensive nervous system nutritional support. Poppy seed oil โ pressed from the seeds โ is used in fine cuisine and has been studied for its cardiovascular and anti-inflammatory properties.
โ ๏ธ Who should limit or avoid
This is the most practically significant caution for poppy seeds. Poppy seeds come from Papaver somniferum (the opium poppy) and can be contaminated with trace morphine and codeine from contact with the seed pod during harvesting. Even food-grade poppy seeds โ in amounts used in a bagel, muffin or lemon poppy seed cake โ can produce a positive result on workplace drug tests for opioids. Multiple documented cases exist of employment consequences from eating poppy seed products. People subject to drug testing (aviation, transport, law enforcement, healthcare) should be very cautious.
Poppy seed allergy is uncommon but documented. Cross-reactivity with other seeds (sesame, hazelnut) is possible via lipid transfer proteins. Oral allergy syndrome symptoms (mouth tingling, itching) may occur in people with grass pollen sensitivities.
Like most seeds and grains, poppy seeds contain phytic acid that binds minerals and reduces their absorption. Soaking, grinding or cooking poppy seeds reduces phytic acid significantly. The calcium, iron and zinc figures in the nutrition table represent total content โ actual absorbed amounts are somewhat lower. Pairing with vitamin C improves iron absorption.
๐ How to select & buy poppy seeds
Blue-grey poppy seeds (the most common variety in Australia) have a mild, nutty flavour suitable for breads, pastries, salad dressings and lemon poppy seed cakes. White poppy seeds (khus khus) used in Indian and South Asian cooking are slightly smaller, milder and are ground into pastes for curries, korma sauces and desserts. Nutritionally very similar โ choose by culinary application. Blue-grey seeds are widely available in supermarkets; white seeds are found at Indian grocery stores.
Fresh poppy seeds have a clean, mild, pleasant nutty smell. Rancid poppy seeds smell sharp, bitter or like old paint โ this is from linoleic acid oxidation. Always smell before using. Check best-before dates and buy from stores with high turnover. Rancid poppy seeds will make baked goods taste bitter and should not be used. Refrigerate after opening, especially in warm Australian conditions.
Dry-toasting poppy seeds in a pan for 2โ3 minutes over medium heat activates their flavour through the Maillard reaction, intensifying the nutty, slightly sweet profile. Essential for Indian cooking applications (where they are often toasted then ground with other spices). For baking applications, toasting is optional โ raw seeds work well in most pastry and bread recipes where oven heat will toast them during baking anyway.
๐ง Storage tips & shelf life
Poppy seeds are susceptible to rancidity due to their linoleic acid content. Pantry storage is suitable before opening and in cool conditions. Always keep in an opaque container โ light accelerates oxidation. In warm Australian summers, move to fridge immediately after purchase or opening.
Best everyday storage for poppy seeds in Australian conditions. Refrigeration significantly extends freshness and prevents rancidity. Keep in a dark glass jar to prevent light exposure. Always smell before using โ rancid poppy seeds will noticeably affect the flavour of baked goods.
Excellent for long-term storage. Poppy seeds freeze with minimal quality loss. Ideal for buying in larger bulk quantities from Indian grocery stores and freezing in 100g portions for baking use. Measure directly from frozen โ no thawing required for most baking applications.
๐ About poppy seeds โ complete guide
Poppy seeds come from Papaver somniferum โ the opium poppy โ whose cultivation history represents one of the most complex intersections of food, medicine and law in the plant kingdom. The species has been cultivated for at least 5,000 years, with evidence from Neolithic sites in Switzerland and Spain documenting both seed consumption and opium extraction. The food use of the seeds (completely different from the alkaloid-containing latex of the unripe seed pod) has been continuous throughout this history across the Mediterranean, Central Europe, the Middle East and South Asia. Central European baking traditions โ particularly Hungarian, Polish, Czech and Austrian โ have elaborate poppy seed pastry traditions (strudel, kolache, makowiec) where large quantities of ground poppy seed paste are used as a primary flavouring, providing meaningful nutrition alongside extraordinary flavour.
The drug testing issue with poppy seeds represents a rare case where a completely legal, healthy food can have serious legal and employment consequences in specific contexts. The morphine and codeine contamination is not from the seeds themselves but from contact with the latex of the seed pod during harvesting and processing. Studies have shown that eating a bagel or two poppy seed muffins before an opioid drug test can produce blood morphine concentrations above the threshold used by many workplace testing programs. This is well-documented in pharmacology literature โ it is the scientific basis of a legitimate legal defence used in drug test appeals. The practical advice is straightforward: people in safety-critical occupations or subject to regular drug testing should avoid poppy seed-containing foods for at least 24โ48 hours before a test. This does not reflect any psychoactive or impairment risk from eating poppy seeds โ they are safe food at normal culinary amounts.