Arborio Rice — Cups to Grams

1 cup arborio rice = 188 grams dry — standard risotto serving is 80g (just under ½ cup) per person

Variant
Result
188grams

1 cup Arborio Rice = 188 grams

Tablespoons16
Teaspoons48.2
Ounces6.63

Quick Conversion Table — Arborio Rice

CupsGramsTablespoonsTeaspoons
¼47 g4 tbsp12.1 tsp
62.7 g5.34 tbsp16.1 tsp
½94 g8 tbsp24.1 tsp
125.3 g10.7 tbsp32.1 tsp
¾141 g12 tbsp36.2 tsp
1188 g16 tbsp48.2 tsp
282 g24 tbsp72.3 tsp
2376 g32 tbsp96.4 tsp
3564 g48 tbsp144.6 tsp
4752 g64 tbsp192.8 tsp

How to Measure Arborio Rice Accurately

Arborio rice has a distinctive fat, oval grain shape — rounder and shorter than long-grain varieties — that packs more uniformly in a measuring cup. At 188g per cup, it falls between jasmine (185g) and basmati (190g), close enough that all three can be measured with the same cup without concern about significant differences.

For risotto: The most practical measurement approach is weighing on a kitchen scale — 80g per person is easier to measure accurately by weight than by volume (just under ½ cup is awkward with standard measuring cups). The alternative: use ½ cup (94g) per person for a slightly more generous portion, or heaping ⅓ cup for a modest portion.

For large batches: Scale by weight. A restaurant preparing risotto for 20 covers uses 1.6kg dry arborio — 8.5 cups by volume, subject to minor cup-to-cup variation, vs exactly 1.6kg on a scale.

Do not pre-soak arborio: Unlike basmati, arborio rice should NOT be rinsed or soaked before risotto. The surface starch is the source of risotto's creaminess — rinsing removes it before cooking, producing a thinner, less creamy result. For other preparations using arborio (rice pudding, arancini), rinsing is appropriate.

MeasureDry (g)Cooked risotto (g)Approximate servings
⅓ cup62.7g~195g cooked~¾ person (first course)
½ cup94g~290g cooked1 generous person
1 cup188g~585g cooked2–2.5 persons
1¾ cups329g~1,020g cooked4 persons (first course)
2 cups376g~1,170g cooked4 persons (main course)

Why Precision Matters: Starch Release and the Risotto Technique

Risotto's iconic creaminess is produced by one mechanism: the progressive release of amylopectin starch from arborio's grain surface into the surrounding hot liquid. Every measurement decision in risotto — rice weight, broth volume, butter and cheese amounts — feeds into this starch-release process.

The starch release mechanism: Arborio's outer layer is almost pure amylopectin (branched starch), surrounding an amylose-rich core. When heat and mechanical agitation (stirring) are applied simultaneously, the amylopectin dissolves progressively into the cooking liquid. Each gram of released amylopectin thickens approximately 10–15ml of liquid. From 80g of dry arborio, approximately 60–65g of starch is available for release — roughly 50–55g will release into the liquid during cooking, thickening approximately 500–700ml of broth into a creamy sauce.

Broth temperature matters: Cold broth drops the pan temperature by 15–20°C each time it is added, momentarily halting starch gelatinization. Hot broth maintains a consistent cooking temperature (approximately 90–95°C at a gentle simmer), allowing continuous starch release without interruption. The 1-ladle-at-a-time rhythm (add ladle, stir until absorbed, add next ladle) works because each ladle absorbs quickly when the cooking liquid is hot — approximately 90 seconds per ladle of absorbed liquid.

The mantecatura (creaming step): After removing from heat, cold butter (30g per 4 servings = 7.5g per serving) is added and vigorously stirred into the finished risotto. The thermal contrast (cold butter into hot rice) creates an emulsion: butter fat disperses into the starchy cooking liquid, creating a creamy, glossy sauce that coats every grain. This final step is responsible for approximately 30% of risotto's perceived creaminess — skipping it produces a noticeably thinner, drier result.

Arborio, Carnaroli, and Vialone Nano: Italian Risotto Rice Varieties

Italy produces three main PDO/DOC-certified risotto rice varieties, grown in the Po Valley of Piedmont and Lombardy. Understanding their differences helps home cooks choose the right rice and adjust cooking technique accordingly.

Arborio (188g/cup): Named after the town of Arborio in Vercelli Province. The most widely exported and recognizable risotto rice globally. Amylose content: approximately 20–22% — lower than carnaroli. The lower amylose makes arborio's grain center softer and more susceptible to overcooking, requiring constant attention during the final 5 minutes. Forgives brief temperature fluctuations less graciously than carnaroli. Available at virtually all supermarkets worldwide.

Carnaroli (190–192g/cup): Often called "the king of risotto rices" by Italian chefs. Higher amylose (24–26%) creates a firmer grain center that holds texture longer during cooking — you have a wider window between "perfectly al dente" and "overcooked." The result: more even texture throughout the dish. Slightly more expensive than arborio and less widely available outside specialty stores and Italian grocers. For first-time risotto makers, carnaroli is actually easier to cook well than arborio.

Vialone Nano (185–188g/cup): A shorter, rounder grain with IGP protection for production in the Venetian lagoon area. Unique starch composition produces a loose, flowing risotto (all'onda style — "wavy") rather than the creamy-dense risotto typical of Milanese cooking. Cooking time is 16–18 minutes vs 18–22 for arborio/carnaroli. Traditional for Venetian risotto dishes: risi e bisi (peas), risotto di mare (seafood). When substituting Vialone Nano for arborio, reduce cooking time by 2–3 minutes.

Troubleshooting Risotto: Density, Texture, and Consistency

The most common risotto failures relate to incorrect broth quantity, temperature management, or timing — all of which can be diagnosed through measurement and corrected systematically.

Too thick (rice holds shape like a mound): Add warm broth in 2-tablespoon (30ml) increments, stirring vigorously between each addition until the consistency becomes fluid enough to spread slowly on the plate. Then stir in butter (mantecatura) and serve immediately. Adding too much broth at once thins the risotto suddenly — add it small amounts.

Too thin (runs like soup): Continue cooking over medium heat without adding more broth, stirring constantly for 3–4 minutes. The additional cooking allows more starch to release and thicken the liquid. If serving time is imminent, add 1–2 tablespoons (10–20g) of finely grated Parmesan — its protein and starch thicken the sauce quickly. Do not add flour or cornstarch — these produce a gummy rather than creamy texture.

Rice still crunchy after 22 minutes: The broth may have been added too quickly, not allowing each addition to fully absorb and cook the rice evenly. Add more warm broth (½ cup / 118ml) and continue cooking 5 more minutes. Also check: was the broth hot when added? Cold broth significantly slows cooking and produces uneven starch release.

Mushy, unified mass: Overcooked — the amylose core has gelatinized along with the amylopectin surface, producing one uniform starchy mass. Prevention: taste every minute after the 15-minute mark. The finished texture should have resistance in the center (al dente) while the exterior is creamy. Once overcooked, risotto cannot be rescued — use it as arancini filling instead.

Common Questions About Arborio Rice