Don't waste time flipping through a measuring cup trying to find a conversion. This quick reference guide has just what you need to convert from the United States, imperial, and metric system right at your fingertips. This measurement conversion chart includes all volume measurements and weight measurements, like half cups, ounces to cups, milliliters to cups, and grams to cups. Cook with confidence, as you'll find the cooking measurement conversion possibilities that matter to you in this measurement converter.
This cooking measurement tool is built in Coda. ? Click a page below to see common cooking measurements and their conversions
Want to see the full conversion tables? Look below:
Half of cups to tbsp and oz
Ounces to cups, tsp, and grams
Milliliters to cups and oz
Grams to cups and oz by ingredient type
This cooking measurement tool is built in Coda. ? Cooking Measurements FAQs
What are cooking measurements?
Cooking measurements are units of measurement used to determine the amount of a particular ingredient for a recipe using standard cooking measurement tools like measuring cups, measuring spoons, or measuring utensils (eg. kitchen scale). Cooking measurements help bring consistency to recipes. A common measure for cooking is “1 cup” which converts to:
What are the types of measurements in cooking?
There are several types of cooking measurements used to measure volume, mass, weight, and temperature of cooking ingredients. For example:
What are the two types of measurement systems?
There are two types of measurement systems used in cooking: metric measurements (liters, grams), and their imperial measurement equivalents in the US imperial system like cups, pints, ounces, etc.
What is the difference between dry measures and liquid measures?
Although dry measuring cups and liquid measuring cups are designed to hold the same volume, we use them for measuring different ingredient types. As their name suggests, dry cups measure dry ingredients (sugar, powder, salt), while liquid cups measure liquid ingredients (syrup, oils, liquid extracts) that the recipe calls for.
What is T in cooking measurements?
Uncapitalized t (or tbs.) in cooking measurements denotes a "teaspoon", while a capitalized letter T refers to "tablespoon".