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amother
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Wed, Jun 19 2024, 9:37 am
isnt it approx 60ml?
I have the oxo angled measuring cup.
a 1/4 cup weighs 50g. if I weigh it to 60g its nearly a 1/3 cup.
I thought oxo is accurate?
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amother
Valerian
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Wed, Jun 19 2024, 9:38 am
Don't start weighing baby bottles, that's even scarier. Haven't found a single one that's accurate.
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amother
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Wed, Jun 19 2024, 10:23 am
if anyone has the one cup angled measuring cup and can measure a 1/4 and let me know in grams how much it weighs. would very much appreciate it.
I wonder if I got a fake one off amazon.
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Elfrida
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Wed, Jun 19 2024, 11:00 am
A standard up measure is not the same across the world. Most common measurements are 200 - 250 gram. So a quarter will also vary.
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amother
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Wed, Jun 19 2024, 11:12 am
Elfrida wrote: | A standard up measure is not the same across the world. Most common measurements are 200 - 250 gram. So a quarter will also vary. |
but when I weighed a 1/2 cup of water it was 120g.
so the 1/4 measurement in the same m cup seems off.
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amother
Offwhite
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Wed, Jun 19 2024, 11:15 am
amother OP wrote: | isnt it approx 60ml?
I have the oxo angled measuring cup.
a 1/4 cup weighs 50g. if I weigh it to 60g its nearly a 1/3 cup.
I thought oxo is accurate? |
Are you trying to measure g (grams) or ml (milliliters)?
Grams are weight.
Milliliters are volume.
The confusion is if you’re used to ounces. Ounces can be weight as in 16 oz in a pound. Or ounces can measure volume as in 16 oz in a cup. The 16 oz that fill a measuring cup should be called fluid ounces but no one bothers.
The markings on a measuring cup measure volume, not weight. That would be fluid oz or ml.
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amother
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Wed, Jun 19 2024, 11:16 am
Iymnok wrote: | 1/4 cup is 59.2ml |
I know but my measuring cups weighs it at 53-54. the oxo angled.
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Iymnok
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Wed, Jun 19 2024, 11:16 am
Double post
Last edited by Iymnok on Wed, Jun 19 2024, 11:19 am; edited 1 time in total
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amother
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Wed, Jun 19 2024, 11:17 am
Iymnok wrote: | 1/4 cup is 59.2ml |
you have the oxo angled?
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amother
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Wed, Jun 19 2024, 11:18 am
amother Offwhite wrote: | Are you trying to measure g (grams) or ml (milliliters)?
Grams are weight.
Milliliters are volume.
The confusion is if you’re used to ounces. Ounces can be weight as in 16 oz in a pound. Or ounces can measure volume as in 16 oz in a cup. The 16 oz that fill a measuring cup should be called fluid ounces but no one bothers.
The markings on a measuring cup measure volume, not weight. That would be fluid oz or ml. |
shouldnt a 1/4 cup in ml weigh nearly 60g?
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Iymnok
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Wed, Jun 19 2024, 11:21 am
I do, but it doesn't have exact for ml, only 50ml increments.
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Elfrida
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Wed, Jun 19 2024, 11:25 am
amother OP wrote: | but when I weighed a 1/2 cup of water it was 120g.
so the 1/4 measurement in the same m cup seems off. |
So in America, a standard cup is 240 ml, which would fit in with half a cup weighing 120. However, a metric cup is 250 ml, so of your OXO jug is calibrated to a metric cup, you would get a different result.
One ml of pure water weighs one gram.
Last edited by Elfrida on Wed, Jun 19 2024, 11:29 am; edited 1 time in total
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Iymnok
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Wed, Jun 19 2024, 11:28 am
It's really about 237.5ml
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Iymnok
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Wed, Jun 19 2024, 11:34 am
Yeah, my recipes weren't coming out right so I checked the actual measurements. I also use a regular kitchen scale regularly.
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amother
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Wed, Jun 19 2024, 11:39 am
is a 1/4 cup water 60 ml in volume and 60 g in weight?
my angled cup gives me the weight of 60 g = 70 ml, over a 1/4 cup,
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Elfrida
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Wed, Jun 19 2024, 11:54 am
amother OP wrote: | is a 1/4 cup water 60 ml in volume and 60 g in weight?
my angled cup gives me the weight of 60 g = 70 ml, over a 1/4 cup, |
Assuming we are talking about a metric cup of 250 ml, one quarter would weigh 62.5 grams. Sixty grams is a good working figure for cooking.
In the case of water, ml and grams can be used interchangeably. The scale was built around water. The definition of a gram is the weight of one cubic centimetre of pure water at standard temperature and pressure. So the weight is a function of the volume. So one ml weighs one gram.
It doesn't work that way with other fluids, or if there is anything g dissolved in the water.
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amother
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Wed, Jun 19 2024, 1:00 pm
Iymnok wrote: | Yeah, my recipes weren't coming out right so I checked the actual measurements. I also use a regular kitchen scale regularly. |
it has ml and cups in one measuring jug.
1 cup-240ml
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