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Cup (unit)

The cup is a cooking measure of volume, commonly associated with cooking and serving sizes. In the US, it is traditionally equal to one-half US pint (236.6 ml). Because actual drinking cups may differ greatly from the size of this unit, standard measuring cups may be used, with a metric cup being 250 millilitres.

cup
A simple plastic measuring cup, capable of holding the volume one metric cup with a scale for US fluid ounces
General information
Unit systemUS customary units
Unit ofVolume
Symbolcup
Conversions (US)
1 US cup in ...... is equal to ...
   SI units   236.588 mL

United States edit

Customary cup edit

 
Coffee carafe showing gradations for measuring water (right) and brewed coffee (left) in multiples of non-standard US customary cups.

In the United States, the customary cup is half of a liquid pint.

1 US customary cup  = 116 US customary gallon
= 14 US customary quart
= 12 US customary pint
= 8 US customary fluid ounces
= 16 US customary tablespoons
= 48 US customary teaspoons
= 236.5882365 milliliters exactly
= 15.7725491 international tablespoons
= 11.829411825 Australian tablespoons
8 13 imperial fluid ounces

Legal cup edit

The cup currently used in the United States for nutrition labelling is defined in United States law as 240 ml.[1][2][3]

1 US "legal" cup  = 240 millilitres
= 16 international tablespoons
= 12 Australian tablespoons
= 8 US nutritional fluid ounces (30 ml each)
8.12 US customary fluid ounces
8.45 imperial fluid ounces

Conversion table to US legal cup edit

The following information is describing that how to measure US legal cup in different ways.[4]

1 cubic meter  = 4166.6667 US legal cup
1 litre  = 4.16667 US legal cup
1 US legal tablespoon  = 0.0625 US legal cup
1 US legal teaspoon  = 0.020833333 US legal cup
1 US gallon  = 15.772549 US legal cup
1 US pint  = 1.9715686 US legal cup
1 US cup  = 0.98578432 US legal cup
1 US fluid ounce  = 0.12322304 US legal cup
1 US tablespoon  = 0.06161152 US legal cup
1 US teaspoon  = 0.020537173 US legal cup
1 imperial gallon  = 18.942 US legal cup
1 imperial pint  = 2.36776 US legal cup
1 imperial fluid ounce  = 0.118388 US legal cup
1 imperial tablespoon  = 0.0739924 US legal cup
1 imperial teaspoon  = 0.0246641 US legal cup
1 US cubic foot  = 117.987 US legal cup
1 US cubic inch  = 0.0682794 US legal cup

Coffee cup edit

A "cup" of coffee in the US is usually 4 fluid ounces (118 ml), brewed using 5 fluid ounces (148 ml) of water. Coffee carafes used with drip coffee makers, e.g. Black and Decker models, have markings for both water and brewed coffee as the carafe is also used for measuring water prior to brewing.[5] A 12-cup carafe, for example, has markings for 4, 6, 8, 10, and 12 cups of water or coffee, which correspond to 20, 30, 40, 50, and 60 US fluid ounces (0.59, 0.89, 1.18, 1.48, and 1.77 litres) of water or 16, 24, 32, 40, and 48 US fluid ounces (0.47, 0.71, 0.95, 1.18, and 1.42 litres) of brewed coffee respectively, the difference being the volume absorbed by the coffee grounds and lost to evaporation during brewing.

Commonwealth of Nations edit

Metric cup edit

Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and some other members of the Commonwealth of Nations, being former British colonies that have since metricated, employ a "metric cup" of 250 millilitres.[6] Although derived from the metric system, it is not an SI unit.[7]

1 cup  = 250 millilitres
= 1623 international tablespoons (15 ml each)
= 12.5 Australian tablespoons (20 ml each)
= 25 dessertspoons (10 ml each)
8.80 imperial fluid ounces
8.45 US customary fluid ounces

A "coffee cup" is 1.5 dL (i.e. 150 millilitres or 5.07 US customary fluid ounces), and is occasionally used in recipes; in older recipes, cup may mean "coffee cup". It is also used in the US to specify coffeemaker sizes (what can be referred to as a Tasse à café). A "12-cup" US coffeemaker makes 57.6 US customary fluid ounces of coffee, which is equal to 6.8 metric cups of coffee.

Canadian cup edit

Canada now usually employs the metric cup of 250 ml, but its conventional cup was somewhat smaller than both American and imperial units.[8]

1 Canadian cup = 8 imperial fluid ounces = 1/20 imperial gallon = 227.3045 ml

1 Canadian tablespoon = 12 imperial fluid ounce (14.2065 ml)

1 Canadian teaspoon = 16 imperial fluid ounce (4.7355 ml)

United Kingdom edit

In the United Kingdom the standard cup was set[by whom?] at 10 imperial fluid ounces, or half an imperial pint. The cup was rarely used in practice, as historically most kitchens tended to be equipped with scales and ingredients were measured by weight, rather than volume.[9] A related measure, the gill (5 fluid ounces, or half an imperial cup), was commonly used in older cookbooks for liquids, and may still be used (in fractions of 1/4, 1/5 and 1/6) for spirits.

1 imperial cup  = 10 imperial fluid ounces
= 16 imperial tablespoons
= 48 imperial teaspoons
284.131 millilitres
9.6076 US customary fluid ounces

International edit

Similar units in other languages and cultures are sometimes translated "cup", usually with various values around 15 to 14 of a litre.

Latin American cup edit

In Latin America, the amount of a "cup" (Spanish: taza) varies from country to country, using a cup of 200 ml, 250 ml, and the US legal or customary amount.

Japanese cup edit

The traditional Japanese unit equated with a "cup" size is the , legally equated with 2401/13310 litres (≈180.4 ml) in 1891, and is still used for reckoning amounts of rice and sake. The Japanese later defined a "cup" as 200 ml.

1 Japanese cup  = 200 millilitres
7.04 imperial fluid ounces
6.76 US customary fluid ounces

Russian cup edit

The traditional Russian measurement system included two cup sizes, one of which, the "charka" (cup proper), was usually used for alcoholic drinks and measured 123 ml (4.2 US fl oz; 4.3 imp fl oz), while another, "stakan" ("glass") was twice as big at 246 ml (8.3 US fl oz; 8.7 imp fl oz) and used for other liquids.

Since metrication, the charka was informally redefined as 100 ml, acquiring a new name of "stopka" (related to the traditional Russian measurement unit "stopa"[citation needed]), while there are currently two widely used glass sizes of 250 and 200 ml.

Dutch cup edit

In The Netherlands, traditionally a "cup" (Dutch: kopje) amounts to 150 ml. However, in modern recipes the US legal cup of 240 ml is more commonly used.

Dry measure edit

In Europe, recipes normally weigh non-liquid ingredients in grams rather than measuring volume. For example, where an American recipe might specify "1 cup of sugar and 2 cups of milk", a European recipe might specify "200 g sugar and 500 ml of milk". A precise conversion between the two measures takes into account the density of the ingredients, and some recipes specify both weight and volume to facilitate this conversion. Many European measuring cups have markings that indicate the weight of common ingredients for a given volume.

Volume to mass conversions for some common cooking ingredients
Ingredient Density
g/ml[a]
Metric cup Imperial cup US customary cup
g oz g oz g oz
water[10] 1[b] 249–250 8.8 283–284 10 236.5882 8.3[c]
granulated sugar 0.8[13] 200 7.0 230 8.0 190 6.7
wheat flour 0.5–0.6[13] 120–150 4.4–5.3 140–170 5.0–6.0 120–140 4.2–5.0
table salt 1.2[13] 300 10.6 340 12.0 280 10.0

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ One gram per millilitre is very close to one avoirdupois ounce per fluid ounce: 1 g/ml ≈ 1.002 av oz/imp fl oz This is not a numerical coincidence, but comes from the original definition of the kilogram as the mass of one litre of water, and the imperial gallon as the volume occupied by ten avoirdupois pounds of water. The slight difference is due to water at 4 °C (39 °F) being used for the kilogram, and at 62 °F (17 °C) for the imperial gallon. The US fluid ounce is slightly larger.
    1 g/ml ≈ 1.043 av oz/US fl oz.
  2. ^ The density of water ranges from about 0.96 to 1.00 g/ml dependent on temperature and pressure. The table above assumes a temperature range 0–30 °C (32–86 °F). The variation is too small to make any difference in cooking.[11][12]
  3. ^ Since an imperial cup of water weighs approximately 10 avoirdupois ounces and five imperial cups are approximately equal to six US cups, one US cup of water weighs approximately 813 avoirdupois ounces.

References edit

  1. ^ (21 CFR 101.9 (b) (5) (viii)
  2. ^ US Government Printing Office—Electronic Code of Federal Regulations 2009-08-13 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ U.S. Food and Drug Administration—Guidelines for Determining Metric Equivalents of Household Measures
  4. ^ . 16 November 2020. Archived from the original on 19 November 2020. Retrieved 17 November 2020.
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 2016-12-31. Retrieved 2016-12-30.
  6. ^ "Standard Australian Cooking Measurements". Retrieved 2014-09-24.
  7. ^ "coherent units". BIPM. Retrieved 2014-05-26.
  8. ^ "How Many Tablespoons in a Cup - Easy Conversions". First Health Mag. 2016-04-28. Retrieved 2016-05-08.
  9. ^ Stobart, Tom (1981).The Cook's Encyclopedia, Harper & Row, p.524
  10. ^ 1 g/ml is a good rough guide for water-based liquids such as milk (the density of milk is about 1.03–1.04 g/ml).
  11. ^ Water density calculator
  12. ^ Ma, Allen (2007). Elert, Glenn (ed.). "Density of water". The Physics Factbook. Retrieved 2018-07-06.
  13. ^ a b c L. Fulton, E. Matthews, C. Davis: Average weight of a measured cup of various foods. Home Economics Research Report No. 41, Agricultural Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture, Washington, DC, 1977.

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Not to be confused with drinking cups or cup serving sizes which may not necessarily correspond with this unit Cup is a measurement used in bra sizing and is unrelated The cup is a cooking measure of volume commonly associated with cooking and serving sizes In the US it is traditionally equal to one half US pint 236 6 ml Because actual drinking cups may differ greatly from the size of this unit standard measuring cups may be used with a metric cup being 250 millilitres cupA simple plastic measuring cup capable of holding the volume one metric cup with a scale for US fluid ouncesGeneral informationUnit systemUS customary unitsUnit ofVolumeSymbolcupConversions US 1 US cup in is equal to SI units 236 588 mL Contents 1 United States 1 1 Customary cup 1 2 Legal cup 1 3 Conversion table to US legal cup 1 4 Coffee cup 2 Commonwealth of Nations 2 1 Metric cup 2 2 Canadian cup 2 3 United Kingdom 3 International 3 1 Latin American cup 3 2 Japanese cup 3 3 Russian cup 3 4 Dutch cup 4 Dry measure 5 See also 6 Notes 7 ReferencesUnited States editCustomary cup edit nbsp Coffee carafe showing gradations for measuring water right and brewed coffee left in multiples of non standard US customary cups In the United States the customary cup is half of a liquid pint 1 US customary cup 1 16 US customary gallon 1 4 US customary quart 1 2 US customary pint 8 US customary fluid ounces 16 US customary tablespoons 48 US customary teaspoons 236 5882365 milliliters exactly 15 7725491 international tablespoons 11 829411825 Australian tablespoons 8 1 3 imperial fluid ounces Legal cup edit The cup currently used in the United States for nutrition labelling is defined in United States law as 240 ml 1 2 3 1 US legal cup 240 millilitres 16 international tablespoons 12 Australian tablespoons 8 US nutritional fluid ounces 30 ml each 8 12 US customary fluid ounces 8 45 imperial fluid ounces Conversion table to US legal cup edit The following information is describing that how to measure US legal cup in different ways 4 1 cubic meter 4166 6667 US legal cup 1 litre 4 16667 US legal cup 1 US legal tablespoon 0 0625 US legal cup 1 US legal teaspoon 0 020833333 US legal cup 1 US gallon 15 772549 US legal cup 1 US pint 1 9715686 US legal cup 1 US cup 0 98578432 US legal cup 1 US fluid ounce 0 12322304 US legal cup 1 US tablespoon 0 06161152 US legal cup 1 US teaspoon 0 020537173 US legal cup 1 imperial gallon 18 942 US legal cup 1 imperial pint 2 36776 US legal cup 1 imperial fluid ounce 0 118388 US legal cup 1 imperial tablespoon 0 0739924 US legal cup 1 imperial teaspoon 0 0246641 US legal cup 1 US cubic foot 117 987 US legal cup 1 US cubic inch 0 0682794 US legal cup Coffee cup edit A cup of coffee in the US is usually 4 fluid ounces 118 ml brewed using 5 fluid ounces 148 ml of water Coffee carafes used with drip coffee makers e g Black and Decker models have markings for both water and brewed coffee as the carafe is also used for measuring water prior to brewing 5 A 12 cup carafe for example has markings for 4 6 8 10 and 12 cups of water or coffee which correspond to 20 30 40 50 and 60 US fluid ounces 0 59 0 89 1 18 1 48 and 1 77 litres of water or 16 24 32 40 and 48 US fluid ounces 0 47 0 71 0 95 1 18 and 1 42 litres of brewed coffee respectively the difference being the volume absorbed by the coffee grounds and lost to evaporation during brewing Commonwealth of Nations editMetric cup edit Australia Canada New Zealand and some other members of the Commonwealth of Nations being former British colonies that have since metricated employ a metric cup of 250 millilitres 6 Although derived from the metric system it is not an SI unit 7 1 cup 250 millilitres 162 3 international tablespoons 15 ml each 12 5 Australian tablespoons 20 ml each 25 dessertspoons 10 ml each 8 80 imperial fluid ounces 8 45 US customary fluid ounces A coffee cup is 1 5 dL i e 150 millilitres or 5 07 US customary fluid ounces and is occasionally used in recipes in older recipes cup may mean coffee cup It is also used in the US to specify coffeemaker sizes what can be referred to as a Tasse a cafe A 12 cup US coffeemaker makes 57 6 US customary fluid ounces of coffee which is equal to 6 8 metric cups of coffee Canadian cup edit Canada now usually employs the metric cup of 250 ml but its conventional cup was somewhat smaller than both American and imperial units 8 1 Canadian cup 8 imperial fluid ounces 1 20 imperial gallon 227 3045 ml1 Canadian tablespoon 1 2 imperial fluid ounce 14 2065 ml 1 Canadian teaspoon 1 6 imperial fluid ounce 4 7355 ml United Kingdom edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2024 Learn how and when to remove this template message In the United Kingdom the standard cup was set by whom at 10 imperial fluid ounces or half an imperial pint The cup was rarely used in practice as historically most kitchens tended to be equipped with scales and ingredients were measured by weight rather than volume 9 A related measure the gill 5 fluid ounces or half an imperial cup was commonly used in older cookbooks for liquids and may still be used in fractions of 1 4 1 5 and 1 6 for spirits 1 imperial cup 10 imperial fluid ounces 16 imperial tablespoons 48 imperial teaspoons 284 131 millilitres 9 6076 US customary fluid ouncesInternational editSimilar units in other languages and cultures are sometimes translated cup usually with various values around 1 5 to 1 4 of a litre Latin American cup edit In Latin America the amount of a cup Spanish taza varies from country to country using a cup of 200 ml 250 ml and the US legal or customary amount Japanese cup edit See also Gō The traditional Japanese unit equated with a cup size is the gō legally equated with 2401 13310 litres 180 4 ml in 1891 and is still used for reckoning amounts of rice and sake The Japanese later defined a cup as 200 ml 1 Japanese cup 200 millilitres 7 04 imperial fluid ounces 6 76 US customary fluid ounces Russian cup edit The traditional Russian measurement system included two cup sizes one of which the charka cup proper was usually used for alcoholic drinks and measured 123 ml 4 2 US fl oz 4 3 imp fl oz while another stakan glass was twice as big at 246 ml 8 3 US fl oz 8 7 imp fl oz and used for other liquids Since metrication the charka was informally redefined as 100 ml acquiring a new name of stopka related to the traditional Russian measurement unit stopa citation needed while there are currently two widely used glass sizes of 250 and 200 ml Dutch cup edit In The Netherlands traditionally a cup Dutch kopje amounts to 150 ml However in modern recipes the US legal cup of 240 ml is more commonly used Dry measure editIn Europe recipes normally weigh non liquid ingredients in grams rather than measuring volume For example where an American recipe might specify 1 cup of sugar and 2 cups of milk a European recipe might specify 200 g sugar and 500 ml of milk A precise conversion between the two measures takes into account the density of the ingredients and some recipes specify both weight and volume to facilitate this conversion Many European measuring cups have markings that indicate the weight of common ingredients for a given volume Volume to mass conversions for some common cooking ingredients Ingredient Densityg ml a Metric cup Imperial cup US customary cup g oz g oz g oz water 10 1 b 249 250 8 8 283 284 10 236 5882 8 3 c granulated sugar 0 8 13 200 7 0 230 8 0 190 6 7 wheat flour 0 5 0 6 13 120 150 4 4 5 3 140 170 5 0 6 0 120 140 4 2 5 0 table salt 1 2 13 300 10 6 340 12 0 280 10 0See also editCooking weights and measuresNotes edit One gram per millilitre is very close to one avoirdupois ounce per fluid ounce 1 g ml 1 002 av oz imp fl oz This is not a numerical coincidence but comes from the original definition of the kilogram as the mass of one litre of water and the imperial gallon as the volume occupied by ten avoirdupois pounds of water The slight difference is due to water at 4 C 39 F being used for the kilogram and at 62 F 17 C for the imperial gallon The US fluid ounce is slightly larger 1 g ml 1 043 av oz US fl oz The density of water ranges from about 0 96 to 1 00 g ml dependent on temperature and pressure The table above assumes a temperature range 0 30 C 32 86 F The variation is too small to make any difference in cooking 11 12 Since an imperial cup of water weighs approximately 10 avoirdupois ounces and five imperial cups are approximately equal to six US cups one US cup of water weighs approximately 81 3 avoirdupois ounces References edit 21 CFR 101 9 b 5 viii US Government Printing Office Electronic Code of Federal Regulations Archived 2009 08 13 at the Wayback Machine U S Food and Drug Administration Guidelines for Determining Metric Equivalents of Household Measures US Legal Cup Measures 16 November 2020 Archived from the original on 19 November 2020 Retrieved 17 November 2020 Black and Decker Replacement Carafe Archived from the original on 2016 12 31 Retrieved 2016 12 30 Standard Australian Cooking Measurements Retrieved 2014 09 24 coherent units BIPM Retrieved 2014 05 26 How Many Tablespoons in a Cup Easy Conversions First Health Mag 2016 04 28 Retrieved 2016 05 08 Stobart Tom 1981 The Cook s Encyclopedia Harper amp Row p 524 1 g ml is a good rough guide for water based liquids such as milk the density of milk is about 1 03 1 04 g ml Water density calculator Ma Allen 2007 Elert Glenn ed Density of water The Physics Factbook Retrieved 2018 07 06 a b c L Fulton E Matthews C Davis Average weight of a measured cup of various foods Home Economics Research Report No 41 Agricultural Research Service United States Department of Agriculture Washington DC 1977 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cup unit amp oldid 1217197934, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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