Cup to gram/ml converter
tanalukacova9371
Posts: 3 Member
in Recipes
Hi people, can someone suggest a reliable app for CUP to gram/ml converter? Can Fitnesspall do it? If you have some hacks for such conversions, please share... thank you 😊
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Replies
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While there are some liquid that reliably weigh X amount of grams per X cups/mls, the issue you're going to run into is that a cup is not a measure for weight whereas a gram is. Cups to other liquid measures is easy enough though. I typically type it into the address bar in Google Chrome, though googling it works just as well. So say a search of "2 cups to ml"0
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Go by weight wherever possible for accuracy's sake. That said, if you need to convert volume to weight for logging or recipe purposes, honestly just ask Google - the trick is to specify the food you are talking about as denser foods will have more weight by volume.
E.g. "okay, Google: how much does a quarter cup of butter weigh?"0 -
When doing a recipe for the first time and using MFP's recipe builder, I measure out a cup of flour or butter or whatever and weigh it on my digital scale and register it by weight. I make a note on my original recipe in pencil. By now I know how much a cup of butter or flour weighs in grams.0
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While there are some liquid that reliably weigh X amount of grams per X cups/mls, the issue you're going to run into is that a cup is not a measure for weight whereas a gram is. Cups to other liquid measures is easy enough though. I typically type it into the address bar in Google Chrome, though googling it works just as well. So say a search of "2 cups to ml"
One issue is that the volume of a cup varies from country to country.Go by weight wherever possible for accuracy's sake. That said, if you need to convert volume to weight for logging or recipe purposes, honestly just ask Google - the trick is to specify the food you are talking about as denser foods will have more weight by volume.
E.g. "okay, Google: how much does a quarter cup of butter weigh?"
An eighth of a pound (i.e., 2 oz. or 56 g.). Off the top of my head. Don't need no Google for that. (You can just look at the printing on the wrapper on the stick of butter. 1 stick of butter = 1/4 pound or a half cup/8 Tbsp.)
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tanalukacova9371 wrote: »Hi people, can someone suggest a reliable app for CUP to gram/ml converter? Can Fitnesspall do it? If you have some hacks for such conversions, please share... thank you 😊
Can't really do that since a cup is a volume measurement...a cup of, say quinoa is going to weigh more than a cup of, say spinach. Most entries in the database also have weight as an option, you just have to find the right entry.0 -
tanalukacova9371 wrote: »Hi people, can someone suggest a reliable app for CUP to gram/ml converter? Can Fitnesspall do it? If you have some hacks for such conversions, please share... thank you 😊
If you are in the US and have purchased liquid measuring cups, all you need to do is turn them around since they come marked with the cup/ounce measurements on one side and the metrics on the other side.
If you are using dry measuring cups for liquids, don't. They are not accurate. Same thing with using liquid measuring cups for dry ingredients.
Weigh all solids and semi solids (like peanut butter or mayo) and measure all liquids.
One US liquid ounce is 29.5 ml. If I am converting in my head, I do 30. When converting weights, 1 US ounce is 28.3 grams. When converting in my head, I do 28.
A liquid ounce is NOT going to be the same as an ounce by weight. Volume and weight will be different for anything except water.0 -
Ditch the cups. Get a food scale and always try for grams or ounces.0
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Volume -> volume, 1 cup = 237mL (8 fluid oz.). You can not convert to grams automatically without knowing density...dimensions 1010
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Thank you everyone! So basically, the best approach is to forget Cups and to weight everything.... do what you do if the recipe says 1/2 cup of rolled oat meals? Should i just goolge how many grams it is and then simply use the scale...? Thanks all again0
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usually the package will say something like like serving size 1/2 cup (40 grams). at least mine does.1
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usually the package will say something like like serving size 1/2 cup (40 grams). at least mine does.
This! You can also still follow the recipe using cups just put your half cup on the scale, tare, and then add oats to see how many grams it weighs. You’ll realize quickly that half a cup of oats is a bit more than 40 grams (mine is 45 grams).0 -
tanalukacova9371 wrote: »Thank you everyone! So basically, the best approach is to forget Cups and to weight everything.... do what you do if the recipe says 1/2 cup of rolled oat meals? Should i just goolge how many grams it is and then simply use the scale...? Thanks all again
Put the recipe into your recipe builder. Measure out the 1/2 cup of oats, then weigh it and enter the weight into the recipe builder.
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