How Many Calories Are In Cooked Mushrooms? | Smart Plate Math

Cooked mushrooms land around 26–56 calories per 100 g, with the exact number shaped by type and cooking method.

What Changes The Calories When You Cook Mushrooms

Two levers move the numbers: water and fat. Mushrooms start with high water content. Heat drives steam off, so each bite can become more calorie-dense per gram even when the total in the pan stays modest. Add oil or butter, and you’re adding pure energy on top. Pan sprays or measured teaspoons keep that in check.

Variety also matters. Shiitake tends to sit higher than white or cremini on a per-weight basis. Portobello sits near the middle when grilled. Those differences show up clearly in lab-based databases that pull from USDA reference sets and lab analyses, such as MyFoodData and linked FoodData Central entries (cooked white button profile and grilled portobello profile).

Calories By Type And Cooking Method (Per 100 G)

This table gives a broad view across common varieties. Values come from lab databases built on USDA data and are rounded for readability.

Mushroom Type Cook Method Calories (per 100 g)
White Button Boiled, drained ~28–44
White Button Stir-fried ~26
Portobello Grilled ~35
Shiitake Cooked (moist heat) ~56

Numbers shift with moisture loss and added fat. Boiled mushrooms keep oil out, so the range stays low. Stir-frying can still be lean with a light spray. Grilling concentrates flavor and keeps oil use minimal. Shiitake brings a firmer bite and a higher reading per 100 g.

Calories In Sautéed And Roasted Mushrooms — Serving Guide

Most of us scoop by the cup, not by the lab gram. So the next step is to translate pan data into plated portions. One cup of cooked white pieces clocks in at 44 calories for a standard 156-gram cup, while a cup of cooked shiitake pieces hits 81 calories at about 145 grams per cup, based on lab entries that reference USDA datasets. Those values help you scale recipes without guesswork.

Fiber and minerals add to the appeal. A cup of cooked white pieces brings a helpful mix of potassium, selenium, copper, and B-vitamins alongside a few grams of fiber, which supports satiety. If you’re tuning your roughage for the day, aligning portions to your recommended fiber intake makes menu planning easier without changing your calories much.

How Cooking Style Shifts The Calorie Count

Boiling Or Steaming

Great when you want clean flavors and the lowest added energy. Boiling sheds water, but it doesn’t pack in fat. Use this route for soups, stews, and meal prep when you plan to sauce later.

Sautéing

Heat, contact, and a little oil create browning. The skillet can swing the math: a tablespoon of oil adds about 120 kcal to the pan. Spread across four servings, that’s ~30 kcal extra per plate. Spray oil or a measured teaspoon keeps the add-on tiny while preserving sear.

Grilling Or Roasting

High heat pushes off more moisture and builds big flavor. Portobello caps shine here. Brush lightly, salt near the end, and you’ll get meaty texture without a heavy energy bump. The per-100-gram figure often sits in the mid-30s for grilled slices drawn from lab references.

Beyond Calories: Standout Nutrients In Cooked Mushrooms

Cooked portions bring B-vitamins (riboflavin, niacin, pantothenic acid), potassium, copper, and selenium in a compact package. When exposed to UV during processing or after harvest, some varieties carry meaningful vitamin D2. The National Institutes of Health notes that several retail mushrooms receive UV to raise vitamin D levels, and UV-treated mushroom powder is an approved additive in foods (NIH ODS vitamin D fact sheet).

Adding a serving to common eating patterns increases fiber and certain micronutrients with only a small nudge in energy intake, according to a modeling paper published in a peer-reviewed journal (dietary modeling analysis).

Portion Math You Can Use Tonight

Here’s a quick, practical set of cooked portions you’ll see in recipes and on the plate. Match the serving that fits your dish and tally the calories with confidence.

Serving Usual Weight Calories
1 cup cooked white pieces ~156 g ~44 kcal
1 cup cooked shiitake pieces ~145 g ~81 kcal
Grilled portobello (100 g) 100 g ~35 kcal

How To Keep Calories Low While Boosting Flavor

Use Heat First, Fat Second

Let moisture steam off in a dry pan for a minute or two. Then add a teaspoon of olive oil to finish the sear. You’ll get browning with far fewer added calories.

Salt Later, Not Early

Salting early pulls water fast and steams the pan. Season near the end. You’ll keep surface heat high and use less oil to chase color.

Lean Sauces And Finishes

Toss with chopped parsley, lemon zest, garlic, and a splash of vinegar. Finish with a small pat of butter only if you want a richer edge. Measure it; the difference shows up on the plate.

Popular Varieties, Quick Calorie Notes

White And Cremini (Agaricus Bisporus)

Workhorse mushrooms for weeknights and meal prep. Boiled or steamed, they’re at the low end of the calorie range. Sautéed with spray oil, they still sit low per 100 g while delivering plenty of umami.

Portobello

Great for grilling or broiling. A mid-range reading per 100 g makes it an easy burger swap. For big caps, scrape gills, brush lightly, and cook hot to shed moisture fast.

Shiitake

Chewy, concentrated, and flavorful. Per 100 g, cooked shiitake is higher than white or portobello. Trim the stems for tenderness and save them for stock.

Sample One-Pan Formula

Weeknight Skillet Mushrooms

Ingredients

  • 450 g mixed mushrooms, sliced
  • 1 tsp olive oil + pan spray
  • 2 cloves garlic, minced
  • Salt and pepper
  • Fresh herbs to finish

Method

  1. Preheat a wide skillet. Add mushrooms to a dry pan and cook 2–3 minutes, stirring, to release water.
  2. Spray, then add 1 tsp oil. Add garlic. Cook until browned at the edges.
  3. Season and finish with herbs. Serve over grains, into omelets, or next to lean protein.

Per serving (makes four): the pan adds ~40 kcal total from oil, so about 10 kcal per plate beyond the mushrooms themselves.

FAQ-Free Quick Answers Inside The Copy

Do Different Cuts Change Calories?

Slices shed water faster than halves, which nudges density a bit, but the real driver is fat added during cooking. Keep that measured and your totals stay predictable.

What About Vitamin D?

UV-exposed products can carry meaningful vitamin D2. Labels may mention “UV-treated” or list vitamin D content. Cooking keeps much of it, and the NIH’s professional sheet confirms UV treatment as a standard route for boosting levels in retail mushrooms.

Bring It All Together

If you just want the math: cup for cup, cooked white pieces are about 44 kcal, cooked shiitake pieces are about 81 kcal, and a grilled portobello sits near the mid-30s per 100 g based on lab-sourced profiles. Keep oil modest, cook hot enough to brown, and you’ll get big flavor without a big energy bump.

Want a simple target for the rest of your day? Try our daily calorie targets for planning.