Diced Onion — Cups to Grams

1 cup diced onion = 160 grams (medium ½-inch dice)

Result
160grams

1 cup Diced Onion = 160 grams

Tablespoons16
Teaspoons48.5
Ounces5.64

Quick Conversion Table — Diced Onion

CupsGramsTablespoonsTeaspoons
¼40 g4 tbsp12.1 tsp
53.3 g5.33 tbsp16.2 tsp
½80 g8 tbsp24.2 tsp
106.7 g10.7 tbsp32.3 tsp
¾120 g12 tbsp36.4 tsp
1160 g16 tbsp48.5 tsp
240 g24 tbsp72.7 tsp
2320 g32 tbsp97 tsp
3480 g48 tbsp145.5 tsp
4640 g64 tbsp193.9 tsp

Onion Dice Size: Why the Cut Changes the Weight

Onion is unique among diced vegetables in that the specific cut affects cup weight more dramatically than with most other ingredients. An onion has a layered structure — concentric rings — which means different cutting techniques produce very different piece geometries with different packing efficiencies.

Medium dice (½-inch / 1 cm cubes) is the universal recipe standard and the basis for 160g/cup. The cubes are roughly uniform, pack moderately densely, and leave predictable air gaps. Fine dice (¼-inch / 6mm) produces smaller pieces that settle more densely — approximately 170g per cup. Rough chop produces irregular angular pieces with more air between them — approximately 140–150g per cup. Thinly sliced half-rings are the least dense at 115–130g per cup because the curved pieces create large air pockets.

The practical consequence: if a recipe specifies "1 cup diced onion" but you chop your onion roughly rather than dicing it precisely, you are adding 10–20g less onion than intended. In a simple sauté this makes no real difference. In a tomato sauce or soup base where onion flavor is foundational, under-onioning by 10–20% per cup is noticeable in the final dish.

Dicing technique: For a consistent medium dice, halve the onion root-to-stem, make horizontal cuts parallel to the cutting board (2–3 cuts, stopping before the root), make vertical cuts perpendicular to the board at ½-inch intervals, then cut across to complete the dice. The root holds the layers together throughout, preventing pieces from scattering. Discard the root end at the finish.

Onion Sizes and Cup Yields

Onion SizeWhole WeightPeeled WeightDiced Yield
Small (5–7 cm diameter)100–130g whole75–110g~½ cup (80g)
Medium (8–9 cm diameter)150–200g whole125–170g~1 cup (160g)
Large (10–12 cm diameter)220–320g whole185–270g~1.5 cups (240g)
Extra-large (13+ cm)350g+ whole300g+~2 cups (320g)
Pearl onions (whole)15–20g each12–15g each~12–14 = 1 cup
Shallots (medium)30–50g each25–42g~4 = 1 cup (approx)

Trim loss for yellow onions averages 15–20% of the whole weight (dry papery skin, root end, stem end). Red onions have slightly thicker skin and more trim loss at 18–22%. White onions and sweet onions (Vidalia, Walla Walla) have thinner, more delicate skin with trim loss of 12–15%. All varieties produce approximately the same diced weight per cup at equivalent piece sizes.

Recipe notes on "1 medium onion" vary in their size assumption. American recipes typically mean a 150–200g whole onion (yielding ~1 cup diced). British recipes often mean slightly smaller — 100–140g whole (yielding ~¾ cup diced). If a recipe specifies cups or grams rather than "1 onion," always defer to the measured quantity.

Mirepoix: The Foundational Ratio in Grams

Mirepoix (pronounced meer-PWAH) is the French aromatic base of onion, carrot, and celery that underpins stocks, braises, soups, and stews across European cooking traditions. The classic ratio is 2 parts onion to 1 part carrot to 1 part celery by volume. In practice:

Batch SizeOnionCarrotCeleryTotal Weight
Small (soup for 4)1 cup / 160g½ cup / 55g½ cup / 50g265g
Medium (braise, 6–8 servings)2 cups / 320g1 cup / 110g1 cup / 101g531g
Large (stock pot, 3–4 liters)3 cups / 480g1.5 cups / 165g1.5 cups / 152g797g
Restaurant stock (10 liters)6 cups / 960g3 cups / 330g3 cups / 303g1593g

The 2:1:1 ratio by volume translates to approximately 2.9:1:1 by weight (onion:carrot:celery) because of the density differences. Onion's ratio dominance in the formula exists for flavor reason: cooked onion's sweetness, glutamate content, and aromatic sulfur compounds form the backbone of the flavor. Carrot adds sweetness and color. Celery adds savory depth and salt-enhancing mineral compounds (the natural sodium and potassium in celery amplify other flavors).

Italian soffritto, Spanish sofrito, German Suppengrün, and Cajun "holy trinity" (onion, bell pepper, celery) are regional variants of the same flavor-base concept. The cup-to-gram conversion is the same regardless of what you call the preparation — 1 cup diced onion is 160g in all of them.

Onion Cooking Shrinkage: How Much Does It Cook Down?

Raw onion is 89% water by weight. Cooking drives off that water, concentrating the flavor compounds and collapsing the cell structure. The rate and degree of shrinkage depends on the cooking method and endpoint:

Cooking StageStarting (raw)Approximate Weight AfterVolume After
Just softened (2–3 min, medium heat)160g (1 cup)~120g~¾ cup
Translucent (5–7 min)160g (1 cup)~90–100g~½ cup
Golden (10–15 min)160g (1 cup)~65–75g~⅓ cup
Fully caramelized (40–60 min, low)160g (1 cup)~30–40g~3–4 tbsp

French onion soup requires approximately 1.5 kg (about 9 cups) of raw thinly sliced onion to produce a pot that serves 4–6. After the 45–60 minutes of slow caramelization, that quantity reduces to approximately 450–500g of deeply golden onion — less than ⅓ of the starting weight. This is why French onion soup recipes that call for "6 large onions" are not exaggerating. The flavor concentration that occurs during caramelization (Maillard reaction compounds + sugar concentration) produces the sweet, deeply savory taste that defines the dish.

Common Questions About Diced Onion