A pastry chef has a tested brownie recipe that makes 12 portions. A corporate event needs 175 portions. Before calculating ingredient quantities, they need the exact scale factor and a note about what needs independent adjustment rather than simple scaling.
1 What this calculator does
Calculates the scaling factor to convert a recipe from its original yield to a target yield. Shows the multiplier to apply to every ingredient and provides notes on ingredients that do not scale linearly (leavening agents, salt, cooking time).
2 Formula & professional reasoning
Scale factor = Target servings / Original servings
Scaled ingredient = Original ingredient amount x Scale factor
Ingredients that do NOT scale linearly:
Baking powder/bicarb: reduce by 25% at 4x+ scale
Salt: taste and adjust -- do not scale directly
Cooking time: does not scale with volume
Eggs in baking: round to whole eggs then adjust liquid
Most ingredients scale proportionally -- double the servings, double the ingredients. The exceptions are critical: leavening agents produce carbon dioxide in proportion to their amount, but too much CO2 creates an overly open structure that collapses. Salt has a non-linear effect on flavour perception at large volumes. Cooking time depends on the thickness of the product and heat transfer, not the total volume -- a large pan of brownies takes the same time as a small pan if the depth is the same, but much longer if the depth doubles.
3 Worked examples
⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.
Scale factor: 175 / 12 = 14.583 | Each ingredient x 14.583 | Example: 200g butter -> 200 x 14.583 = 2,917g (2.9kg) | 6 eggs -> 6 x 14.583 = 87.5 -> 88 eggsScale factor: 12 / 80 = 0.15 | Each ingredient x 0.15 | Example: 2kg flour -> 2,000 x 0.15 = 300g | 8 eggs -> 8 x 0.15 = 1.2 eggsScale factor: 500/20 = 25x | Batch factor: 3kg dough capacity / (20 portion recipe total weight) = batches needed | If one batch = 800g dough: 25x scale = 20kg dough / 3kg per mix = 6-7 batches4 Sanity check
5 Common errors
| Error | Cause | Consequence | Fix |
|---|---|---|---|
| Scaling baking powder and bicarb directly at large scale | Applying the scale factor to all leavening agents | Over-leavened product with large holes, collapsed centre and soapy or metallic aftertaste | At 4x scale and above, reduce baking powder and bicarb by 20-25% from the direct scale amount. At 10x+ scale, reduce by up to 30-40%. Leavening agents have a non-linear effect on rise at large volumes. |
| Not rounding eggs to whole numbers and adjusting accordingly | Treating the scaled egg count (e.g. 5.7 eggs) as exact | Unable to measure 0.7 of an egg without additional calculation -- or using incorrect quantity | Round eggs to the nearest whole number and adjust other liquids slightly if needed: if scaling rounds to 5.7 eggs, use 6 eggs and reduce other liquid (milk, water) by approximately 1 tablespoon. Alternatively, scale to a yield that gives a clean egg number. |
| Expecting the same cooking time for a scaled-up recipe | Assuming more food takes proportionally longer to cook | Burnt or undercooked product when cooking time is scaled with the serving count | Cooking time depends on the depth and thermal mass of the product, not the total quantity. If you make more pans of the same depth, the cooking time per pan is unchanged. If you make deeper pans to accommodate more volume, cooking time increases significantly -- check with a probe thermometer. |
| Not accounting for salt tasting at scale | Scaling salt directly without tasting the mixture | Product too salty at large scale -- salt sensitivity is non-linear in cooking | Scale salt approximately to start, then taste and adjust before cooking. In large batches, salt can be perceived as more intense. Start at 80% of the scaled amount and add to taste. |
6 Reference & regulatory links
7 Professional workflow
Common tools used alongside this one: