A recipe from a US food magazine lists ingredients in cups, ounces and Fahrenheit. The professional kitchen works in grams, millilitres and Celsius. Before scaling the recipe, you need quick conversions for every unit in the list.
Volume: 1 cup = 250 mL (AU) · 1 tbsp = 15 mL · 1 tsp = 5 mL · 1 fl oz = 29.6 mL
Temperature: Fan = conventional − 20°C · Gas Mark 4 = 180°C = 350°F
1 What this calculator does
Converts between common cooking measurement units: weight (g, kg, oz, lb), volume (mL, L, cups, tbsp, tsp, fl oz), temperature (C to F, F to C, C to fan-forced) and cups to mL. Provides all conversions in one view for quick reference.
2 Formula & professional reasoning
Weight: 1 kg = 1,000g | 1 lb = 453.6g | 1 oz = 28.35g
Volume: 1 L = 1,000mL | 1 cup (AU) = 250mL | 1 US cup = 240mL | 1 tbsp (AU) = 20mL | 1 US tbsp = 15mL | 1 tsp = 5mL | 1 fl oz = 29.57mL
Temperature C to F: F = C x 9/5 + 32 | F to C: C = (F-32) x 5/9
Fan-forced: Fan C = Conventional C - 20
Professional kitchens use metric (grams and mL) for accuracy and consistency. Home recipes from the US use cups, tablespoons and ounces. International recipe books use a mix of all systems. The cooking unit converter provides instant reference for all common conversions. The critical distinctions: AU tablespoon (20mL) differs from US (15mL) by 25%; AU cup (250mL) differs from US (240mL) by 4%; and fan-forced ovens run 20C hotter than their setting compared to conventional ovens.
3 Worked examples
⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.
Oz: 250 / 28.35 = 8.82 oz | Lb: 250 / 453.6 = 0.551 lb | Kg: 250 / 1000 = 0.25 kgmL: 2.5 x 250 = 625mL | L: 625/1000 = 0.625L | tbsp: 625/20 = 31.25 AU tbsp | tsp: 625/5 = 125 tsp375F: (375-32)x5/9 = 190.6C conventional | Fan-forced: 170.6C | Flour: 2 cups (US) = 2x240 = 480mL volume; use baking converter for grams | Butter: 1/2 cup US = 120mL = 113g | Vanilla: 1 tsp = 5mL | Sugar: 3/4 cup US = 180mL = 150g | Chocolate: 2 oz = 56.7g4 Sanity check
5 Common errors
| Error | Cause | Consequence | Fix |
|---|---|---|---|
| Using a simple mL calculation to convert cups of dry ingredients | Treating cups as a pure volume measure for all ingredients | Ingredient weight significantly wrong -- 1 cup of flour is not the same weight as 1 cup of sugar despite the same volume | For dry ingredients, use the Baking Conversion Calculator which applies ingredient-specific densities (g per cup). Volume to weight conversion for dry baking ingredients requires knowing the density of each specific ingredient. |
| Not noting AU vs US tablespoon when adapting recipes | Assuming all tablespoons are 15mL | A recipe from a US book measured in AU tablespoons will use 25% more of any tablespoon measure than intended | AU tablespoon is 20mL; US tablespoon is 15mL. For leavening agents (baking powder, bicarb), spices and salt, specify and use the correct size. For large volumes of liquid (milk, water), the difference is less critical. |
| Confusing fl oz and oz | Treating fluid ounces (volume) and ounces (weight) as the same unit | Liquid volume calculation wrong when weight-based conversion is applied | Fluid ounce (fl oz) is a volume measure: 1 fl oz = 29.57mL. Ounce (oz) without 'fluid' is a weight measure: 1 oz = 28.35g. They are completely different units with the same name. Check context to determine which is meant. |
| Forgetting to adjust oven temperature when the recipe uses a different oven type | Not noting whether the recipe is written for fan-forced or conventional | Baked goods overcooked (fan in a conventional recipe) or undercooked (conventional in a fan recipe) | Check whether the recipe specifies fan-forced or conventional. Most UK and AU recipes specify one or the other. US recipes assume a conventional oven unless noted. Subtract 20C for fan-forced when the recipe was written for conventional. |
6 Reference & regulatory links
7 Professional workflow
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