The first step is to get
yourself a good selection of measuring cups and spoons:
- 1 Cup (C)
- 1/2 C
- 1/3 C
- 1/4 C
- 1/8 C
- 1 Tablespoon (tbsp or T)
- 1 Teaspoon (tsp or t)
- 1/2 tsp
- 1/4 tsp
A clear glass measuring cup
is necessary to get precise liquid measurements.
Dry Ingredients -
The most important thing to know about measuring dry
ingredients is that they should be level with the top of
your measuring cup. Dip your cup into the bin, fill to
overflowing and level it off by sweeping the edge of a
butter knife across the top. Be careful if you are using a
cup larger than what is needed (as in a one cup measure to
get 1/2 C worth of ingredients). Because of the way certain
foods settle, this will only be an approximation. The same
leveling technique should be used with measuring spoons.
To pack or not to pack?
That is the culinary question. Most ingredients don't need
to be packed into the measuring cup. Granulated sugar does
it for you. Flour should actually be aerated of fluffed up
before measuring. Brown sugar is the one exception, this you
want to pack down while measuring in order to get the proper
amount.
Measure liquids at eye
level. In other words, place the cup on a flat surface
and crouch down so your at the same level as the cup in
order to check the accuracy of the amount in the cup.
To measure solid fats
(shortening, butter etc.): Most butter has measurements
listed on the wrapper, so you can simply cut off the amount
you need. Another method that works well for butter and
especially shortening is water displacement (this works for
any fraction of a cup measurement). For instance, if you
need 1/2 C shortening fill a 1 cup measure 1/2 full with
water. Carefully add shortening to the cup until the water
reaches the top of the cup. Drain the water and use the
shortening.
Measurement Equivalents:
- 4C = 1 quart
- 2C = 1 pint
- 2 pints = 1 quart
- 4 quarts = 1 gallon
- 8 quarts = 1 peck
- 4 pecks = 1 bushel
- 16 ounces (oz) = 1 pound
- 3 tsp = 1 tbsp
- 2 tbsp = 1/8 C or 1
ounce
- 4 tbsp = 1/4C
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