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Grape — image 1 of 1
Fruit

Grape

49/ 100

Grapes are nutrient-dense fruits rich in polyphenols, particularly resveratrol and anthocyanins, with a favorable carbohydrate profile and significant potassium content supporting cardiovascular health.

Variants (2)

Nutrition · per ~140 g serving · ≈ 1 medium piece

🔥 Calories
120/ 2000 kcal day
🥩Protein1.3 g3% DV
🍞Carbs28.3 g10% DV
🥑Fat0.2 g<1% DV
🌿Fiber0.0 g<1% DV
Vitamins
  • Vitamin C4.6 mg5% DV
Minerals
  • Copper0.11 mg13% DV
  • Potassium321.2 mg7% DV
  • Manganese0.14 mg6% DV
  • Magnesium12.0 mg3% DV
  • Phosphorus34.8 mg3% DV
  • Iron0.23 mg1% DV
  • Calcium14.2 mg1% DV
  • Zinc0.05 mg<1% DV
  • Sodium9.8 mg<1% DV
BioactivesEstimated
  • Anthocyanins~280 mg
  • Resveratrol~1.4 mg
  • Polyphenols~210 mg
Estimated typical amounts — derived from this food's profile, not measured for this item. Real bioactive content varies widely by variety, ripeness, storage and preparation; use as a rough guide only.
Source: USDA FDC · 2263890

Score · 49/100

Nutrient Density6.2 / 35

Vitamins & minerals packed in relative to calories — the single biggest driver of the score.

Protein Quality3.2 / 15

How much protein it delivers, by absolute grams and per calorie.

Fiber Content5.0 / 10

Dietary fiber for gut health, satiety and steadier blood sugar.

Healthy Fats5.0 / 10

Fat quality — unsaturated vs saturated, and trans-fat free.

Bioactives11.0 / 15

Polyphenols, flavonoids and other beneficial plant compounds for this food group.

Glycemic Impact8.5 / 10

Low sugar with a high fiber-to-carb ratio scores best — gentler on blood sugar.

Top Nutrients
  • Copper9% DV
  • Potassium5% DV
  • Manganese4% DV
  • Vitamin C4% DV
  • Magnesium2% DV

Overview

Grapes (Vitis species) have been cultivated for over 8,000 years across Mediterranean and temperate regions worldwide. Both red/purple and green varieties offer distinct polyphenolic profiles, with darker grapes containing higher concentrations of anthocyanins and resveratrol—compounds extensively studied for cardiovascular and neuroprotective effects. With 229 mg potassium per 100g and minimal sodium, grapes support healthy blood pressure regulation crucial for longevity. The natural sugars (glucose and fructose) provide quick energy while the low fiber content (noted as 0g in some databases, though whole grapes contain ~0.9g) means rapid glucose absorption—important context for metabolic health. Grapes contain negligible calories but deliver meaningful micronutrients including vitamin C, manganese, and copper. The skin contains the majority of bioactive compounds; whole grape consumption outperforms juice due to polyphenol concentration and the additional benefit of natural compounds in seeds (proanthocyanidins). Red and purple grapes specifically demonstrate superior antioxidant capacity compared to white varieties. Scientific literature supports grape consumption for endothelial function, arterial flexibility, and cognitive aging prevention, making them a foundational longevity food when consumed whole.

Health Benefits (5)

  • Improved vascular endothelial function and arterial elasticity
    strong
    Resveratrol and anthocyanins activate nitric oxide production in blood vessel walls, enhancing vasodilation and reducing arterial stiffness—key markers of cardiovascular aging
  • Enhanced cognitive function and reduced neurodegenerative risk
    moderate
    Polyphenols cross the blood-brain barrier and reduce neuroinflammation via microglial activation suppression; anthocyanins specifically protect against amyloid-beta accumulation
  • Reduced blood pressure and hypertension risk
    moderate
    High potassium content (229 mg/100g) supports sodium-potassium pump function; resveratrol enhances endothelial relaxation and reduces vascular resistance
  • Improved insulin sensitivity and glucose metabolism
    moderate
    Polyphenols, particularly in grape skins, enhance insulin-signaling pathways and reduce postprandial glucose spikes through alpha-glucosidase inhibition
  • Enhanced antioxidant defense and reduced systemic inflammation
    strong
    Resveratrol and anthocyanins upregulate endogenous antioxidant enzymes (SOD, catalase) and inhibit NF-κB inflammatory signaling

Food Pairings

  • ·Pair with nuts (almonds, walnuts) because polyphenols enhance absorption of fat-soluble compounds and nut polyphenols create synergistic antioxidant effects
  • ·Combine with dark leafy greens (spinach, kale) because grape polyphenols reduce iron oxidation, improving non-heme iron bioavailability from greens
  • ·Eat with yogurt or kefir because polyphenols promote beneficial Lactobacillus growth, supporting the SCFA-producing microbiome
  • ·Pair with green tea because both share catechin polyphenols, creating additive anti-inflammatory and antioxidant effects with complementary absorption kinetics

Practical Tips

  • ·Consume whole grapes with skins and seeds rather than juice; 80% of polyphenols reside in skin and seeds, with significant loss during juice processing
  • ·Choose red, purple, or black varieties over green grapes; anthocyanin content is 2-3x higher, directly correlating with antioxidant capacity
  • ·Store grapes in the refrigerator in a breathable container; they maintain polyphenol integrity for 5-7 days at 4°C but lose potency rapidly at room temperature
  • ·Freeze fresh grapes for a low-glycemic snack that concentrates polyphenols and extends storage; freezing ruptures cell walls, slightly increasing polyphenol bioavailability
  • ·Source organic grapes when possible; conventional grape farming uses heavy pesticide loads, and peeling eliminates the polyphenol-rich skin

Optimal Timing

🕒
anytime
Best with food

Grapes provide sustained energy via natural sugars with minimal glycemic impact when consumed whole due to fiber and polyphenol-mediated glucose regulation. Morning consumption supports cognitive function; post-exercise consumption replenishes glycogen without hyperglycemic response. No circadian-dependent nutrient absorption limits timing.

While grapes break a fast due to carbohydrate content, they're superior to refined carbohydrates for post-fasting meals due to polyphenol-mediated insulin sensitivity enhancement.

Systems supported

body systems this food feeds

Pathways supported

biochemical reactions enabled by this food