Dried Strawberries — Cups to Grams
1 cup sliced dried strawberries = 95 grams. Freeze-dried = 25g. Diced = 115g. Fresh strawberries = 144g/cup whole.
1 cup Dried Strawberries = 85 grams
Quick Conversion Table — Dried Strawberries
| Cups | Grams | Tablespoons | Teaspoons |
|---|---|---|---|
| ¼ | 21.3 g | 3.61 tbsp | 10.7 tsp |
| ⅓ | 28.3 g | 4.8 tbsp | 14.2 tsp |
| ½ | 42.5 g | 7.2 tbsp | 21.3 tsp |
| ⅔ | 56.7 g | 9.61 tbsp | 28.4 tsp |
| ¾ | 63.8 g | 10.8 tbsp | 31.9 tsp |
| 1 | 85 g | 14.4 tbsp | 42.5 tsp |
| 1½ | 127.5 g | 21.6 tbsp | 63.8 tsp |
| 2 | 170 g | 28.8 tbsp | 85 tsp |
| 3 | 255 g | 43.2 tbsp | 127.5 tsp |
| 4 | 340 g | 57.6 tbsp | 170 tsp |
Dried vs Freeze-Dried: Fundamentally Different Products
The weight difference between dried strawberries (95g/cup sliced) and freeze-dried strawberries (25g/cup) reflects fundamentally different manufacturing processes, textures, and culinary roles. Confusing them in recipes produces drastically wrong results — a recipe calling for 1 cup freeze-dried strawberries (25g) will be overwhelmingly concentrated if substituted with 1 cup regular dried (95g), which is nearly 4 times the weight.
Regular dried strawberries are dehydrated using warm air at 135-150°F (57-65°C) over 6-12 hours. Approximately 80% of the water is removed, leaving a pliable, chewy product with a leathery-jammy texture. The heat dehydration causes slight Maillard browning of the natural sugars, producing a cooked, concentrated flavor that is sweeter and more complex than fresh. Shelf life: 6-12 months in an airtight package at room temperature.
Freeze-dried strawberries are frozen first (typically to -40°F / -40°C), then placed in a vacuum chamber where pressure is lowered to allow the ice to sublimate directly from solid to vapor — bypassing the liquid phase entirely. Over 97% of the water is removed. The resulting product retains the strawberry's original cellular structure (which is why they look like perfect strawberries), produces an intensely bright flavor because heat-sensitive volatile aromatic compounds are preserved, and dissolves almost instantly in the mouth. The texture is crisp, light, and brittle — similar to styrofoam before water contact, then dissolving like cotton candy.
The 6:1 weight difference between the two products per cup means they inhabit entirely different recipe spaces. Neither can substitute for the other by volume or weight in most applications.
| Measure | Sliced dried (g) | Diced dried (g) | Freeze-dried (g) | Fresh whole (g) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 tablespoon | 5.9g | 7.2g | 1.6g | 9.0g |
| 1/4 cup | 23.75g | 28.75g | 6.25g | 36g |
| 1/2 cup | 47.5g | 57.5g | 12.5g | 72g |
| 1 cup | 95g | 115g | 25g | 144g |
Granola and Trail Mix: No-Soak Applications
Dried strawberries are an outstanding granola and trail mix ingredient. Their natural sweetness, pink-red color, and chewy texture create contrast with crunchy oats and nuts. The single rule for granola use: always add dried strawberries after the granola has baked and cooled slightly — never bake them with the oats.
Baking dried strawberries at 325°F (165°C) for 25-30 minutes (the typical granola bake time) causes several problems: the pieces harden from leathery-chewy to tough and difficult to chew; the sugars, both natural and added, caramelize and potentially scorch; and the fresh-fruit strawberry flavor cooks off, leaving a flat, overly sweet residue. By adding after baking, you preserve the chewy texture and flavor.
Standard granola recipe with dried strawberries (yields 8 cups):
- 4 cups (360g) rolled oats
- 1 cup (120g) sliced almonds
- 1/2 cup (70g) pepitas
- 1/3 cup (80ml) melted coconut oil
- 1/4 cup (85g) honey or maple syrup
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract, 1/2 teaspoon salt
Combine oat mixture, spread on two lined sheet pans. Bake 325°F (165°C) for 25 minutes, stirring once at 12 minutes. Remove from oven, cool 5 minutes, then add 1 cup (95g) sliced dried strawberries per batch. The residual heat softens the berries slightly without cooking them. Finished granola ratio: approximately 2.8:1 oat-mix to strawberry by weight.
Trail mix (yields 4 cups): 1 cup (145g) roasted almonds + 1 cup (130g) cashews + 1/2 cup (85g) dark chocolate chips + 3/4 cup (71g) sliced dried strawberries + 1/4 cup (35g) coconut flakes. The strawberry-to-nut ratio by weight (1:3.3) ensures strawberry flavor in every handful without dominating. The pink color of the dried strawberries makes this mix visually appealing.
Overnight oats: 1/4 cup (24g) sliced dried strawberries per 1/2 cup (40g) dry rolled oats. No soaking needed — overnight refrigeration in milk or yogurt hydrates the dried fruit naturally over 6-8 hours, tinting the oats a soft pink and releasing strawberry flavor throughout.
Baking with Dried Strawberries: Soaking Method
For muffins, quick breads, and cakes, the 10-minute soak is the difference between well-distributed fruit and dry pockets. Muffin batter contains approximately 50-65% moisture by weight. Dried strawberries at 15-20% moisture are significantly drier than the surrounding batter. When baked without pre-soaking, the dried fruit pulls moisture from the batter through osmosis during the 18-22 minutes in the oven, creating desiccated zones in the crumb immediately surrounding each piece of fruit.
Soaking technique:
- Measure the dried strawberries (usually 3/4 cup / 71g sliced for a standard 12-muffin batch)
- Place in a small bowl, cover with warm water (110°F / 43°C — not boiling, which further cooks the fruit)
- Soak exactly 10 minutes — set a timer. Shorter than 10 minutes is insufficient; longer produces overly soft pieces that disintegrate when folded
- Drain through a fine mesh strainer — save the soaking liquid (it is strawberry-infused water, useful for simple syrups or brushing onto finished muffins)
- Spread on a paper towel and blot gently — the goal is damp, not dripping wet
- Measure again after soaking: 3/4 cup (71g) dried strawberries absorbs approximately 25-30g of water during soaking, increasing to about 95-100g. Adjust the recipe's expected weight accordingly
Strawberry muffins (yields 12): 2 cups (250g) all-purpose flour + 3/4 cup (150g) sugar + 1 tablespoon baking powder + 1/2 teaspoon salt + 1 cup (240ml) buttermilk + 1/2 cup (113g) melted butter + 2 eggs + 1 teaspoon vanilla. Whisk dry, whisk wet, combine. Fold in 3/4 cup soaked-and-drained sliced dried strawberries plus 1/2 cup (12.5g) freeze-dried strawberries (the freeze-dried adds color and flavor intensity without moisture). Fill cups 3/4 full. Bake 400°F (200°C) 16-18 minutes.
Freeze-Dried Strawberries in Baking and Decoration
Freeze-dried strawberries at 25g/cup are nearly pure flavor delivery systems. Their uses in baking differ fundamentally from regular dried strawberries.
Strawberry powder for frosting and buttercream: Grind 1 cup (25g) freeze-dried strawberries in a food processor or spice grinder to a fine powder. One cup of whole freeze-dried strawberries yields approximately 3 tablespoons (20g) of powder. Sift this powder into 2 cups (240g) powdered sugar before combining with 1 cup (226g) softened butter and 2 tablespoons (30ml) cream. The resulting buttercream is naturally pink, intensely flavored, and completely stable (no added moisture that could break the emulsion). This technique produces a better strawberry flavor than extracts and a more natural color than gel food coloring.
Strawberry shortcake garnish: Use sliced dried strawberries as a year-round garnish when fresh are unavailable. Place 3-4 sliced dried strawberries on each portion of whipped cream for visual appeal and a concentrated strawberry bite. For the macerated strawberry filling component, regular dried won't substitute directly — use the soaked-in-sugar method: 1 cup (95g) sliced dried strawberries + 1/4 cup (60ml) warm water + 2 tablespoons (25g) sugar, rest 20 minutes. The result is a thick, jammy filling with concentrated flavor.
Chocolate bark: Scatter whole or lightly crushed freeze-dried strawberries (25-40g per 200g dark chocolate bar) over melted tempered chocolate while still wet. The freeze-dried pieces adhere as the chocolate sets, creating visually striking confectionery. Do not use regular dried strawberries for this application — they are too soft and heavy to adhere properly to chocolate bark without sinking in.
- USDA FoodData Central — Strawberries, dried, sweetened
- USDA FoodData Central — Strawberries, freeze-dried
- USDA FoodData Central — Strawberries, raw
- King Arthur Baking — Ingredient Weight Chart
- Journal of Food Science — Nutrient retention in freeze-drying vs air-drying of fruits, 2019