How many grams of buckwheat in a glass?
Buckwheat is often called the queen of cereals for its taste, useful properties and compatibility with almost all products. It is also popular among people leading a healthy lifestyle, among those who want to lose weight and among children and the elderly. And just in every family there is definitely buckwheat porridge. It is cooked easily and relatively quickly, it is almost impossible to spoil it.
But not every housewife has a culinary scale for weighing buckwheat. But this is often necessary when preparing new recipes and the correct calculation when cooking porridge for the family.
But almost every housewife in the kitchen has a faceted glass. So, it is he who, known since the time of our grandmothers, will help us measure the exact weight of cereals. It is made according to GOST and its dimensions are exactly the same for everyone. Therefore, it is universal for measuring all cereals, cereals, bulk products and liquids. There are several versions of the origin of this glass.
The most popular - the glass was invented by the muralist Mukhina, who created the well-known sculpture "Collective Farmer and Worker". The volume of this glass is 200 ml. Moreover, 200 ml is the place where the faceted sides end and a rim about 1 cm wide begins. Previously, this glass was made without this rim, but it was inconvenient to drink from it, and later they came up with a smooth ending to the top of the glass, which was popularly called “lip”.
So, if we pour buckwheat into the aforementioned glass with edges up to the “lip”, we get 170 grams of the net weight of the product.
In a "tea" glass with a volume of 250 ml, also known to us since the times of the USSR, 210 grams of cereal will fit.
But if, nevertheless, according to the recipe, we need 100 grams of buckwheat, a glass will no longer help with such a small volume. The well-known cutlery will come to the rescue - an ordinary tablespoon. One tablespoon holds 19 grams of buckwheat, if you take it without a top. If we take it with a slide, then 25 grams come out. That is, to measure 100 grams of buckwheat, you need only 4 large spoons with a top.
Respectively, to measure such a frequent weight - 150 grams of buckwheat, you need 6 tablespoons of buckwheat with a slide. 25*6=150 grams.
200 grams of buckwheat is the glass mentioned above along the “lip” and a tablespoon with a top.
To measure 300 grams of buckwheat, we only need one faceted glass filled to the “lip” and seven standard large spoons of cereal with a top. Or a faceted glass filled to the top and one standard spoonful of cereal without a top.
It should also be remembered that from 100 grams of buckwheat, 260-300 grams of finished porridge is obtained, depending on the variety and degree of boiledness. We need this data if the recipe gives the weight in grams of ready-made buckwheat.
When measuring, one should take into account whether it is dry buckwheat or it was lying in a humid place. If it is calcined, it is natural that its weight will be less than unfried, because liquid was removed from it during calcination. The error in this case will be about 3-6%.
If we recall such concepts as density and volume, then the density of this porridge is 800 g / l, that is, 800 grams of cereal is placed in a liter jar. If we apply mathematics, we can calculate that 1 kg of buckwheat is 1250 ml in volume equivalent. That is, it is one liter jar and half a half liter jar.
About how many grams of buckwheat in a glass, see the next video.