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Cooking conversions calculators
#11
Maybe you should buy a scale. Oh, wait, you have one!

I bake bread regularly. I bake lots of brioche, and use brioche as the basis for sweet rolls. I don't use a scale. I don't even have one. I would if I baked wedding cakes, but for bread it's really not necessary. I can make a fantastic brioche without even measuring cups or spoons.

500 grams of flour is common amount for a recipe. It's 17.6 ounces, or a little more than one pound. One pound of bread flour is maybe a bit more than 3.5 cups. Many or most recipes call for 500g, or 1 lb, or 3.5 cups. But the weight per volume depends on the type of flour, and the moisture content, and how you scoop it.

The salt is off, but that's an error in both the recipe and the conversion. How much one teaspoon weighs depends on the type and brand, but for the most part, a teaspoon of salt is close to a quarter of an ounce. I'd be wary of any calculation that starts with 1 tsp = 5g. I know that's what many cheap measuring spoons say, but it's absurd. By my conversion, 65 grams = 2.3 ounces, or roughly 9 tsp, or 3 TB. Which is still way, way too much.

In bread, one pound of flour usually goes with 1 or 2 tsp of salt. I use 2 tsp in a regular old peasant bread. In a brioche, with all those eggs and unsalted butter, going to 1 TB would be fine, but I still stick with 2 tsp out of habit. So, whether you add 9 tsp, or 13, it's going to ruin your brioche.

You can carefully measure 500 grams of flour, and 2 tsp of salt, and what, a couple TB of sugar? Then you add 1/2 cup of milk, but it might be whole milk or 1% of who knows. Then you add a couple sticks of butter, and how much of that is fat and how much is water depends on the brand. Then you crack open 3 or 4 or 6 eggs, each of which is a different and unpredictable size. Even in a carton of "large" eggs there can be a wide variation -- the "large" simply refers to the weight of the entire dozen. Out of the twelve, you might pix six eggs that are actually mediums, or maybe they're jumbos.

So careful measuring won't get you an exact result, no matter what -- it's like measuring with a micrometer, marking it with chalk, and then cutting it with an axe.

Brioche is a little tricky in getting it all well incorporated without letting the butter melt. But it's forgiving in terms of quantities. 1 stick of butter is good, 2 sticks is better, more than that is perhaps too rich. 3 eggs is a fine start, 6 or 7 would be the max. Or, add 4 eggs and another 5 or 6 yolks. It'll be fine.
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#12
I always use a scale when I'm baking to measure flour, brown sugar etc. This is the only way to achieve consistency.

I never use a scale when I'm cooking.
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#13
Oh, you guys have made this entirely too complicated again. What I said was "...trying to do some conversions so I had a feel for how many cups of flour it would take to equal 500 grams." This should have been simple, and apparently the answer is that nobody knows of a site that gives reasonably consistent results. Okey dokey. Smile
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#14
How many precise buds of weed do you bake in your brownies ?
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#15
AlphaDog wrote:
Oh, you guys have made this entirely too complicated again. What I said was "...trying to do some conversions so I had a feel for how many cups of flour it would take to equal 500 grams." This should have been simple, and apparently the answer is that nobody knows of a site that gives reasonably consistent results. Okey dokey. Smile

There is no answer because, flour can be compressed.

Try this experiment:

- Scoop out 1 cup of flour from a bag of flour. Level it off and weigh it.

- Sift flour into a 1 cup measure. Level it off and weigh it.
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#16
Maybe it would be better to start with a recipe that is set up for weights in the first place, because I've come across fairly substantial variations in what different bakers consider the weight of a cup of flour. Looking at a few sources close by right now, Alton Brown uses 135 grams, the King Arthur Flour baking book uses 4-1/4 oz., and Cook's Illustrated uses 5 oz.--all for one cup of all-purpose flour.

Weigh the empty cup, then weigh the cup with flour. Subtract the weight of the cup and you'll have the weight of the flour.
Fortunately, with most scales you don't have to do any math at all: put a bowl or cup on the scale, hit the tare button; add whatever weight of flour you're aiming for, hit tare again; and repeat as needed. FWIW, I don't usually bother weighing small amounts of salt and spices.

For a sample of brioche proportions to compare your recipe to, the King Arthur book calls for 10-1/2 oz. (2-1/2 cups) flour, 4 eggs, 7/8 oz. sugar (2 tbs.), 8 oz. (1 cup) butter, 2 oz. water, and 3/4 tsp. salt (no weight given--sometimes they do, sometimes they don't!) to make what they call one round loaf. Disclaimer: I haven't tried this recipe. Hope yours works out well!
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#17
A-Polly wrote:
Maybe it would be better to start with a recipe that is set up for weights in the first place, because I've come across fairly substantial variations in what different bakers consider the weight of a cup of flour.

That is the best solution. All of my baking books use this method.
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