Cups!

Posts: 1 Member
edited November 2024 in Chit-Chat
I want to use home made recipes when I'm entering my meals, but in most cases the quantities refer to cups - do what, I mean how big is your cup, my cup for tea is big, for coffee it's small & don't start me on cocoa! So how do I translate cups to weight? Love the app, except the "cups"!

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Replies

  • Posts: 22,834 Member
    You can Google cup to ounces for whatever you are adding.

    And lots of these charts online.

    http://www.kingarthurflour.com/learn/ingredient-weight-chart.html

  • Posts: 1,090 Member
    Make sure even if the recipe calls for "cups" you weigh in grams anyway.
  • Posts: 35,719 Member
    I thought a cup was 250g?
  • Posts: 34 Member
    edited February 2017
    pudgy1977 wrote: »
    j22hsv5528x9.gif

    How many cups in "a lot"? Coffee cups or cocoa cups?
  • Posts: 1,090 Member
    edited February 2017
    I thought a cup was 250g?

    1 cup is only 250g for something that weighs 250g per cup. For denser materials, 1 cup will weigh more. For less dense materials (e.g. icing sugar) it will weigh less.
  • Posts: 3,779 Member
    it doesn't matter to me. I like A through DD.... i'm more about proportion
  • Posts: 7,678 Member
    I'm an A cup... and I have no problem with it.
    Scan your food, that way you'll get the grams or at least I do.
  • Posts: 21 Member
    Good God what are they teaching you kids in school... gcj8opipc2s8.png
  • Posts: 10,477 Member
    I want to use home made recipes when I'm entering my meals, but in most cases the quantities refer to cups

    A cup is a volume measure typically about 240 ml depending where you are (16 tablespoons) you can usually buy a set of 1 cup, 3/4, 2/3, 1/2, 1/3, 1/4 etc for ease of use. They seem popular in the US as a measuring unit.
  • Posts: 610 Member
    edited February 2017
    Important distinction. You can convert cups to *fluid* ounces, which is a volume to volume measurement. 1 cup = 8 fluid ounces.

    Nice for milk, broth, etc.

    You cannot convert cups (a volume) to regular ounces, which is a measurement of weight.
    1 cup is not equal to 8 ounces.

    The "cups" measurement of volume is particularly bad for tracking calories of solid foods.

    This is where a food scale comes in extremely handy. If a recipe calls for 1-1/2 cups of rice (dry) for instance, it is more accurate to weigh the rice (dry).

    It can be a little bit of a pain to start with, but I try to find gram measurements for foods I'm using in recipes.
  • Posts: 2,382 Member
    I want to use home made recipes when I'm entering my meals, but in most cases the quantities refer to cups - do what, I mean how big is your cup, my cup for tea is big, for coffee it's small & don't start me on cocoa! So how do I translate cups to weight? Love the app, except the "cups"!

    Hi Gareth,

    You can check this chart for conversions, and "cup" sizes. US cup is 240 ml, which would equate to 240 grams of water.
    It is not really accurate for non-liquids though, so you should definitely buy a kitchen scale, and add your stuff in grams. MFP food database have grams as well, so you can simply search, say "butter grams", and it will show up.
  • Posts: 1,221 Member
    ^^ this was helpful. Spent some time reading it and looking at the drawings
  • Posts: 3,655 Member
    @Jimb376
    So whatever I can fit into my bra will count for a cup measurement from now on. I got it. :D;)
  • Posts: 7,682 Member
    I thought a cup was 250g?

    well a cup on anything I drink says 240ml,but my measuring cups all say 235ml. so go figure lol
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