Brown Sugar — Cups to Grams
1 cup brown sugar = 220 grams (packed)
1 cup Brown Sugar = 220 grams
Quick Conversion Table — Brown Sugar
| Cups | Grams | Tablespoons | Teaspoons |
|---|---|---|---|
| ¼ | 55 g | 4 tbsp | 12 tsp |
| ⅓ | 73.3 g | 5.33 tbsp | 15.9 tsp |
| ½ | 110 g | 8 tbsp | 23.9 tsp |
| ⅔ | 146.7 g | 10.7 tbsp | 31.9 tsp |
| ¾ | 165 g | 12 tbsp | 35.9 tsp |
| 1 | 220 g | 16 tbsp | 47.8 tsp |
| 1½ | 330 g | 24 tbsp | 71.7 tsp |
| 2 | 440 g | 32 tbsp | 95.7 tsp |
| 3 | 660 g | 48 tbsp | 143.5 tsp |
| 4 | 880 g | 64 tbsp | 191.3 tsp |
How to Measure Brown Sugar Accurately
Brown sugar is always measured packed — firmly pressed into the measuring cup to eliminate air pockets — unless a recipe explicitly says otherwise. The correct technique: fill the measuring cup with brown sugar, then press it firmly with your fingers or the back of a spoon in layers until the cup is solid with no visible gaps. Level the top with a straight edge. A properly packed cup weighs 220 grams and holds the cup's shape briefly when inverted — this is the classic "sand castle" test that appears in many cookbook instructions.
The 25-gram difference between packed (220g) and loosely spooned (195g) brown sugar is not trivial — it represents 11% more sugar. In a cookie recipe that calls for 220g of packed brown sugar, using only 195g means significantly less moisture (since molasses is hygroscopic), less sweetness, less browning, and less of the rich caramel flavor that molasses contributes. The cookies will spread more, be less chewy, and taste blander.
If your brown sugar has hardened into a solid block, do not try to break it into pieces and use it unpacked — the hard chunks leave air gaps and weigh significantly less per cup than intended. Soften the sugar first: place in an airtight container with a damp paper towel overnight, or microwave on 50% power for 20-second intervals, working the lumps apart after each interval, until softened enough to pack properly.
Brown Sugar in Baking: Why Precision Matters
Brown sugar is granulated white sugar coated with molasses — typically 3.5% molasses for light brown and 6.5% for dark brown, by weight. This molasses coating transforms a simple sweetener into a multifunctional ingredient that simultaneously affects moisture retention, flavor depth, color development, pH balance, and texture in baked goods.
The most significant functional difference between brown sugar and granulated white sugar is moisture retention. Molasses is hygroscopic — it actively draws water from the surrounding environment and from other ingredients in the recipe. When you bake a cookie with 220g of brown sugar, the molasses fraction (about 7.7g in light brown, 14.3g in dark brown) continues to attract moisture from the air after baking, keeping the cookie soft and chewy for days. A cookie made with the equivalent amount of granulated sugar, by contrast, dries out and crisps faster because there is no hygroscopic agent present.
On flavor, the molasses in dark brown sugar contains ketones, aldehydes, furans, and organic acids produced during the molasses production process — a byproduct of sugarcane refining. These compounds give brown sugar its characteristic "caramel-rich, slightly bitter" flavor profile. In chocolate chip cookies, this complexity amplifies the chocolate flavor; in gingerbread, it reinforces the spices; in banana bread, it deepens the fruitiness. Replacing 220g of dark brown sugar with 220g of granulated sugar loses all of this complexity.
Precision in measuring matters because molasses also contributes liquid: 1% weight difference in molasses content changes the effective water content of the recipe by a measurable degree. Using 195g of brown sugar (loosely packed) instead of 220g doesn't just reduce sweetness — it reduces the total moisture added to the batter, changes the fat-to-moisture ratio, and reduces the acidic molasses that might be activating baking soda. The cumulative effect can shift the texture from chewy to dry, the color from deep amber to pale, and the flavor from rich to flat.
Types of Brown Sugar and Their Weights
| Brown Sugar Type | Molasses % | 1 Cup (packed) | Flavor |
|---|---|---|---|
| Light brown sugar | 3.5% | 220g | Mild caramel, subtle |
| Dark brown sugar | 6.5% | 220g | Robust, complex, slightly bitter |
| Turbinado (raw) sugar | 0.5–1% | ~200g | Mild, crunchy, caramel notes |
| Muscovado sugar | 8–13% | ~215g | Intense molasses, sticky |
| Demerara sugar | 1–2% | ~190g | Light toffee, coarse crystals |
| Coconut sugar | n/a | ~200g | Caramel, earthy, lower GI |
Muscovado sugar is the most intensely flavored of the brown sugars — its 8–13% molasses content makes it sticky and almost paste-like, and it packs to a slightly lower per-cup weight (215g) because the high molasses content makes the crystals cling together in larger clumps with air gaps. Turbinado and demerara sugars are minimally refined with very little molasses, so they measure more like granulated sugar and don't pack tightly — their per-cup weight reflects this. Never substitute raw or turbinado sugar cup-for-cup for packed brown sugar without adjusting for the significant weight difference.
Troubleshooting: When Brown Sugar Goes Wrong
Cookies are flat and crispy instead of chewy. Either not enough brown sugar (use packed measurement), or the sugar ratio has too much granulated white sugar. Brown sugar's molasses content is what creates chewiness. Check that you packed the brown sugar firmly — loosely spooned brown sugar at 195g vs packed at 220g is a 25g deficit that directly reduces the hygroscopic molasses content keeping cookies moist and chewy.
Baked goods have a bitter aftertaste. Dark brown sugar's molasses becomes sharply bitter when overcooked. This can happen in recipes baked at temperatures above 375°F / 190°C for too long — the molasses caramelizes and then scorches. Reduce oven temperature by 25°F / 15°C or switch to light brown sugar, which has less molasses and is less prone to over-browning.
Brown sugar dissolved unevenly, leaving dark streaks. This happens when cold butter and brown sugar are creamed briefly, not allowing the molasses to fully distribute. Cream butter and brown sugar at medium speed for 3–4 minutes, scraping the bowl at least twice. The friction and time allow the molasses film to break down and distribute evenly through the fat.
Hardened brown sugar crumbles when measuring and won't pack. The molasses has lost too much moisture to the air. Place the hardened sugar and a damp paper towel (not wet) in an airtight bag for 12–24 hours. For faster results, spread hard sugar in a baking pan, place a small cup of hot water next to it, and cover tightly with foil for 30 minutes. Never add water directly to brown sugar — it dissolves the crystals and creates sticky syrup instead of packable sugar.
Common Questions About Brown Sugar
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1 cup of packed brown sugar weighs 220 grams. Loosely spooned brown sugar weighs about 195 grams per cup — a 25-gram (11%) difference. Always pack unless the recipe specifies otherwise. Both light and dark brown sugar weigh the same per packed cup; the difference is only in molasses content (3.5% vs 6.5%) and flavor intensity.
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Press brown sugar firmly into the measuring cup in layers with your fingers or the back of a spoon, eliminating all air pockets. Level the top. Test: invert the cup briefly over the scale — properly packed brown sugar holds the cup's shape momentarily. If it immediately crumbles and falls, it needed more pressing. A correctly packed cup consistently weighs 220g.
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Yes — both weigh 220g per packed cup. Light brown sugar has 3.5% molasses; dark brown has 6.5% molasses. These are interchangeable by weight in recipes, though the flavor differences are real: dark brown sugar produces deeper, more complex flavor in cookies and cakes. When substituting one for the other, use the same gram weight and expect a flavor difference, not a structural one.
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Brown sugar's molasses coating loses moisture to air, causing the sugar crystals to cement together. Hardening doesn't spoil the sugar — it's purely a texture problem. Prevention: airtight storage with a terra cotta disk or bread slice that slowly releases moisture. Recovery: damp paper towel in a sealed bag overnight, or microwave at 50% power in 20-second bursts. Never add water directly — it dissolves the crystals into syrup.
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Yes. For light brown sugar: mix 200g (1 cup) granulated white sugar with 1 tablespoon (21g) molasses. For dark brown sugar: add 2 tablespoons (42g) molasses per cup of sugar. Mix thoroughly — a stand mixer makes this easier. The result is chemically identical to commercial brown sugar, which is produced by coating refined white sugar crystals with molasses. Weigh the finished sugar to confirm it matches your recipe's gram requirement.
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Molasses contributes moisture (it's hygroscopic, keeping baked goods soft longer), flavor complexity (rich, slightly bitter caramel notes from organic acids and color compounds formed during refining), and mild acidity (pH 5.0–5.5) that reacts with baking soda for leavening. It also deepens browning color. The molasses in 1 cup dark brown sugar accounts for about 14g — enough to measurably affect texture, color, and flavor in the finished product.
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Use the same gram weight (220g packed brown sugar = 220g granulated sugar — not the same cup volume, since granulated sugar is looser at 200g per cup). Expect: less moisture retention (cookies dry out faster), less complex flavor, more spreading in cookies, and paler color. Add 1 tablespoon of molasses per cup of granulated sugar to compensate — this recreates most of brown sugar's functional and flavor properties.
Brown Sugar Conversion Table (Packed)
| Cups | Grams | Ounces |
|---|---|---|
| ¼ cup | 55 g | 1.94 oz |
| ⅓ cup | 73 g | 2.58 oz |
| ½ cup | 110 g | 3.88 oz |
| ⅔ cup | 147 g | 5.19 oz |
| ¾ cup | 165 g | 5.82 oz |
| 1 cup | 220 g | 7.76 oz |
| 1½ cups | 330 g | 11.64 oz |
| 2 cups | 440 g | 15.52 oz |
| 3 cups | 660 g | 23.28 oz |
| 4 cups | 880 g | 31.04 oz |
Related Sweetener Converters
- USDA FoodData Central
- King Arthur Baking — Ingredient Weight Chart
- Shirley O. Corriher, BakeWise — Scribner, 2008