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Cooking weights and measures

Specifications for quantities of ingredients

Cooking weights and measures

Summary

Specifications for quantities of ingredients

[[Measuring spoon]]s (customary units) – 1 tablespoon, 1 teaspoon, {{1/2}} teaspoon, {{1/4}} teaspoon
Measuring spoons (metric) – 1 mL, 5 mL, 15 mL, 50 mL, 100 mL, 125 mL

In recipes, quantities of ingredients may be specified by mass (commonly called weight), by volume, or by count.

For most of history, most cookbooks did not specify quantities precisely, instead talking of "a nice leg of spring lamb", a "cupful" of lentils, a piece of butter "the size of a small apricot", and "sufficient" salt. Informal measurements such as a "pinch", a "drop", or a "hint" (soupçon) continue to be used from time to time. In the US, Fannie Farmer introduced the more exact specification of quantities by volume in her 1896 Boston Cooking-School Cook Book.

Today, most of the world prefers metric measurement by weight, though the preference for volume measurements continues among home cooks in the United States and the rest of North America. Different ingredients are measured in different ways:

Liquid ingredients are generally measured by volume worldwide.

Dry bulk ingredients, such as sugar and flour, are measured by weight in most of the world ("250 g flour"), and by volume in North America (" cup flour"). Small quantities of salt and spices are generally measured by volume worldwide, as few households have sufficiently precise balances to measure by weight.

In most countries, meat is described by weight or count: "a 2 kilogram chicken"; "four lamb chops".

Eggs are usually specified by count. Vegetables are usually specified by weight or occasionally by count, despite the inherent imprecision of counts given the variability in the size of vegetables.

Metric measures

In most of the world, recipes use the metric system of units—litres (L) and millilitres (mL), grams (g) and kilograms (kg), and degrees Celsius (°C). The official spelling litre is used in most English-speaking nations. The notable exception is the United States where the spelling liter is preferred.

The United States measures weight in pounds (avoirdupois). Recipes in the UK tend to include both imperial and metric measures, following the advice of the Guild of Food Writers. The United States also uses volume measures based on cooking utensils and pre-metric measures. The actual values frequently deviate from the utensils on which they were based, and there is little consistency from one country to another.

MeasureAUNZUKCACFIA (CA)FDA (US)USTeaspoonDessertspoonTablespoonFluid ounceCupPintQuartGallon
5*5 or ≈3.555*≈ 4.93
10≈7.10≈ 9.86
2015*15 or ≈14.2115*≈ 14.79
≈ 28.4130≈ 29.57
250≈ 170.48≈ 227.31‡250240≈ 236.59
570≈ 568.26≈ 473.18
≈ 1136.52≈ 946.35
≈ 4546.09≈ 3785.41

: In South Australia, a "pint" of beer is traditionally 425 mL, while most other states have metricated this value to 570 mL. :‡ In Canada, a cup was historically 8 imperial fluid ounces (227 mL) but could also refer to 10 imperial fl oz (284 mL), as in Britain, and even a metric cup of 250 mL. Serving sizes on nutrition labelling on food packages in Canada employ the metric cup of 250 mL, with nutrition labelling in the US using a cup of 240 mL, based on the US customary cup. :* In Canada, a teaspoon is historically imperial fluid ounce (4.74 mL) and a tablespoon is imperial fl oz (14.21 mL). In Canada, cooking utensils commonly come in 5 mL for teaspoons and 15 mL for tablespoons. : In the UK, teaspoons and tablespoons are formally and of an imperial pint (3.55 mL and 14.21 mL), respectively, with 1tbsp being equal to 2 dessert spoons or 4tsp. Cooking utensils are now commonly manufactured at 15 mL for tablespoons, and either 1 metric teaspoon (5ml) or a compromise measurement (such as 4ml) for teaspoons. Metric dessertspoons are not commonly used in the UK.

The volume measures here are for comparison only. See below for the definition of Gallon for more details.

The "cook's cup" above is not the same as a "coffee cup", which can vary anywhere from 100 to, or even smaller for espresso.

In Australia, since 1970, metric utensil units have been standardized by law, and imperial measures no longer have legal status. It is wise to measure the actual volume of the utensil measures, particularly the 'Australian tablespoon' (see above), since many are imported from other countries with different values. Dessertspoons are standardized as part of the metric system at 10 mL, though they are not normally used in contemporary recipes. Australia is the only metricated country with a metric tablespoon of 20 mL, unlike other countries that metricated, which have a 15 mL metric tablespoon.

In Europe, older recipes frequently refer to "pounds" (e.g. Pfund in German, pond in Dutch, livre in French). In each case, the unit refers to 500 g, about 10% more than an avoirdupois pound (454 g). Dutch recipes may also use the ons, which is 100 g.

Weight of liquids

IngredientDensity
(g/mL3 = kg/L = t/m3 -- or av.oz./fl.oz.)SugarFlourSaltButter
0.8
0.7
1.2
0.9

With the advent of accurate electronic scales, it has become more common to weigh liquids for use in recipes, avoiding the need for accurate volumetric utensils. The most common liquids used in cooking are water and milk, milk having approximately the same density as water.

1 mL of water weighs 1 gram, so a recipe calling for 300 mL (≈ Imperial Pint) of water can simply be substituted with 300 g (≈ 10 oz.) of water.

1 fluid ounce of water weighs approximately 1 ounce, so a recipe calling for a UK pint (20 fl oz) of water can be substituted with 20 oz of water.

More accurate measurements become important in the large volumes used in commercial food production. Also, a home cook can use greater precision at times. Water at 4.0 °C may be volumetrically measured then weighed to determine an unknown measuring-utensil volume without the need for a water-density adjustment.

United States measures

The US uses pounds and ounces (avoirdupois) for weight, and US customary units for volume. For measures used in cookbooks published in other nations navigate to the appropriate regional section in Traditional measurement systems.

Ratios among the larger and smaller US cooking volumetric measures.

Measures are classified as either dry measures or fluid measures. Some of the fluid and dry measures have similar names, but the actual measured volume is quite different. A recipe will generally specify which measurement is required. U.S. recipes are commonly in terms of fluid measures, even for dry ingredients. Most of these units derive from earlier English units, as applied to the U.S. gallon. Typically they follow a pattern of binary submultiples, where each larger measure consists of two units of the next-smallest measure. An exception is with the commonly used teaspoon as one-third of a tablespoon.

Binary submultiples are fractional parts obtained by successively dividing by the number 2. Thus, one-half, one-fourth, one-eighth, one-sixteenth, and so on, are binary submultiples.{{cite book | access-date =2016-09-24 | archive-date =2016-09-27 | archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20160927045840/https://www.nist.gov/sites/default/files/documents/pml/wmd/pubs/2016/02/18/hb44-2016-final-web.pdf | url-status =dead

From units and tools of convenience, most of the system's history could have values vary widely. It was not until recent centuries that standardization began to take shape. The overlap with other systems like the apothecaries' system, and giving each division a unique and often variable by context, person, place, and time name instead of a systematic one, can make the system seem confusing for those not accustomed to it.

Other than the names themselves, the regular ratios make the actual measurements straightforward. In many cases, names have been deprecated in favor of fractionally denominated amounts of a few core units (such as taking gallons, cups, and teaspoons to their nearest quarters without names: nixing pottle; gill and wineglass; dram (as a culinary unit), coffeespoon, and saltspoon; respectively), or are limited to the specific or esoteric.

It is still a legal basis for measures in many states, such as Massachusetts, which mandates that "Glass bottles or jars used for the sale of milk or cream to the consumer shall be of the capacity of one gallon, a multiple of the gallon, or a binary submultiple of the gallon."

Metric equivalents are based upon one of two nearly equivalent systems. In the standard system the conversion is that 1 gallon = 231 cubic inches and 1 inch = 2.54 cm, which makes a gallon = 3785.411784 millilitres exactly. For nutritional labeling on food packages in the US, the teaspoon is defined as exactly 5 ml, giving 1 gallon = 3840 ml exactly. This chart uses the former.

UnitAbbrev.Definedfl ozmL
Binary submultiplesdropsmidgenpinchdashsaltspoon‡ or scruple†coffeespoon‡Fluid dram {{#tag:refThe bartender's teaspoon was onceteaspoon (culinary)dessertspoon‡tablespoonfluid ouncewineglass‡gill‡ or teacup‡cuppintquartgallon
dr., gt., gtt. (plural)tsp0.0513429
smdg., smi.tsp*0.1155222 smidgens = 1 pinch
pn.tsp*0.2310432 pinches = 1 dash
ds.tsp*0.4620862 dashes = 1 saltspoon
ssp.tsp*0.924173†2 saltspoons = 1 coffeespoon
csp.tsp*1.848352 coffeespoons = 1 teaspoon
fl.dr.tsp3.696692 fluid drams = 1 dessertspoon (Australia)
tsp. or t.tbsp4.928922 teaspoons = 1 dessertspoon
dsp., dssp. or dstspn.2 tsp9.85784
tbsp. or T.cup14.7868
fl.oz. or oz.cup129.57352 fluid ounces = 1 wineglass
wgf.cup259.14712 wineglasses = 1 teacup
tcf.cup4118.2942 teacups = 1 cup
Cpint8236.588
pt.qt16473.176
qt.gal32946.3532 quarts = 1 pottle‡
gal.231 in31283,785.414 quarts = 1 gal

Suffixed asterisks on some of the "tsp" units in the "Defined" column above indicate that those teaspoon units are defined as fl oz (4 fl dram), the old 4 tsp = 1 tbsp amount, instead of fl oz. This definition fits with "barkeepers' teaspoon", and is used in many cocktail recipe books. Generally the subdivisions are not so explicitly defined nor named below tsp in general culinary. This can be verified by comparing the associated values in the "fl oz" column. All other "tsp" units in the "Defined" column are indeed defined as fl oz, the current 3 tsp = 1 tbsp amount.

  • Discrepancies due to size, generally disregarded as at the scale it becomes a factor, the person generally is using the next size up measuring cup (i.e.: fl oz is likely to be straight measured in an ounce cup and not as 9 (vs 12) teaspoons)

‡ Rare if not nonexistent in use by name rather than as fraction of a different unit.

† The fluid scruple has been properly defined on its own in the apothecaries' system as fl oz, fluid dram, or = 20 minims (≈ 1.23223 ml), and also tsp. Mind that scruples and drams were pharmaceutical and intended to be specific and precise. Cooking measures tended to use what was on hand and/or actually used to consume what was being prepared, and not intended to be as formally scientific in its degree of precision.

The saltspoon most likely combined into the scruple over time, as a consequence of home cooks approximating standard measures with what they had at hand, much as the teaspoon was roughly "close enough" for a kitchen approximation to a fluid dram (= 60 minims), but not equal to the fl dr (80 minims) value it actually is. Especially with the variability of the method of measuring itself. Not of insignificance is the natural habit of customary measures to use a 2n dividing scheme regardless of exact definitions. This pattern is seen even with metric measuring spoons.

Confusion comes about from teaspoon continuing to be called a "dram" in vernacular, despite the sizes of actual spoons creeping up quietly over time, such that of a tsp (tsp fl dr) would in fact become congruent with current fl dr values for the scruple and saltspoon. In other words, the terminology not keeping pace with the definition. At the small scales involved this is negligible (i.e.: math can convert down to tsp ×10−9, but to what degree can it practically be meted).

However, it can cause problems when accuracy is required such as medicines: "In almost all cases the modern teacups, tablespoons, dessertspoons, and teaspoons, after careful test by the author, were found to average 25 percent greater capacity than the theoretical quantities given above, and thus the use of accurately graduated medicine glasses, which may be had now at a trifling cost, should be insisted upon."

teaspoondram-teaspoonUnitAbbr.defined in tspminimsmlminimsmlNotes
Fluid Ouncefl oz, f℥6 tsp*/ 8 fl dr48029.5748029.57
TablespoonTbsp3 tsp*/ 4 fl dr24014.7924014.791 Tbsp = 3 tsp*
Dessertspoondsp2 tsp1609.8581207.3932 tsp}}
Teaspoontsp1 tsp804.929603.6971 tsp = 2 csp
Fluid Dramfl dr, fʒtsp / 1 tsp603.697603.697fl oz}}
Coffeespooncsptsp402.464301.8481 csp = 2 ssp
Fluid Scruplef℈tsp201.232201.232fl oz}}
Saltspoonssptsp201.232150.92421 ssp = 2 ds
Dashdstsp100.61610.46211 ds = 2 pn
Pinchpntsp50.30810.23101 pn = 2 smdg
Smidgeonsmdgtsp0.15400.1155
Minimmin, ɱtsp10.061610.616fl oz}}
Dropdr., gt., gtt.tsp0.0513.0513fl oz}}
  • Discrepancies due to size, generally disregarded as at the scale it becomes a factor, the person generally is using the next size up measuring cup. i.e.: fl oz is likely to be straight measured in an ounce cup and not as 9 (vs 12) teaspoons.

In domestic cooking, bulk solids, notably flour and sugar, are measured by volume, often cups, though they are sold by weight at retail. Weight measures are used for meat. Butter may be measured by either weight ( lb) or volume (3 tbsp) or a combination of weight and volume ( lb plus 3 tbsp). It is sold by weight but in packages marked to facilitate common divisions by eye.

As a sub-packaged unit, a stick of butter, at lb [113 g], is a de facto measure in the US. Some recipes may specify butter amounts called a pat (1–1.5 tsp) or a knob (2 tbsp).

Cookbooks in Canada use the same system, although pints and gallons would be taken as their Imperial quantities unless specified otherwise. Following the adoption of the metric system, recipes in Canada are frequently published with metric conversions.

Approximate units

There are a variety of approximate units of measures, which are frequently undefined by any official source, or which have had conflicting definitions over time, yet which are commonly used. The measurement units that are most commonly understood to be approximate are the drop, smidgen, pinch, and dash, yet nearly all of the traditional cooking measurement units lack statutory definitions, or even any definition by any organization authorized to set standards in the U.S.

For example, of the table above, only the fluid ounce, pint, quart, and gallon are officially defined by the NIST. All of the others appear only in conversion guides lacking statutory authority, or in now-obsolete publications of the U.S. Pharmacopeial Convention, or USP—essentially, the Apothecaries' system—which still has authority to define certain drug and supplement standards. The USP has long-since abandoned Apothecaries' measurements, and even now recommends against using teaspoons to measure doses of medicine.

British (Imperial) measures

Note that measurements in this section are in imperial units.

British imperial measures distinguish between weight and volume.

Weight is measured in ounces and pounds (avoirdupois) as in the U.S.

Volume is measured in imperial gallons, quarts, pints, fluid ounces, fluid drachms, and minims. The imperial gallon was originally defined as 10 lb of water in 1824, and refined as exactly 4.54609 litres in 1985.

Traditionally, when describing volumes, recipes commonly give measurements in the following units:

  • Tumbler (10 fluid ounces; named after a typical drinking glass)
  • Breakfast cup (8 fluid ounces; named after a cup for drinking tea or coffee while eating breakfast)
  • Cup (6 fluid ounces; named after an everyday drinking cup)
  • Teacup (5 fluid ounces; named after a typical teacup)
  • Coffee cup ( fluid ounces; named after a small cup for serving after‑dinner coffee)
  • Wine glass (2 fluid ounces; named after a small glass for serving liquor) If the recipe is one that has been handed down in a family and gives measurements in ‘cups’, it is just as likely to refer to someone's favourite kitchen cup as to the said unit that is 6 fluid ounces.

All six units are the traditional British equivalents of the US customary cup and the metric cup, used in situations where a US cook would use the US customary cup and a cook using metric units the metric cup. The breakfast cup is the most similar in size to the US customary cup and the metric cup. Which of these six units is used depends on the quantity or volume of the ingredient: there is division of labour between these six units, like the tablespoon and the teaspoon.

British cookery books and recipes, especially those from the days before the UK's partial metrication, commonly use two or more of the aforesaid units simultaneously. For example, the same recipe may call for a ‘tumblerful’ of one ingredient and a ‘wineglassful’ of another one. Or a ‘breakfastcupful’ or ‘cupful’ of one ingredient, a ‘teacupful’ of a second one, and a ‘coffeecupful’ of a third one.

Unlike the US customary cup and the metric cup, a tumbler, a breakfast cup, a cup, a teacup, a coffee cup, and a wine glass are not measuring cups. They are simply everyday drinking vessels commonly found in British households and typically having the respective aforementioned capacities. Due to long-term and widespread use, they have been transformed into measurement units for cooking. There is not a British imperial unit⁠–⁠based culinary measuring cup.

For smaller amounts, British recipes traditionally give measurements in the following units:

  • Tablespoon (4 fluid drachms or fluid ounce)
  • Dessert spoon ( tablespoon: the equivalence of 2 fluid drachms or fluid ounce)
  • Teaspoon ( dessert spoon or tablespoon: the equivalence of 1 fluid drachm or fluid ounce)
  • Salt spoon ( teaspoon: the equivalence of 30 minims, fluid drachm, or fluid ounce)

For even smaller amounts, the following units are used:

  • Pinch ( salt spoon or teaspoon: an amount of space that can accommodate 15 minims ( fluid drachm or fluid ounce) of liquid), if it is a dry ingredient
  • Drop (1 minim, fluid drachm, or fluid ounce), if it is a liquid
UnitFluid ouncesPintsMillilitresCubic inchesUS fluid ouncesUS pintsfluid ounce (fl oz)gillpint (pt)quart (qt)gallon (gal)
128.4130625 mL
5142.0653125 mL
201568.26125 mL
4021136.5225 mL
16084546.09 mL
Note: The millilitre figures are exact whereas the cubic-inch and US measure figures are to five significant digits.
Note 2: The imperial gallon is equal to 10 lbs of water.
1 tumbler1 breakfast cup1 cup1 teacup1 coffee cup1 wine glass
10 fluid ounces / pint8 fluid ounces / pint6 fluid ounces / pint5 fluid ounces / pint2 fluid ounces / pint2 fluid ounces / pint
1 breakfast cupstumblertumblertumblertumblertumbler
1 cups1 cupsbreakfast cupbreakfast cupbreakfast cupbreakfast cup
2 teacups1 teacups1 teacupscupcupcup
4 coffee cups3 coffee cups2 coffee cups2 coffee cupsteacupteacup
5 wine glasses4 wine glasses3 wine glasses2 wine glasses1 wine glassescoffee cup
≈ 284.13 millilitres≈ 227.3 millilitres≈ 170.48 millilitres≈ 142.07 millilitres≈ 71.03 millilitres≈ 56.83 millilitres
≈ 1.14 metric cups≈ 0.91 metric cup≈ 0.68 metric cup≈ 0.57 metric cup≈ 0.28 metric cup≈ 0.23 metric cup
≈ 9.61 US customary fluid ounces≈ 7.69 US customary fluid ounces≈ 5.76 US customary fluid ounces≈ 4.8 US customary fluid ounces≈ 2.4 US customary fluid ounces≈ 1.92 US customary fluid ounces
≈ 1.2 US customary cups≈ 0.96 US customary cup≈ 0.72 US customary cup≈ 0.6 US customary cup≈ 0.3 US customary cup≈ 0.24 US customary cup
1 tablespoon1 dessert spoon1 teaspoon1 salt spoon
4 fluid drachms / fluid ounce2 fluid drachms / fluid ounce1 fluid drachm / fluid ouncefluid drachm / fluid ounce
2 dessert spoonstablespoontablespoontablespoon
4 teaspoons2 teaspoonsdessert spoondessert spoon
8 salt spoons4 salt spoons2 salt spoonsteaspoon
16 pinches (solids only)8 pinches (solids only)4 pinches (solids only)2 pinches (solids only)
240 drops (liquids only)120 drops (liquids only)60 drops (liquids only)30 drops (liquids only)
≈ 14.21 millilitres≈ 7.1 millilitres≈ 3.55 millilitres≈ 1.78 millilitres
≈ 0.95 international metric tablespoon≈ 0.47 international metric tablespoon≈ 0.24 international metric tablespoon≈ 0.11 international metric tablespoon
≈ 0.71 Australian metric tablespoon≈ 0.36 Australian metric tablespoon≈ 0.18 Australian metric tablespoon≈ 0.09 Australian metric tablespoon
≈ 1.42 metric dessert spoons≈ 0.71 metric dessert spoon≈ 0.36 metric dessert spoon≈ 0.18 metric dessert spoon
≈ 2.84 metric teaspoons≈ 1.42 metric teaspoons≈ 0.71 metric teaspoon≈ 0.36 metric teaspoon
≈ 3.84 US customary fluid drams / 0.48 US customary fluid ounce≈ 1.92 US customary fluid drams / 0.24 US customary fluid ounce≈ 0.96 US customary fluid dram / 0.12 US customary fluid ounce≈ 0.48 US customary fluid dram / 0.06 US customary fluid ounce
≈ 0.96 US customary tablespoon≈ 0.48 US customary tablespoon≈ 0.24 US customary tablespoon≈ 0.12 US customary tablespoon
≈ 1.44 US customary dessert spoons≈ 0.72 US customary dessert spoon≈ 0.36 US customary dessert spoon≈ 0.18 US customary dessert spoon
≈ 2.88 US customary teaspoons≈ 1.44 US customary teaspoons≈ 0.72 US customary teaspoon≈ 0.36 US customary teaspoon
≈ 5.76 US customary coffee spoons≈ 2.88 US customary coffee spoons≈ 1.44 US customary coffee spoons≈ 0.72 US customary coffee spoon
≈ 11.53 US customary salt spoons≈ 5.76 US customary salt spoons≈ 2.88 US customary salt spoons≈ 1.44 US customary salt spoon
≈ 23.06 US customary dashes (solids only)≈ 11.53 US customary dashes (solids only)≈ 5.76 US customary dashes (solids only)≈ 2.88 US customary dashes (solids only)
≈ 46.12 US customary pinches (solids only)≈ 23.06 US customary pinches (solids only)≈ 11.53 US customary pinches (solids only)≈ 5.76 US customary pinches (solids only)
≈ 92.23 US customary smidgens (solids only)≈ 46.12 US customary smidgens (solids only)≈ 23.06 US customary smidgens (solids only)≈ 11.53 US customary smidgens (solids only)
≈ 276.7 US customary drops (liquids only)≈ 138.35 US customary drops (liquids only)≈ 69.17 US customary drops (liquids only)≈ 34.59 US customary drops (liquids only)
1 pinch
An amount of a solid occupying an amount of space that can accommodate 15 minims ( fluid drachm or fluid ounce) of liquid
salt spoon or teaspoon
≈ An amount of a solid occupying an amount of space that can accommodate 0.89 millilitre of liquid
≈ 0.178 metric teaspoon
≈ An amount of a solid occupying an amount of space that can accommodate 14.41 US customary minims (0.24 US customary fluid dram or 0.03 US customary fluid ounce) of liquid
≈ 0.18 US customary teaspoon / 0.36 US customary coffee spoon / 0.72 US customary salt spoon
≈ 1.44 US customary dashes
≈ 2.88 US customary pinches
≈ 5.76 US customary smidgens
1 drop
1 minim / fluid drachm / fluid ounce
salt spoon / teaspoon
≈ 0.059 millilitre
≈ 0.0118 metric teaspoon
≈ 0.96 US customary minim / 0.016 US customary fluid dram / 0.002 US customary fluid ounce
≈ 0.012 US customary teaspoon / 0.024 US customary coffee spoon / 0.033 US customary salt spoon
≈ 1.15 US customary drops

American cooks using British recipes, and vice versa, need to be careful with pints and fluid ounces. A US pint (16 US fluid ounces) is about 16.65 UK fluid ounces or 473 mL. A UK pint is 20 UK fluid ounces (about 19.21 US fluid ounces or 568 mL). A UK pint is about 20% larger than a US pint.

A US fluid ounce is of a US pint (about 1.04 UK fluid ounces or 29.6 mL). A UK fluid ounce is of a UK pint (about 0.96 US fluid ounce or 28.4 mL).

On a larger scale, perhaps for institutional cookery, a UK gallon is 8 UK pints (160 UK fluid ounces; about 1.2 US gallons or 4.546 litres). The US gallon is 8 US pints (128 US fluid ounces; about 0.83 UK gallon or 3.785 litres).

In the 20th century, the metric system was officially adopted in the UK, for most purposes. Both imperial and metric are taught in schools and used in books. It is now mandatory for the sale of food to also show metric. However, it is not uncommon to purchase goods which are measured and labeled in metric, but the actual measure is rounded to the equivalent imperial measure (i.e., milk labeled as 568 mL / 1 pint). In September 2007, the EU deregulated prescribed metric packaging of most products, leaving only wines and spirits subject to prescribed EU-wide pre-packaging legislation.{{cite web |access-date = 28 March 2012 |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20120531035638/http://ec.europa.eu/enterprise/sectors/legal-metrology-and-prepack/documents/pack-sizes/index_en.htm |archive-date = 31 May 2012 |access-date =28 March 2012}}{{cite web |access-date = 28 March 2012 |archive-date = 14 February 2016 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160214072517/http://www.mcisystems.co.uk/legislation/Guidance_for_Business_on_Specified_Quantities_for_Pre-packages_Jan_09.pdf |url-status = dead

Special instructions

Volume measures of compressible ingredients have a substantial measurement uncertainty, in the case of flour of about 20%. Some volume-based recipes, therefore, attempt to improve the reproducibility by including additional instructions for measuring the correct amount of an ingredient. For example, a recipe might call for "1 cup brown sugar, firmly packed", or "2 heaping cups flour". A few of the more common special measuring methods:

;Firmly packed :With a spatula, a spoon, or by hand, the ingredient is pressed as tightly as possible into the measuring device. ;Lightly packed :The ingredient is pressed lightly into the measuring device, only tightly enough to ensure no air pockets. ;Even / level :A precise measure of an ingredient, discarding all of the ingredient that rises above the rim of the measuring device. Sweeping across the top of the measure with the back of a straight knife or the blade of a spatula is a common leveling method. ;Rounded :Allowing a measure of an ingredient to pile up above the rim of the measuring device naturally, into a soft, rounded shape. ;Heaping / heaped :The maximum amount of an ingredient which will stay on the measuring device. ;Sifted :This instruction may be seen in two different ways, with two different meanings: before the ingredient, as "1 cup sifted flour", indicates the ingredient should be sifted into the measuring device (and normally leveled), while after the ingredient, as "1 cup flour, sifted", denotes the sifting should occur after measurement.

Such special instructions are unnecessary in weight-based recipes.

Notes

References

References

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  27. Clark, Norah. (June 27, 2023). "What Is A Knob Of Butter?".
  28. Whitaker, Will. (May 12, 2015). "Ditch the Kitchen Teaspoon".
  29. Whitaker, Will. (May 12, 2015). "Ditch the Kitchen Teaspoon".
  30. [https://www.victorianschool.co.uk/ebooks/enquire%20within/10766-h/10766-h.htm#p665 Paragraph 665], page 119, ''Enquire Within Upon Everything'' (1894)
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  32. ‘[http://spprd.insec.netcopy.thompsonjames.co.uk/article/15th-march-1963/29/consuming-interest Measure for Measure] {{Webarchive. link. (2024-12-07 ’, [[Elizabeth David]], ''[[The Spectator]]'', 15th March, 1963)
  33. ‘Tea Making, My Experiments [1859]’, [https://galton.org/pearson/vol3/new/pearson-vol3b-ch17-1.pdf chapter XVII], page 456, volume IIIB, ''The Life, Letters and Labours of Francis Galton'' (1930)
  34. Page 11, ''[https://deriv.nls.uk/dcn23/1262/7738/126277384.23.pdf The Feill Cookery Book]'' (1907)
  35. [https://archive.org/details/bookofhouseholdm0000mrsi/page/40/mode/2up Page 40], ''The Book of Household Management'' (1861)
  36. (1977). "Average weight of a measured cup of various foods". United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service.
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