Buckwheat Groats (Whole, Cooked)

Buckwheat Groats (Whole, Cooked)

FamilyPolygonaceae
Importance
Cooked buckwheat groats are a whole pseudo-grain with a strong nutritional identity built around complex carbohydrates, fiber, magnesium, manganese, copper, phosphorus, complete plant protein, lysine, rutin, quercetin, resistant starch, and phenolic acids. Per 100 g cooked, buckwheat provides steady carbohydrate energy, modest protein, low fat, and a broad mineral profile. It is naturally gluten-free and botanically distinct from wheat, yet it functions nutritionally like a whole grain because the cooked groats retain starch, fiber, minerals, and protective seed compounds.

Buckwheat supports cancer-focused nutrition through antioxidant defense, fiber fermentation, mineral-supported enzyme activity, and polyphenol signaling. Rutin and quercetin help reduce oxidative pressure that can affect DNA, proteins, and cell membranes. Fiber supports bowel movement quality, gut microbial fermentation, short-chain fatty acid production, and intestinal barrier function. Magnesium supports ATP metabolism, phosphorylation reactions, and enzymes involved in energy production and cellular repair. Manganese supports antioxidant enzyme systems, while copper supports redox balance and connective-tissue metabolism. These features connect buckwheat to antioxidant response, vascular support, digestive regulation, cellular energy, and repair pathways.

For ailments, cooked buckwheat groats are especially relevant where poor satiety, low fiber intake, sluggish digestion, mineral insufficiency, vascular strain, or unstable meal energy are part of the pattern. Its carbohydrate content is meaningful, but it is paired with fiber, protein, minerals, rutin, and other phenolic compounds. Buckwheat protein fractions and phenolic compounds have been studied for effects on alpha-amylase and alpha-glucosidase, two enzymes that help break starch into absorbable sugars. This makes insulin a valid linked hormone because starch digestion directly influences post-meal glucose and insulin response.

The strongest pathways for cooked buckwheat include carbohydrate digestion, insulin-related glucose handling, fiber fermentation, magnesium-supported ATP metabolism, manganese-supported antioxidant defense, rutin and quercetin antioxidant activity, nitric-oxide-related vascular support, gut barrier support, and polyphenol inflammatory-signaling balance. Cooked buckwheat groats are best used as a whole-grain-style base that adds steady energy, fiber, minerals, complete protein, lysine, rutin, quercetin, and phenolic acids to meals. Their value comes from combining whole-grain satiety with strong flavonoid chemistry and mineral density, making them useful for digestive balance, vascular health, cellular protection, metabolic support, and long-term resilience.
Region FoundNative to Central and East Asia and historically cultivated in China, the Himalayan region, Russia, eastern Europe, and Japan; now grown across Asia, Europe, North America, and other cool temperate agricultural regions.
Glycemic Index49.0
Glycemic Load9.40
Helps Fight These Cancers: Colorectal Cancer, Breast Cancer, Prostate Cancer (Via Polyphenol Antioxidant Signaling)
Helps Fight These Ailments: Type 2 Diabetes, Hypertension, Chronic Inflammation, Varicose Veins, Gluten Sensitivity
Linked Hormones:
SUMMARY OF EFFECTS ON THE BODY
Immune System
Rutin + quercetin reduce inflammatory oxidative stress
Cardiovascular
Rutin strengthens capillaries and supports vascular elasticity
Digestive System
Resistant starch feeds butyrate-producing gut microbes
Skin & Collagen
Antioxidants reduce collagen glycation damage
Cellular Repair
Magnesium + manganese support mitochondrial enzyme defenses

All values per 100g
Nutrition Facts
Calories (kcal)92
Protein (g)3.4
Carbohydrates (g)19.9
Fiber (g)2.7
Sugars (g)0.3
Total Fat (g)0.62
Saturated Fat (g)0.133
Vitamins
Vitamin A (µg RAE)0
Vitamin C (mg)0
Vitamin D (µg)0
Vitamin E (mg)0.1
Vitamin K (µg)1.6
Vitamin B1 / Thiamin (mg)0.061
Vitamin B2 / Riboflavin (mg)0.019
Vitamin B3 / Niacin (mg)0.231
Vitamin B5 / Pantothenic Acid (mg)0.131
Vitamin B6 (mg)0.021
Vitamin B7 / Biotin (µg)0
Folate B9 (µg)14
Vitamin B12 (µg)0
Vitamin Detail Pages
Minerals
Calcium (mg)7
Iron (mg)0.8
Magnesium (mg)51
Phosphorus (mg)70
Potassium (mg)88
Sodium (mg)3
Zinc (mg)0.74
Copper (mg)0.155
Manganese (mg)0.44
Selenium (µg)1.3
Iodine (µg)0
Mineral Detail Pages
Amino Acids
Alanine (mg)112 mg
Arginine (mg)210 mg
Asparagine (mg)0 mg
Aspartic Acid (mg)203 mg
Cysteine (mg)41 mg
Glutamic Acid (mg)401 mg
Glutamine (mg)0 mg
Glycine (mg)115 mg
Histidine (mg)64 mg
Isoleucine (mg)87 mg
Leucine (mg)150 mg
Lysine (mg)117 mg
Methionine (mg)32 mg
Phenylalanine (mg)101 mg
Proline (mg)108 mg
Serine (mg)113 mg
Threonine (mg)83 mg
Tryptophan (mg)28 mg
Tyrosine (mg)47 mg
Valine (mg)111 mg
Amino Acid Detail Pages
Phytochemicals
Rutin, quercetin, orientin, vitexin, isovitexin, catechin, epicatechin, phenolic acids, ferulic acid, caffeic acid, chlorogenic acid, resistant starch, soluble fiber, insoluble fiber, phytosterols, fagopyritols, D-chiro-inositol
Research & Notes
Research Notes:
USDA FDC cooked buckwheat. Rutin is a major bioactive — improves capillary elasticity. GI ≈ 49, GL ≈ 10. Asparagine + glutamine not reported → NULL.
Notes:
Cooling increases resistant starch → supports butyrate production and gut barrier healing.
Created: 2025-11-07 18:45:11
Last Updated: 2026-06-04 08:14:33