dry pasta measurement vs cooked pasta - barilla plus? help!

andrea777
andrea777 Posts: 23 Member
edited September 25 in Food and Nutrition
Hi everyone!

So last night we had Barilla Plus Penne for dinner....i measured out one cup exactly of cooked pasta..one cup is 8 oz right! So when i entered it into MFP - turns out to be 840 calories....OMG! So i am thinking it must be a dry measurement. Does anyone know the correct answer for how much cooked pasta is per cup? I have researched a little on the web and found conflicting answers.
Thanks in advance for your help! I almost choked when I saw 840 come up on my food journal...arrrrrrgh!

:noway:
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Replies

  • I think when you are reading 8 oz that is in weight??? 1 c of cooked noodles should not weigh that much...Im not positive, but i think thats what it is?
  • Atlantique
    Atlantique Posts: 2,484 Member
    You generally measure pasta before you cook it. I just weigh it dry on my food scale.

    So if you are cooking for your family, try making your portion in a smaller pot. After you cook it, you can measure it if you want to see how much dry pasta = cooked pasta. Once you've done that a few times, you'll have a good estimate of how to translate dry to cooked measurements.
  • Asomething
    Asomething Posts: 61 Member
    I'm really curious about this too!!! The box's nutritional info lists the serving size as dry pasta, it's very annoying!!!
  • Roukie
    Roukie Posts: 41 Member
    i'm interested to see what people have to say on this as well. I've pretty much cut pasta off my menu because it has alot of calories.
  • ashley0616
    ashley0616 Posts: 579 Member
    Depending on the type of pasta, 2oz dry will generally give you about 1 cup cooked.
  • Oompa_Loompa
    Oompa_Loompa Posts: 1,099 Member
    I have posted a few topics about this as well lol and what ive been told is that pasta doubles when you cook it. So for example 1/2 cup dry comes out to 1 cup cooked.
  • Healthyby30
    Healthyby30 Posts: 1,349 Member
    2oz dry is about equivalent to 1/2 cup dry, which doubles to about 1 cup when cooked.
  • Painten
    Painten Posts: 499 Member
    A lot of pasta packets with the nutritional value will say something like 75g dry makes up 150g cooked. (This is an example and not an accurate measurement.) So if your weighing out cooked pasta, look on the pack to see how much dried would make that much.
  • time2runnn
    time2runnn Posts: 252 Member
    I got to test this out the other night-- I measured out 8oz dry angel hair pasta for my family of 4 and it was about 1c cooked per person.

    And BTW I found this link if it helps any on different kinds of pasta shapes....

    http://www.ilovepasta.org/cooking.html
  • ikeinmass
    ikeinmass Posts: 17
    Uncooked is the figure they give you on the box. Your weight will vary depending on how long you cook it (water absorption) and the type of pasta. Experiment a little and cook your serving separately a few times and you will know how much your pasta will net cooked.
  • smareeh
    smareeh Posts: 117 Member
    2oz is about 1 cup. And that is with most pastas
  • my3kidos
    my3kidos Posts: 19
    You generally measure pasta before you cook it. I just weigh it dry on my food scale.

    So if you are cooking for your family, try making your portion in a smaller pot. After you cook it, you can measure it if you want to see how much dry pasta = cooked pasta. Once you've done that a few times, you'll have a good estimate of how to translate dry to cooked measurements.

    I'm going to try this next time cause I have always wondered myself.
  • tolygal
    tolygal Posts: 602 Member
    You generally measure pasta before you cook it. I just weigh it dry on my food scale.

    So if you are cooking for your family, try making your portion in a smaller pot. After you cook it, you can measure it if you want to see how much dry pasta = cooked pasta. Once you've done that a few times, you'll have a good estimate of how to translate dry to cooked measurements.

    Yup - if you really want to know for sure - measure out 2 oz. dry and cook it in a seperate pot. I did this and found that 2 oz of dry pasta, came to a heaping cup cooked for one pasta, and an even cup cooked for another type. I'd say in general (if you can't be more precise) 1 cup cooked = 2 oz dry - on average. But if you want to be more accurate, measure it dry and cook it seperate from the family pasta.
  • janetlove
    janetlove Posts: 17 Member
    Here is what I found on the internet:

    Calories in 1 Cup Cooked Pasta/Calories
    Pasta, Cannelloni /170
    Pasta, Gnocchi /175
    Pasta, Lasagne /180
    Pasta, Macaroni /170
    Pasta, Spaghetti /170
    Pasta, Spaghetti, whole wheat /165
    Pasta, Tagliatelle /185
    Pasta, Vermicelli/ 170
  • andrea777
    andrea777 Posts: 23 Member
    Here is what I found on the internet:

    Calories in 1 Cup Cooked Pasta/Calories
    Pasta, Cannelloni /170
    Pasta, Gnocchi /175
    Pasta, Lasagne /180
    Pasta, Macaroni /170
    Pasta, Spaghetti /170
    Pasta, Spaghetti, whole wheat /165
    Pasta, Tagliatelle /185
    Pasta, Vermicelli/ 170
    thanks so much for this !!! :smile:
  • I got a call back from Barilla' customer service. They said that 3/4 cup of dry pasta equals 2 ounces. They also said that 3/4 cup dry would cook up to 1 1/8 cups. I called asking specifically about whole grain rotinni but, can't imagine there's a lot of difference in the pasta varieties. Pasta nutritional info is pretty poor on the box regardless of the manufacturer. You can google dry to cooked conversions for some help too.
  • LilyBugsMommy
    LilyBugsMommy Posts: 109 Member
    bump
  • taletreader
    taletreader Posts: 377 Member
    OK, the first thing to realise is that there is a difference between volume and weight. Unfortunately, in the US the system of measurements that is used makes it really so much harder to wrap one's head around it. I think it must make you guys (I'm originally European and have grown up with g and ml) really really good at arithmetic on the average. But it can be an obstacle to understanding.

    One problem is that there are oz for weight and (fl) oz for volume. 1 oz = 28 g and 1 fl oz = 28 ml(*). As 1 ml of water weights approximately 1 g (very very close, depending on pressure and temperature), the two are equivalent for fluids like water.

    However, pasta (dry or cooked) are very different from water!

    A cup is a volume measure, and the same as 8 fl oz. So half a cup of water would be 4 fl oz which weigh 4 oz. But half a cup of dry pasta would be a LOT less.

    Some say a portion of dry pasta is half a cup, but again that depends a lot on the shape of the pasta. Try measuring half a cup of dry spaghetti, especially the original extra-long ones! It's more precise to go by weight anyway, because whatever the shape, the same weight of the same type of pasta (same brand/variety) always would have the same number of calories whether you look at spaghetti, farfalle, rotini, fusili, penne, whatever.

    So let's say a portion (a reasonable-sized one, though a lot less than I used to eat to be honest :blushing: ) is 56g (that is, 2 oz). That is, dry. Once you cook it, it'll *approximately* double in weight and volume, but that again depends on the shape and on how much water your specific type of noodle absorbes in the cooking process.

    That's where the "1 cup cooked" comes from -- that's some middle-of-the-road value. To be honest, it's too imprecise for me, so I weigh my pasta. It'll be probably approximately 4 oz in weight (if it doubles from 2 oz). NOT 8 oz like a cup of water!

    And I weigh dry, and again cooked when I use leftovers, using an approximate factor of 2 (1 portion = 2 oz dry = approx. 4 oz cooked).

    (*) Or 30 ml for US fluid oz! There's also imperial fl oz, which are again different, but let's forget about the difference here.
  • I came across this issue too when I first started being precise about how much pasta I ate. I would measure the pasta (dry) in 1/4 cup (which is 2 oz.) and couldn't believe how little it was. Then one day I decided to try weighing it and realized that 2 oz. of the rotini I was using was more like 3/4 cup dry. However, due to its shape, I'm sure elbows would fit in a smaller cup. Therefore, in regards to figuring out how much is a serving, it is better to weigh it, at least to start with. Then you will be able to figure out what size cup would accurately measure it in the future.
  • bentobee
    bentobee Posts: 321 Member
    If after you cooked it you ate a serving of one cup (roughlty the size of your fist) that should be approximately one serving size - and if memory serves, that's about 210 calories for Barilla Plus.
  • carpar1
    carpar1 Posts: 211 Member
    210 calories for 1 cup of cooked Barilla Plus Penne.
  • elizabeth51608
    elizabeth51608 Posts: 31 Member
    OK, MFP PEOPLE!! HELP HAS ARRIVED. I got so frustrated with pasta measurements that, after reading this post, I set out to discover the truth for myself.

    Barilla Spaghetti. Not plus, not whole wheat, just regular, plain old spaghetti. Measure out 2 oz DRY on your food scale. Boil it, and measure it. It will be one cup of cooked pasta.

    2 oz dry OR 1 cup cooked Barilla spaghetti contains 200 calories, 1 gram of fat, 42 grams of carbs, and 7 grams of protein.

    Now you can have your pasta, and eat it, too!!!
  • Red3535
    Red3535 Posts: 4 Member
    This is exactly what I'm eating now! Have you ever seen one of those pasta measuring tools? It has a hole that you can bundle the pasta through and for example, the littlest circle says 1 oz, the next is 2 oz, and so on. When I use the 2 oz one, it seems like more than 1 cup. Any idea if these tools are accurate?
  • I know this is old but guys, 1 cup is 8 FLUID ounces which is a measure of volume (how much space something takes up). All liquids take up the same amount of space so it's easy to measure them like this. 1 cup of jelly takes up just amount of space as 1 cup of water . 8 fluid ounces of water actually weighs roughly 8.3 oz. Water takes up one cup of space (8fluid oz) to equal to 8.3 oz in weight. But. Food is measured by weight. Not all foods are the same size and shape so you have to find their weight. Think about it. Weigh a 1/4 cup of rocks and a 1/4 cup of yarn. They take up the same space but weigh different. 2 oz of yarn might be 4 cups where as 2oz of rocks are 1/2 cup. Since most people do not have scales to measure their food companies will determine that 2oz of pasta takes up roughly 3/4 cup. This way you can still measure out a serving.
  • Holy Jesus! Thank you to everyone! This was boggling my mind!
  • cwolfman13
    cwolfman13 Posts: 41,865 Member
    OP...8 oz in cup is a liquid measurement....liquid ounce. A cup of something dry can vary substantially in actual weight. One cup of popcorn is going to weight significantly less than one cup of pasta for example.

    I think it's already been stated, but 2 oz pasta (typical serving size) is roughly 1/2 cup dry and 1 cup after being cooked.
  • RPrincess4688
    RPrincess4688 Posts: 2 Member
    Another way to do this is, cook your pasta and then weigh it all on a scale. Then look at your box and look at how many servings are in the box than take the measurement you get and divide it by # of servings. There you go. I just figured this out tonight. That way you can make the whole box for your family and dont have to have 4 burners going at the same time to make separate portions especially because hubby and I are on two different plans for eating.
  • JeenOlson
    JeenOlson Posts: 1 Member
    HERE IS WHAT I DID.. My recipe called for 4 cups of cooked penne pasta. I, like most on here, have been irritated by the boxes that list calories for dry pasta only. Then, I realized that the pasta producers needed to use a measurement that would be the same for every pasta, and which would not be dependent on any one cooking method, or result. Thus, dry measurements are the answer. Well, swell, but where do I go with my recipe that calls for 4 cups of cooked pasta???

    Hmmmm.

    I finally decided to cook the whole box, al dente, per their instructions for exactly 11 mins. Usually, I would test for the tenderrness I prefer, but to keep all measurements standard, I removed the pasta at once, and drained it immediately. Then, I measured it, coming up with 8 cups of cooked pasta for a 14.5 oz box of Barilla Plus Penne. Then, I divided the 1470 calories (for the box of dry) by 8 to get the calories per cup of cooked. Next, I entered the cooked pasta for this item in My Foods on MyFitnessPal, so I can always know what it is for that product. I will do this for every pasta variety I use, until My Foods list has all the ones I use. End of problem. I put the other four cups in the refrigerator for another use. Being a fan of pastas as a side dish, I'll have no trouble using it up.
  • dnunny70
    dnunny70 Posts: 411 Member
    Oh doh! Slap my head!
    No wonder I was looking at my cooked 2 oz and feeling deprived!! I have trying not to pasta because, well...2 oz. cooked isn't a lot!

    I do tend to use a separate pot for me; makes it easier. I can be more accurate that way--until I've been doing it for years.
  • iseeu1939
    iseeu1939 Posts: 2 Member
    I just cooked 2 1/2 ounces of Barilla Whole Wheat Spaghetti and after it was cooked, it measured 1 1/2 cups. This is a great amount when cooking for one -- the end result of my spaghetti and sauce was 2 cups of spaghetti with sauce (no meat).
    Came out making 2 servings of 1 cup each.
    This was a big help and very easy to weigh the dry spaghetti. Thanks
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