How much vegetable oil is in a glass?
Cooking a huge mass of dishes requires the use of vegetable oil. Moreover, it is often present not only in recipes for second courses, but also in baking. Many housewives prefer to replace butter or margarine with vegetable oil. The fact is that for this you need to know the exact amount of vegetable oil in a glass. Indeed, in recipes and instructions, they always write a specific volume of this product - for example, 150 g or some other figure.
The simplest way
It is in a faceted glass that it is most appropriate to measure the volume of liquid if there are no scales or weighed packaging. If you fill the tank to the very top rim, you can fit 250 ml of oil inside. By weight, it will be 240 grams of liquid for frying, dressing soups or salads. If you pour liquid there only to the “risk”, it will turn out to measure exactly 200 ml of vegetable oil (190 g by weight). But sometimes such a mass of it is redundant.
How to measure less vegetable oil? It can also be estimated as follows:
- ¾ cup filled - inside 180 g;
- 2/3 cup is 160 g;
- respectively, 1/3 cup contains 80 g of vegetable oil;
- if it turned out to fill only 0.25 of the vessel (or ¼) - inside is 60 g of sunflower pomace.
Additional Recommendations
But the owners often have the opposite situation - they need more oil than 1 faceted glass can hold, so you need to more accurately measure the volume or mass of the liquid without using scales.Let only an ordinary glass be at hand - this is enough to solve the problem with acceptable culinary accuracy. To get 0.5 liters of oil, you need to fill 2 containers to the brim.
If the recipe says 400 ml, then it will be enough to fill 2 faceted glasses of sunflower oil strictly to the risk. If the chefs indicate that the dish they offer should be prepared with the addition of 300 ml of liquid, problems should not arise again. Start by filling 1 glass to the limit. Then pour the oil into the desired container. And add another 3 tablespoons there. But there may also be recipes that mention 200 ml of vegetable oil. Here you can pour 1 glass to risk.
Finally, we will give one more useful advice for those who do not have a faceted glass in their household, but everyone will definitely find tablespoons and teaspoons. A tablespoon contains 15 ml of vegetable oil, respectively, 150 ml is exactly 10 tablespoons, 120 ml is 8 tablespoons, and so on. And if you want to be accurate to the gram, then remember that 5 ml of sunflower oil fit in a teaspoon. For example, you need to measure 100 ml like this: take 6 tablespoons and 2 teaspoons. And 125 ml is 8 tablespoons and 1 teaspoon.
By the way, if you use recipes from foreign cookbooks or sources on the Internet, they often mention not glasses, but cups. Their capacity usually coincides with the Russian counterpart or is specified directly in the recipe. Pay attention to such nuances so that the dish turns out tasty and the right consistency.
How much vegetable oil is in a glass, see the video below.