Cannellini Beans — Cups to Grams
1 cup cannellini beans = 180 grams (dry, cooked, or canned drained — all nearly identical)
1 cup Cannellini Beans = 180 grams
Quick Conversion Table — Cannellini Beans
| Cups | Grams | Tablespoons | Teaspoons |
|---|---|---|---|
| ¼ | 45 g | 3.98 tbsp | 12 tsp |
| ⅓ | 60 g | 5.31 tbsp | 16 tsp |
| ½ | 90 g | 7.96 tbsp | 24 tsp |
| ⅔ | 120 g | 10.6 tbsp | 32 tsp |
| ¾ | 135 g | 11.9 tbsp | 36 tsp |
| 1 | 180 g | 15.9 tbsp | 48 tsp |
| 1½ | 270 g | 23.9 tbsp | 72 tsp |
| 2 | 360 g | 31.9 tbsp | 96 tsp |
| 3 | 540 g | 47.8 tbsp | 144 tsp |
| 4 | 720 g | 63.7 tbsp | 192 tsp |
What Are Cannellini Beans?
Cannellini beans (pronounced "can-eh-LEE-nee") are the Italian white kidney bean, a large, oval legume with a thin skin, creamy white color, and a smooth, mild interior. They are classified as Phaseolus vulgaris — the same species as kidney beans, black beans, and pinto beans — but they are a white-skinned variety distinct from the red-skinned kidney bean in both texture and culinary application.
The name derives from the Italian word for "small tubes," referring to the bean's elongated, slightly cylindrical shape. They are grown primarily in central Italy — particularly in Tuscany, Calabria, and the Lazio region — and are the bean of Italian cooking in a way that pinto beans are the bean of Mexican-American cooking. Authentic Italian cannellini have a thin skin that almost disappears into the flesh when fully cooked, producing a seamlessly creamy texture that distinguishes them from navy or great northern beans.
In American supermarkets, cannellini beans are sold dried (at 180g/cup) or canned in brine. The canned product is reliably convenient for everyday cooking; the dried bean, properly soaked and cooked, has a superior texture for dishes like pasta e fagioli where the bean's integrity matters.
Cannellini vs Navy vs Great Northern: The White Bean Family
Three white bean varieties dominate North American and European cooking, and they are often used interchangeably in recipes — with different textural results. All are Phaseolus vulgaris and share a mild, starchy, creamy flavor profile, but they differ significantly in size and post-cooking texture.
| Bean | Size | g/cup (dry) | Texture when cooked | Best application |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cannellini | Large (≈1.5 cm) | 180g | Creamy, holds shape well | Pasta e fagioli, salads, soups |
| Great Northern | Medium (≈1.2 cm) | 185g | Firm, holds shape best | Casseroles, baked beans |
| Navy bean | Small (≈0.8 cm) | 190g | Very creamy, breaks down easily | Boston baked beans, soups, purees |
When a recipe specifies one white bean variety, substitution is possible at equal weight. The texture difference matters most when the beans are visible and whole (salads, pasta dishes) — use cannellini for their shape retention. When beans are mashed or pureed (soups, dips), navy beans produce the smoothest result. Great northern beans are the middle ground — firmer than cannellini but less creamy than navy beans.
Pasta e Fagioli: Quantities and Technique
Pasta e fagioli is one of the great Italian peasant dishes — thick, hearty, and built around cannellini beans as both the protein and the thickener. The bean performs double duty: whole beans add texture, and mashed beans thicken the broth. Getting the bean quantity right is essential to achieving the classic dense, porridge-like consistency.
Standard recipe for 4 servings: 1.5 cups (270g) dried cannellini beans, soaked overnight and cooked until very soft (approximately 1.5 hours), or two 15-oz cans (totaling 630g drained, approximately 3.5 cups). After cooking, remove approximately one-third of the beans (1 cup/180g) and mash or blend them, then stir the puree back into the soup — this creates the thick, creamy broth that defines the dish. Add 1 cup (100g) dry ditalini or elbow pasta, cook 8–10 minutes in the soup. Finish with olive oil, rosemary, and Parmesan.
The critical technical point: the pasta is cooked directly in the soup, not separately. This releases pasta starch into the broth, thickening it further. The soup thickens as it sits — leftovers turn nearly solid in the refrigerator and require 2–3 tablespoons of water per portion when reheating. This is why ribollita ("reboiled") emerged as a second-day use.
Ribollita: The Bean Soup That Becomes a Porridge
Ribollita is the Tuscan answer to the question of what to do with leftover bean soup. Literally "reboiled," it takes yesterday's cannellini-based minestrone and transforms it by adding stale bread and reheating (reboiling) until the bread absorbs all the liquid and the soup becomes a thick, spoonable porridge. A classic ribollita recipe uses a 2-day process:
Day one — the base soup: 2 cups (360g) dried cannellini beans, soaked overnight and cooked with olive oil, garlic, canned tomatoes, cavolo nero (Tuscan kale), and vegetables. Season with salt only after beans are fully tender. Makes approximately 3 quarts of thick bean soup — enough for 6 servings on day one with leftover for ribollita on day two.
Day two — the ribollita: Reheat the leftover soup. Stir in 3–4 thick slices (200–280g) of day-old Tuscan bread (pane sciocco — the unsalted, dense-crumb loaf traditional to Tuscany) torn into chunks. Simmer, stirring, until the bread completely disintegrates into the soup and the mixture is thick enough that a spoon dragged through it holds a track for several seconds. Season with fresh-pressed olive oil poured over the top before serving. The ribollita should be served in the same pot at the table.
Cannellini Beans Conversion Table
| Amount | Dry (g) | Cooked (g) | Canned Drained (g) | Ounces (dry) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 tsp | 3.75g | — | — | 0.13 oz |
| 1 tbsp | 11.3g | 11.3g | 11.3g | 0.40 oz |
| ¼ cup | 45g | 45g | 45g | 1.59 oz |
| ⅓ cup | 60g | 60g | 60g | 2.12 oz |
| ½ cup | 90g | 90g | 90g | 3.17 oz |
| ⅔ cup | 120g | 120g | 120g | 4.23 oz |
| ¾ cup | 135g | 135g | 135g | 4.76 oz |
| 1 cup | 180g | 180g | 180g | 6.35 oz |
| 15-oz can (drained) | — | ≈315g (1.75 cups) | ≈315g | — |
| 1 lb dried | 454g | ≈850–990g | — | 16 oz |
Common Questions About Cannellini Beans
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180g per cup in all three forms: dry, cooked, and canned drained. This unusual consistency occurs because cooked cannellini beans are larger and pack less densely than hard dry beans, offsetting the extra water weight. 1 tablespoon dry = 11.3g.
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Yes. Cannellini beans are sometimes labeled "white kidney beans" in North American markets. They are a white-skinned variety of Phaseolus vulgaris — the same species as red kidney beans — but with a distinctly milder flavor, thinner skin, and creamier interior. They are not the same as navy beans (smaller, rounder) or great northern beans (medium-sized, firmer).
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Overnight-soaked cannellini beans: 60–90 minutes at a gentle simmer. Unsoaked: 90–120 minutes. Pressure cooker (Instant Pot): 20–25 minutes soaked, 35–40 minutes unsoaked, at high pressure. Cannellini cook slightly faster than kidney beans due to thinner skins. Test by squeezing a bean — it should yield to light pressure with no hard center. Unlike kidney beans, no mandatory hard boil required for safety.
Related Bean Converters
- USDA FoodData Central — Beans, white, mature seeds, raw (FDC ID 175194)
- King Arthur Baking — Ingredient Weight Chart
- Marcella Hazan, Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking — Alfred A. Knopf, 1992
- Faith Willinger, Eating in Italy — William Morrow, 1998
- Harold McGee, On Food and Cooking — Scribner, 2004