Measuring Cups
trackmyday1973
Posts: 393 Member
Hello,
I have a question. I was wondering if the measuring cups at the dollar store are as accurate as any other measuring cups. I was reading online (I know you can't trust everything you read on the net). They say that since those types of measuring cups are made in China, they don't measure accuracy. I don't know. I just need a new set, and was wondering if the ones at the dollar store are as reliable.
Thank you
I have a question. I was wondering if the measuring cups at the dollar store are as accurate as any other measuring cups. I was reading online (I know you can't trust everything you read on the net). They say that since those types of measuring cups are made in China, they don't measure accuracy. I don't know. I just need a new set, and was wondering if the ones at the dollar store are as reliable.
Thank you
0
Replies
-
Hey - I found a complete set of measuring cups and measuring spoons at Walmart for less than 5 bucks....And Made in America....LOl/// now I have to find a kitchen scale.....0
-
Liquid measuring cups (usually see-through) and dry measuring cups (usually opaque plastic or stainless steel) measure slightly differently, but that's the way it's supposed to be. For me, it's not a problem. I use dry measures to measure my food and almond milk. If you're making a recipe, however, it could cause a slight difference in the outcome of the product. I've never heard of the ones made in China being inaccurate, but I wouldn't be surprised. For my needs it wouldn't matter if they're off a little.0
-
Measuring cups should really only be used for measuring liquids... get a kitchen scale for any food for accuracy.
The measuring cups at the dollar store are fine. I have some. You can get them for 2-5 at places like walmart or target as well.0 -
Hey - I found a complete set of measuring cups and measuring spoons at Walmart for less than 5 bucks....And Made in America....LOl/// now I have to find a kitchen scale.....
My mom just picked up an awesome new food scale on a clearance rack at Walmart for $80 -
I would for sure spend the money a go for a food scale. You will be amazed at the difference of a measuring cup/spoons compared to scales on some items!0
-
Thank you everyone for your wonderful help0
-
I bought my Measuring cups at Walmart.
Also bought a diet scale for $11.00 and works great, I use it all of the time.
It measures in Ounces and Grams.0 -
SO for everyone recommending scales over measuring cups --- what do you do about recipes? All my recipes (and most of the entries in MFP are by volume, not weight.0
-
SO for everyone recommending scales over measuring cups --- what do you do about recipes? All my recipes (and most of the entries in MFP are by volume, not weight.
Great question! I'm wondering that as well.0 -
You would be more accurate with a set of volumetric flasks than measuring cups.
If your going to use a food scale don't forget to calibrate it as well!
Or I mean you could live your life loose and just accept a certain amount of inaccuracy.0 -
SO for everyone recommending scales over measuring cups --- what do you do about recipes? All my recipes (and most of the entries in MFP are by volume, not weight.
It's going to take some work but look up online what the volume measurements should weight. This link has some for flour at the bottom of the page.
http://www.browneyedbaker.com/2009/07/16/volume-weight-baking-why-should-weigh-ingredients/0 -
Hey - I found a complete set of measuring cups and measuring spoons at Walmart for less than 5 bucks....And Made in America....LOl/// now I have to find a kitchen scale.....
I found a set of cups and spoons at Walmart on clearance for 88 cents. I compared them to my existing cups and spoons (which includes a few old Tupperware cups) and they were accurate with the mismatched sets I currently have.
The scale is really the most accurate way to measure your food though.
edited for spelling0 -
There are plenty of recipes (and MFP entries) in weight - you have probably just always pikced the volume because thet's what you're used to (like a cup of pasta rather than 75g). Most online recipe sites based in the US offer metric conversion, all UK sites (such as BBCgoodfood.co.uk) will automatically offer metric and (UK)imperial measures. If you google "US volume conversion chart" or similar you should come up with a good guideline - that's what I did when I started using US recipes and needed metric measurements.
I couldn't manage without scales. I have measuring cups (a relic from my Pampered Chef days!) but really only use them for US breadmaker recipes.0 -
When recipes call for cups say 1.5 cups of flour I find what one cup of flour weighs (by measuring it myself each time) and then add another half of what it weighed.
It's much easier for baking etc to use grams as you need more accuracy.0 -
Measuring cups should really only be used for measuring liquids... get a kitchen scale for any food for accuracy.
No. there is no logic here since you can use your food scale to measure ounces as well.
Measuring cups and spoons are quite necessary when cooking and baking.0 -
SO for everyone recommending scales over measuring cups --- what do you do about recipes? All my recipes (and most of the entries in MFP are by volume, not weight.
You can look up conversion charts for this online :drinker:0 -
SO for everyone recommending scales over measuring cups --- what do you do about recipes? All my recipes (and most of the entries in MFP are by volume, not weight.0
-
Measuring cups should really only be used for measuring liquids... get a kitchen scale for any food for accuracy.
No. there is no logic here since you can use your food scale to measure ounces as well.
Measuring cups and spoons are quite necessary when cooking and baking.
A food scale is essential for accuracy when counting food calories. Food scales measure ounces because of things like meat, which are normally listed as oz a serving... dry pasta has an oz listing and a grams listing normally. A measuring cup or spoon is a LIQUID measure. There are measurements for ounces by weight or ounces by volume (normally with liquids). Ounces by weight don't always equal ounces by volume. 1 cup is equal to 8 fluid ounces, but a cup of say flour may not equal 8 ounces.
My oatmeal for example is 1/3 cup as a serving which is also listed as I believe 35 grams. When I weight out that 1/3 cup of oatmeal it weights over 40 grams.
My one level scoop of protein powder weighs more than what it should based on the label.
My serving of serving based on the measuring cup amount weighs more than it should. A few things a day that are counted as less than they should be can really add up.
Using measuring cups or spoons for food is not accurate which is where the kitchen scale comes in. There are a lot of recipes out there that have measurements listed as grams. Sure, some will have it in cups or tbsp., tsp, etc however that can easily be changed to grams.0 -
I use standard measuring cups and spoons for baking, etc. Dry measuring cups for flour, etc and liquid cups for liquid. I use the scale for weighing things like pasta, meats, cereals for more accuracy when cooking individual items.0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.4K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 424 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions