Arrowroot — Cups to Grams
1 cup arrowroot starch = 128 grams (Paleo & AIP compliant)
1 cup Arrowroot = 128 grams
Quick Conversion Table — Arrowroot
| Cups | Grams | Tablespoons | Teaspoons |
|---|---|---|---|
| ¼ | 32 g | 4 tbsp | 11.9 tsp |
| ⅓ | 42.7 g | 5.34 tbsp | 15.8 tsp |
| ½ | 64 g | 8 tbsp | 23.7 tsp |
| ⅔ | 85.3 g | 10.7 tbsp | 31.6 tsp |
| ¾ | 96 g | 12 tbsp | 35.6 tsp |
| 1 | 128 g | 16 tbsp | 47.4 tsp |
| 1½ | 192 g | 24 tbsp | 71.1 tsp |
| 2 | 256 g | 32 tbsp | 94.8 tsp |
| 3 | 384 g | 48 tbsp | 142.2 tsp |
| 4 | 512 g | 64 tbsp | 189.6 tsp |
How to Measure Arrowroot Accurately
Arrowroot starch is one of the finer-textured kitchen starches, similar in fineness to cornstarch and tapioca starch. One cup measured by the spoon-and-level method weighs 128 grams. Like cornstarch, arrowroot compacts easily when scooped — a scooped cup can reach 150–160 grams, a 17–25% overcalculation that will over-thicken your sauce or make your baked goods unpleasantly starchy.
In most thickening applications, arrowroot is used in tablespoon or teaspoon quantities (1 tablespoon = 8g, 1 teaspoon = 2.7g), where small measurement errors have less dramatic effects. But in Paleo and AIP baking, where arrowroot can make up a significant fraction of the total "flour" blend, weight measurement is essential.
Arrowroot is also sold as "arrowroot powder" and "arrowroot flour" — all three names refer to the same product. True arrowroot comes from the Maranta arundinacea plant, native to tropical Americas. Some cheaper products labeled "arrowroot" may be blended with other starches (potato, cassava) — check the ingredients list if you need pure arrowroot for AIP compliance.
Storage: arrowroot absorbs moisture and odors readily. Store in an airtight container away from strong-smelling spices. Properly stored arrowroot lasts 2–3 years, though its thickening power can diminish after the first year. If your arrowroot clumps, sift it before measuring to restore consistent density.
Why Precision Matters When Using Arrowroot
Arrowroot's thickening ratio is more sensitive to measurement error than cornstarch because it's a more efficient thickener at lower temperatures. A small excess of arrowroot in a sauce produces a gel that's noticeably over-firm — and unlike a flour-thickened sauce, which you can thin by adding liquid and whisking, an over-thickened arrowroot sauce that has set cannot be successfully thinned without losing the gel structure entirely.
The standard ratio for a medium sauce is 1 tablespoon (8g) arrowroot per 1 cup of liquid. At 1.5 tablespoons (12g) per cup, you have a thick gravy consistency. At 2 tablespoons (16g) per cup, you have a firm gel suitable for sliceable terrines or firm fruit pie fillings. A measurement error of 4–5 grams per tablespoon (which easily occurs when scooping a damp tablespoon into packed starch) shifts you between these consistency categories.
In AIP and Paleo baking, where arrowroot might comprise 20–30% of a flour blend, an error of 20g per cup of flour blend significantly alters the starch-to-fiber ratio and the structure of the final baked good. Too much arrowroot makes baked goods gummy and dense (the starch gel dominates the crumb); too little leaves baked goods crumbly and falling apart (insufficient starch to bind the blend).
For fruit pies specifically, the correct amount of arrowroot is critical for both texture and appearance. Too little arrowroot and the filling is runny and soaks into the bottom crust. Too much and the filling firms into an opaque, starchy gel that tastes floury and loses the fresh-fruit transparency that makes arrowroot superior to cornstarch in this application.
Arrowroot vs Other Thickeners: A Detailed Comparison
| Thickener | 1 Cup Weight | Clarity | Dairy-Safe | Freeze-Thaw | Heat Sensitivity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arrowroot | 128g | Crystal clear | No (slimy) | Good | High (breaks above 80°C) |
| Cornstarch | 128g | Slightly cloudy | Yes | Poor (weeps) | Moderate |
| Tapioca starch | 120g | Very clear | Moderate | Excellent | High (breaks with prolonged heat) |
| Potato starch | ~160g | Slightly opaque | Yes | Poor | Very high (breaks easily) |
| AP flour | 120g | Opaque | Yes | Moderate | Low |
For non-dairy sauces and glazes that need to look pristine — think a beautiful berry coulis spooned over panna cotta, or a perfectly transparent glaze brushed over fresh strawberry tart — arrowroot is the superior choice. The clarity difference versus cornstarch is immediately visible and meaningful.
For make-ahead or freeze-and-reheat applications (soups, stews, pie fillings that will be frozen), arrowroot's freeze-thaw stability gives it a significant advantage over cornstarch. Cornstarch-thickened gravy frozen and reheated typically weeps, releasing liquid. Arrowroot-thickened gravy holds together through one freeze-thaw cycle with minimal weeping.
For anything with milk, cream, or cheese in it, however, use cornstarch or flour. Arrowroot becomes unacceptably slimy when combined with calcium-rich dairy proteins — a béchamel, cream soup, or cheese sauce thickened with arrowroot will have an unpleasant, mucilaginous texture regardless of technique.
Arrowroot is also the right choice for acidic sauces — lemon curd, fruit compote, acidic fruit pie fillings. Cornstarch loses thickening power in strongly acidic environments as the acid cleaves the starch chains. Arrowroot is more stable in mild acid, producing reliable results with lemon juice, vinegar, and citrus in quantities typical for recipes.
Troubleshooting Arrowroot
Sauce is slimy or gluey instead of glossy. Either too much arrowroot was used, or you added it to dairy-based liquid. Reduce the quantity by 25–30% in your next batch. If the sauce contains any milk, cream, or butter, switch to cornstarch — arrowroot is incompatible with dairy proteins.
Sauce thickened beautifully but then thinned out. Held at heat for too long. Once an arrowroot sauce reaches the desired consistency, remove it from the heat or serve immediately. Arrowroot gel is not heat-stable — simmering for more than 5–10 minutes after thickening causes the starch granules to rupture and the gel to break. If you need a hold-warm sauce, use cornstarch or a flour-butter roux instead.
Fruit pie filling is runny after cooling. Insufficient arrowroot for the moisture content of the fruit. Very juicy fruits (peaches, cherries, berries) release significantly more liquid during baking than apples or pears. Increase arrowroot to 2.5 tablespoons (20g) per cup of fruit, or pre-cook the fruit briefly to release and thicken some of the juice before filling the pie shell.
AIP baked goods are gummy in the center. Too much arrowroot in the blend — the starch gel dominates. Reduce arrowroot to no more than 20–25% of total flour weight. Balance with coconut flour (absorbs liquid) and/or cassava flour (provides more fiber structure). The total AIP blend should feel like a slightly gritty, fine powder — not like pure starch.
Arrowroot didn't thicken at all. The liquid wasn't hot enough. Arrowroot requires a minimum of 60°C (140°F) to gelatinize. If you added the slurry to warm (not hot) liquid, it won't thicken. Bring the liquid to a clear simmer before adding the arrowroot slurry, then stir and remove from heat immediately once thickening is visible.
Common Questions About Arrowroot
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1 cup of arrowroot (also sold as arrowroot starch, arrowroot powder, or arrowroot flour — all the same product) = 128 grams using the spoon-and-level method. 1 tablespoon = 8g, 1 teaspoon = 2.7g. Scooping from a bag can compact it to 150g+ per cup.
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Yes, 1:1 by volume for thickening in most applications. The results differ: arrowroot makes a clearer, glossier gel that holds up after freezing; cornstarch makes a slightly opaque gel that works better in dairy sauces and can be simmered longer. For non-dairy applications where clarity matters (fruit sauces, glazes, clear soups), arrowroot is superior. For cream sauces or anything held warm, use cornstarch.
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No — different plants, different weights, slightly different properties. Arrowroot (128g/cup) comes from Maranta arundinacea; tapioca starch (120g/cup) comes from cassava root. Both produce clear gels and are freeze-thaw stable, but tapioca produces a slightly more elastic, chewy gel while arrowroot produces a more delicate, easily broken gel. They substitute 1:1 by volume in most applications, but tapioca is better for boba and GF baking binders; arrowroot is better for delicate sauces and AIP cooking.
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For a lightly thickened broth-style soup: 1 teaspoon (2.7g) arrowroot per cup of liquid. For a medium-bodied soup: 1 tablespoon (8g) per cup. For a thick, gravy-like consistency: 1.5 tablespoons (12g) per cup. Always make a slurry with equal cold water first, add to simmering soup (not boiling), stir, and remove from heat immediately. Don't continue cooking once thickened. Arrowroot-thickened soup can be refrigerated and reheated gently — it will re-thicken as it warms.
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Yes — arrowroot in small amounts (1–2 teaspoons per cup of flour) produces crisper, lighter cookies. It works by the same mechanism as cornstarch in shortbread: diluting the gluten-forming proteins in wheat flour, reducing toughness. In AIP and Paleo cookies where wheat flour is absent, arrowroot forms part of the flour blend but shouldn't exceed 30–40% — too much creates a gummy, starchy cookie that doesn't brown properly. Pair with coconut flour and cassava flour for balanced AIP cookie texture.
Arrowroot Conversion Table
| Amount | Grams | Ounces |
|---|---|---|
| 1 teaspoon | 2.7 g | 0.10 oz |
| 1 tablespoon | 8 g | 0.28 oz |
| ¼ cup | 32 g | 1.13 oz |
| ⅓ cup | 43 g | 1.52 oz |
| ½ cup | 64 g | 2.26 oz |
| 1 cup | 128 g | 4.51 oz |
| 2 cups | 256 g | 9.03 oz |
Related Converters
- USDA FoodData Central — Arrowroot, raw
- Harold McGee, On Food and Cooking — Scribner, 2004
- Bob's Red Mill — Arrowroot Starch/Flour product specifications
- The Paleo Mom — AIP Baking Guide, Sarah Ballantyne PhD