Dried Mango — Cups to Grams

1 cup dried mango strips = 160g | Diced = 175g

Variant
Result
160grams

1 cup Dried Mango = 160 grams

Tablespoons16
Teaspoons48.5
Ounces5.64

Quick Conversion Table — Dried Mango

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

Dried Mango Weight Compared to Other Dried Fruits

Dried fruits vary significantly in weight per cup depending on their natural sugar content (higher sugar = higher density), residual moisture, and piece size and shape. Dried mango at 160g per cup (strips) sits in the mid-range among common dried fruits.

Dried Fruitg per CupNatural Sugar %Typical Use
Medjool dates (pitted)178g~65%Energy bars, natural sweetener
Dried mango (diced)175g65–70%Snacking, baking, granola
Raisins (Thompson)160g~72%Baking, oatmeal, trail mix
Dried mango (strips)160g65–70%Snacking, baking
Dried figs (halved)149g~53%Cheese boards, baking
Dried apricots130g~53%Baking, tagines, trail mix
Dried cranberries120g~72% (added sugar)Baking, salads, trail mix

When substituting dried mango for other dried fruits in a recipe, match by weight to maintain consistent moisture and sweetness contribution. 1 cup raisins (160g) = 1 cup dried mango strips (160g) is a direct substitution by weight and volume. For dried apricots, use more mango by volume (approximately 1.25 cups mango strips = 1 cup apricot halves by weight at 130g).

Snacking Portions and Nutritional Context

Dried mango is nutritionally dense — both in beneficial nutrients and in sugar. Understanding the caloric context helps use it appropriately in both snacking and recipe contexts.

Per 40g serving (standard FDA serving, approximately ¼ cup strips):

The sugar concentration in dried mango is high relative to volume — a ½ cup (80g) portion contains 55–60g sugar. This is 4–5× the sugar content of the same weight of fresh mango (a cup of sliced fresh mango, 165g, contains approximately 22g sugar). Water removal during drying concentrates all nutrients and sugars proportionally. This is nutritionally relevant but not a reason to avoid dried mango — it is a whole food with fiber and micronutrients, unlike added sugar. Context and portion size are the relevant considerations.

For trail mix and granola bars: 1 cup (160g) dried mango strips blended with 1 cup nuts and seeds and ½ cup granola or oats creates approximately 4–6 servings of a balanced snack mix. Each serving provides sustained energy from fat (nuts) and quickly-accessible energy from dried fruit sugars. The fiber in both components slows sugar absorption relative to candy or pure sugar.

Using Dried Mango in Baking

Dried mango is underused in baking compared to its flavor potential. Its tropical sweetness pairs well with coconut, lime, ginger, cardamom, and macadamia nuts — a natural flavor profile for tropical-themed baked goods. Here are the key application techniques:

Preparation before baking: Large dried mango strips (3–5cm) should be cut into 1cm pieces with kitchen scissors or a sharp knife before adding to batter. Large pieces bake unevenly and create awkward texture pockets. If the mango is very dry or hard, soak cut pieces in warm orange juice, pineapple juice, or rum for 15–20 minutes before incorporating — this prevents the dried fruit from absorbing moisture from your batter, which would make the surrounding crumb dry.

Mango muffins: Per 12-muffin batch: 80–100g (½–⅔ cup diced) chopped dried mango. Add with the dry ingredients fold-in. Complementary spices: ½ teaspoon cardamom, ½ teaspoon ginger. Optional: 50g toasted unsweetened coconut. The mango contributes sweetness and moisture; reduce added sugar by 2 tablespoons if using sweetened dried mango.

Granola bars: Per 9×13 pan (approximately 24 bars): 160g (1 cup strips, chopped) dried mango mixed with 3 cups (270g) rolled oats, 1 cup nuts, ½ cup (170g) honey or maple syrup, ¼ cup (55g) coconut oil. Mango pieces near the surface will caramelize slightly during baking — aim for a 5mm deep fruit distribution rather than surface-heavy.

Tropical quick bread: Replace raisins in a standard fruit loaf with 120g (¾ cup diced) dried mango + 30g (¼ cup) unsweetened shredded coconut. Substitute ¼ cup of the milk with pineapple juice and add 1 teaspoon lime zest. The mango provides the structural dried fruit component while adding tropical character.

Common Questions About Dried Mango