European plum

European Plum · Prunus domestica

Prune puree

Nutrition facts per 100 g · edible portion

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Dietary labels are inferred automatically from Prune puree's food group, name and nutrient profile — a helpful guide, not a guarantee. Recipes and brands vary, so always read the label on packaged foods.

13%
257 kcal Calories
4%
2.1 g Protein
24%
65.1 g Carbs
0%
0.2 g Fat

Fair nutrient density 16/100

How many beneficial nutrients Prune puree delivers for its calories — scored across 24 vitamins, minerals, protein and fiber, minus saturated fat and sodium. See the most nutrient-dense foods.

Caloric ratio

Where the calories in Prune puree come from — the split across carbs, fat & protein.

What Prune puree is a good source of

Stand-out nutrients per 100 g, by share of your Daily Value.

Potassium18% Niacin (B3)16% Iron16% Dietary Fiber12% Vitamin A (RAE)11%

Full nutrition breakdown

  • Beneficial
  • Moderate
  • Limit
  • Neutral

Bars are shaded by how a high amount affects your diet — green for nutrients to seek out (fiber, protein, vitamins), red for those best kept low (saturated fat, sodium, cholesterol), neutral where it depends. Each bar shows the % of your Daily Value per serving.

CarbohydratesAmount% DV
Total Carbohydrate65.1 g
24%
Dietary Fiber3.3 g
12%
Total Sugars39.0 g
Fats & Fatty AcidsAmount% DV
Total Fat0.2 g
0%
Saturated Fat0.0 g
0%
Trans Fat0.0 g
Protein & Amino AcidsAmount% DV
Protein2.1 g
4%
MineralsAmount% DV
Calcium31.0 mg
2%
Iron2.8 mg
16%
Magnesium~
Phosphorus72.0 mg
6%
Potassium852.0 mg
18%
Sodium23.0 mg
1%
Zinc~
SterolsAmount% DV
Cholesterol0.0 mg
0%
Phytosterols~
OtherAmount% DV
Alcohol~
Caffeine~
Theobromine~
Ash2.6 g

About Prune puree

The European plum (Prunus domestica) is a sweet, juicy stone fruit with smooth skin in shades of purple, blue, red, or golden, and firm, honeyed, amber flesh. This is the type best known for drying into prunes, and it tends to be denser, sweeter, and less watery than the round Japanese plum, which makes it ideal for baking, canning, and preserves; the small, deep-blue Italian prune plum is a classic example.

Plums are low in calories and provide fiber, vitamin C, vitamin K, potassium, and antioxidants, while their dried form, prunes, is well known for supporting healthy digestion. They are delicious eaten fresh out of hand, baked into tarts, cakes, and cobblers, simmered into jam and plum butter, roasted to deepen their sweetness, and even distilled into brandy such as slivovitz. Choose plums that yield slightly to gentle pressure and smell fragrant at the stem end, ripen firm fruit at room temperature in a paper bag, then refrigerate them and enjoy within a few days at their juicy best.

Source: USDA FoodData Central & FooDB. Values are per 100 g, edible portion.

Frequently asked questions

How many calories are in Prune puree?

There are 257 calories in 100 g of Prune puree, or about 93 calories in 2 tbsp (36 g).

How much protein is in Prune puree?

Prune puree contains 2.1 g of protein per 100 g.

How many carbs are in Prune puree?

Prune puree has 65.1 g of carbohydrates per 100 g.

How much fat is in Prune puree?

Prune puree provides 0.2 g of total fat per 100 g.

What is Prune puree a good source of?

Prune puree is a good source of Potassium, Niacin (B3), Iron, Dietary Fiber and Vitamin A (RAE) (per 100 g). Daily Values are based on a 2,000-calorie diet.

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