Creme Fraiche — Cups to Grams Converter

1 cup creme fraiche = 240 grams (standard 30% fat) — the higher-fat cultured cream that doesn't curdle when cooked.

Variant
Result
240grams

1 cup Creme Fraiche = 240 grams

Tablespoons16
Teaspoons48
Ounces8.47

Quick Conversion Table — Creme Fraiche

CupsGramsTablespoonsTeaspoons
¼60 g4 tbsp12 tsp
80 g5.33 tbsp16 tsp
½120 g8 tbsp24 tsp
160 g10.7 tbsp32 tsp
¾180 g12 tbsp36 tsp
1240 g16 tbsp48 tsp
360 g24 tbsp72 tsp
2480 g32 tbsp96 tsp
3720 g48 tbsp144 tsp
4960 g64 tbsp192 tsp

How to Measure Creme Fraiche

Creme fraiche is semi-solid — thicker than sour cream but pourable at room temperature — which makes cup measurement reasonably accurate without special technique. At refrigerator temperature (4°C / 39°F) it is firmer and packs into measuring cups without significant air pockets; at room temperature (20°C / 68°F) it is looser and self-levels.

Measure Standard 30% fat (g) Light/reduced-fat (g) Sour cream sub (g)
1 teaspoon5g4.9g4.8g
1 tablespoon15g14.7g14.4g
¼ cup60g58.75g57.5g
⅓ cup80g78.3g76.7g
½ cup120g117.5g115g
¾ cup180g176.25g172.5g
1 cup240g235g230g
8 oz container227g

The 8 oz container row reflects the most common commercial size. At 227g, it is 13g short of a full cup (240g). Recipes that call for "1 cup creme fraiche" and you have an 8 oz container: you need to add 13g (just under 1 tablespoon) from a second container, or accept the 5.4% deficit — negligible for most applications.

What Is Creme Fraiche? Fat Content, Fermentation, and Why It Matters

Creme fraiche (French: "fresh cream") is a matured, fermented cream product originating in Normandy, France, one of Europe's great dairy regions. It is made by introducing live bacterial cultures — primarily Lactococcus lactis subsp. cremoris and Lactococcus lactis subsp. lactis — into heavy cream. The bacteria consume lactose and produce lactic acid, which lowers the pH from approximately 6.8 (fresh cream) to 4.5–5.0, causing the cream proteins to loosely aggregate and the product to thicken. The fat content remains 30–40%, virtually unchanged from the starting cream.

This fermentation distinguishes creme fraiche from sour cream structurally and functionally:

In France, creme fraiche is produced in two main forms: creme fraiche epaisse (thick, spoonable, 30–40% fat) and creme fraiche liquide (pourable, slightly fermented, closer to "single cream" in the UK). US commercial creme fraiche is closest to the epaisse style. French AOC-protected creme fraiche d'Isigny, from the Calvados department of Normandy, contains a minimum 35% fat and has a distinctly rich, almost buttery flavor from cows grazing on the region's mineral-rich salt meadow grass.

Why Creme Fraiche Doesn't Curdle When Cooked

The most commercially important property of creme fraiche over lower-fat cultured creams is heat stability. Understanding why it doesn't curdle makes it easier to use correctly and to choose substitutes intelligently.

Curdling occurs when milk proteins — primarily casein micelles and whey proteins — denature under heat or acid exposure and aggregate into visible clumps. In a 20% fat product like sour cream, the protein-to-fat ratio is high enough that denatured proteins can aggregate freely once the protective fat shell around them breaks down. In creme fraiche at 30–40% fat, the ratio reverses: there is so much fat relative to protein that denatured proteins cannot reach each other to clump. The fat molecules physically separate them, acting as a structural barrier.

Additionally, creme fraiche's fermentation pre-denatures some casein proteins (acid denaturation at lower pH), making them less reactive to heat-induced denaturation — they have already undergone partial structural change and are more stable in their denatured state than in their native state.

The practical result: creme fraiche can be:

Sour cream cannot do any of these safely at high heat. Heavy cream can be reduced aggressively but lacks the tang and thickening body of creme fraiche. This makes creme fraiche uniquely valuable in French cuisine's sauce tradition, where dairy enrichment at high heat is a fundamental technique.

Creme Fraiche in Cooking: Sauces, Pasta, Desserts, and Baking

Salmon Pasta

The classic smoked salmon pasta sauce: 200g smoked salmon (flaked) + ½ cup (120g) creme fraiche + 1 tablespoon (15g) capers + zest of 1 lemon + 300g cooked linguine. Toss pasta with 2 tablespoons of pasta water to thin, then fold in creme fraiche off the heat. The residual heat from the pasta is sufficient to melt the creme fraiche into a silky coating sauce without risk of curdling. Serves 4. The 120g of creme fraiche adds approximately 300 calories and 24g fat to the dish total — about 75 calories and 6g fat per serving from the cream.

Chicken or Veal Pan Sauce

After searing chicken breasts (2 pieces, 400g total), deglaze the pan with 60 ml (¼ cup) white wine, scraping up fond. Reduce by half. Add ½ cup (120g) creme fraiche and 1 tablespoon (15g) Dijon mustard. Simmer on medium-high for 3–4 minutes, stirring constantly, until sauce coats the back of a spoon. Season with salt, white pepper, and fresh tarragon. The creme fraiche reduces and concentrates in this time without breaking — a sauce that takes under 10 minutes and requires no thickening agent beyond the dairy itself.

Borscht Garnish

Traditional Eastern European borscht is finished with a cold swirl of sour cream (in Ukraine and Poland) or creme fraiche (in the French-influenced version). Use 1–2 tablespoons (15–30g) per bowl. The cold dairy creates a visual contrast against the deep purple soup and a temperature and flavor contrast — cool, mild richness against hot, acidic beet broth.

Fruit Desserts

Creme fraiche is classically served alongside summer berries: ½ cup (120g) creme fraiche + 1 tablespoon (12g) icing sugar + ½ teaspoon vanilla extract, whisked until smooth and slightly thickened. This serves 4 as a topping for strawberries, raspberries, or poached peaches. Unlike whipped cream, creme fraiche holds for hours in the refrigerator without weeping — the fermentation creates a more stable structure than fresh cream.

Clafoutis and Baked Puddings

Creme fraiche appears in clafoutis batter as a partial replacement for milk or cream. Classic cherry clafoutis: 3 eggs + ½ cup (100g) sugar + ½ cup (120g) creme fraiche + ½ cup (118 ml) whole milk + ½ cup (62.5g) all-purpose flour + 1 teaspoon vanilla. Pour over 400g pitted cherries in a buttered baking dish, bake at 180°C (350°F) for 35–40 minutes until puffed and golden. The creme fraiche contributes both richness and a subtle tang that balances the cherries' sweetness — something plain heavy cream cannot replicate.

Cheesecake Base

New York-style cheesecake uses cream cheese as the structural element; French-style cheesecakes (gateau fromage blanc) use fromage blanc or creme fraiche. A simple creme fraiche cheesecake: 500g (2 cups) creme fraiche + 3 eggs + ½ cup (100g) sugar + 1 teaspoon vanilla + 2 tablespoons (15g) cornstarch. Bake in a bain-marie at 150°C (300°F) for 45–50 minutes. The lower fat content of creme fraiche compared to cream cheese produces a lighter, more tangy result that benefits from a fruit compote topping.

How to Make Creme Fraiche at Home

Homemade creme fraiche takes 24–36 hours of passive time and approximately 3 minutes of active work. It costs significantly less than commercial versions and produces a product that many cooks find richer and more flavorful.

Ingredients and Method

Method: Combine cream and buttermilk in a clean glass jar. Stir gently. Cover loosely with cheesecloth or a cloth napkin secured with a rubber band — the mixture needs air circulation to ferment properly but must be protected from contaminants. Leave at room temperature (21–24°C / 70–75°F) for 24–36 hours. The exact time depends on room temperature and the specific bacterial culture: cooler rooms require longer, warmer rooms shorten fermentation. The finished product should be noticeably thickened — it coats a spoon and pulls slightly when the spoon is lifted. Refrigerate immediately. It will firm further in the refrigerator within 2–3 hours. Keeps for up to 2 weeks.

Why Ultra-Pasteurized Cream Won't Work

Ultra-pasteurized (UP) or ultra-high temperature (UHT) cream is heated to 138°C (280°F) for 2 seconds, killing all bacteria including the pathogens that regular pasteurization targets. This sterilization also denatures the whey proteins (primarily beta-lactoglobulin) that are essential for the bacterial culture to thicken the cream. The bacteria in buttermilk (Lactococcus species) need these proteins as scaffolding for the curd structure. With UP cream, the bacteria will produce acid but cannot form a thick, stable product — you get liquid with a slightly sour taste rather than true creme fraiche. Use cream labeled "pasteurized" only, from a refrigerated dairy case.

Troubleshooting

Substituting Creme Fraiche: The Sour Cream + Heavy Cream Blend

When creme fraiche is unavailable, the most functional substitute for cooked applications is a 3:1 blend of sour cream and heavy cream. This raises the effective fat content from sour cream's 18–20% toward creme fraiche's 30%+, significantly improving heat stability.

The Formula

For every 1 cup (240g) of creme fraiche needed:

Effective Fat Content of the Blend

Sour cream at 20% fat: ¾ cup (172.5g) × 20% = 34.5g fat. Heavy cream at 36% fat: ¼ cup (59ml × 1.01 g/ml density ≈ 59.6g) × 36% = 21.5g fat. Total fat: 56g in 231.6g total mixture = 24.2% fat. This is below creme fraiche's 30% but significantly above sour cream's 20%, providing meaningful heat stability improvement. For uncooked applications (dips, dressings, dessert garnishes), the blend performs identically to commercial creme fraiche.

Other Substitutes by Application

Application Best substitute Notes
Cold dips and dressingsSour cream 1:1Slightly more acidic flavor
Hot pan sauces¾ sour cream + ¼ heavy creamLower heat, don't boil
Pasta saucesMascarpone thinned with lemon juiceLess tangy, richer
Baking (cheesecake, pound cake)Sour cream 1:1More tang, slightly less rich
Whipped cream toppingHeavy cream + 1 tsp lemon juiceLighter body, less tang

Nutritional Profile and Commercial Packaging

Creme fraiche is a calorically dense product — significantly more so than sour cream, reflecting its higher fat content. Per 100g: approximately 292 calories, 30g fat (19g saturated), 3g protein, 3g carbohydrates (from residual lactose). Per 2 tablespoons (30g standard serving): 88 calories, 9g fat.

Commercial Container Sizes

US market standard is the 8 oz (227g) container — equivalent to 0.95 cups. Vermont Creamery, the largest US creme fraiche producer, sells 8 oz and 16 oz containers. Whole Foods' 365 brand offers 7 oz (198g). European imports (Isigny Ste. Mère, Elle & Vire) are available in specialty grocers in 200g containers — equivalent to 0.83 cups. For recipes calling for 1 cup, the nearest practical options are:

Creme fraiche keeps for 3–4 weeks refrigerated in an unopened commercial container; once opened, 7–10 days. Homemade keeps 2 weeks. Do not freeze — the emulsion breaks on freezing, producing a grainy, separated product when thawed.

Common Questions About Creme Fraiche