Feta Cheese — Cups to Grams
1 cup crumbled feta = 150 grams — a 4 oz package equals approximately ¾ cup crumbled
1 cup Feta Cheese = 150 grams
Quick Conversion Table — Feta Cheese
| Cups | Grams | Tablespoons | Teaspoons |
|---|---|---|---|
| ¼ | 37.5 g | 3.99 tbsp | 12.1 tsp |
| ⅓ | 50 g | 5.32 tbsp | 16.1 tsp |
| ½ | 75 g | 7.98 tbsp | 24.2 tsp |
| ⅔ | 100 g | 10.6 tbsp | 32.3 tsp |
| ¾ | 112.5 g | 12 tbsp | 36.3 tsp |
| 1 | 150 g | 16 tbsp | 48.4 tsp |
| 1½ | 225 g | 23.9 tbsp | 72.6 tsp |
| 2 | 300 g | 31.9 tbsp | 96.8 tsp |
| 3 | 450 g | 47.9 tbsp | 145.2 tsp |
| 4 | 600 g | 63.8 tbsp | 193.5 tsp |
How to Measure Feta Cheese Accurately
Feta cheese is one of the most variable cheeses to measure by volume because its weight changes dramatically based on the form (crumbled, cubed, or block) and how loosely or tightly it is packed. The three-way density difference — crumbled (150g), cubed (135g), block (170g) — means a recipe's specified form of feta matters significantly for accurate measurement.
Crumbled feta: Gently spoon crumbles into the measuring cup without pressing — natural pour gives 150g. Packing firmly can increase weight to 175–190g per cup. Most recipes using crumbled feta intend the light, uncompressed fill. If a recipe says "crumbled feta, lightly packed," use 160–165g per cup.
Cubed feta: Cut block feta into ½-inch cubes. Fill cup without pressing — the cube shape creates air gaps in the corners, giving 135g per cup versus crumble's 150g. For recipes calling for cubed feta, do not use crumbled as a substitute without adjusting quantity — you would need 10% less crumbled feta by volume to match cubed by weight.
Block feta (whole): When a recipe gives a weight (e.g., "200g feta") but you only have block feta, this is the most accurate format — slice and weigh directly on a scale. Block feta pressed into a cup gives 170g — 13% more than crumbled, because the solid block fills all air gaps.
| Measure | Crumbled (g) | Cubed (g) | Block (g) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 teaspoon | 3.1g | — | — |
| 1 tablespoon | 9.4g | — | — |
| ¼ cup | 37.5g | 33.75g | 42.5g |
| ½ cup | 75g | 67.5g | 85g |
| ¾ cup (4 oz pkg) | 112.5g ≈ 4 oz | 101.25g | 127.5g |
| 1 cup | 150g | 135g | 170g |
Why Precision Matters: Feta's Salt Load and Recipe Balance
Feta is one of the saltiest common cheeses — Greek PDO feta contains 260–350mg sodium per tablespoon (9.4g). This is significantly more salt per gram than most cooking ingredients, making accurate feta measurement important not just for texture but for the final salt balance of a dish.
Sodium math: At 300mg sodium per tablespoon, 1 cup (approximately 16 tablespoons) of crumbled feta delivers approximately 4,800mg sodium — double the recommended daily intake. A typical recipe uses ¼–½ cup (37.5–75g) crumbled feta per serving, contributing 750–1,500mg sodium. When feta is a primary ingredient, reduce or eliminate other salt sources entirely.
Spanakopita salt management: A 9×13-inch spanakopita recipe using 500g (3⅓ cups) feta contains approximately 16,000mg sodium from the cheese alone — divided among 12–16 servings, approximately 1,000–1,300mg per serving. Do not add salt to the filling; black pepper, nutmeg, and fresh dill provide flavor complexity without additional salt load.
Reducing feta saltiness: Soak feta in cold water or low-fat milk for 15–20 minutes before crumbling. This leaches out some salt — reducing sodium content by approximately 15–25% depending on soaking duration. Useful when making dishes where feta is prominent and you need control over salt levels (feta dips, whipped feta, pastries).
Whipped feta: Blended feta changes density dramatically. 1 cup (150g) crumbled feta + 2–3 tablespoons (30–45ml) olive oil + 1 tablespoon cream cheese → approximately 1¼ cups (310g) whipped feta dip. The added fat and air from blending increases volume. Whipped feta weighs approximately 240–250g/cup — similar density to sour cream.
Greek, Bulgarian, and French Feta: Origins and Cooking Differences
The term "feta" legally refers only to the Greek PDO product within the European Union, but similar cheeses are produced globally under different names. Understanding these differences helps with ingredient substitutions and recipe expectations.
Greek Feta (PDO): Made in Macedonia, Thrace, Epirus, Thessaly, Central Greece, Peloponnese, and Lesbos. Minimum 70% sheep's milk, remainder goat's milk — no cow's milk permitted. Texture: firm and crumbly when cold, softens at room temperature. Flavor: tangy, salty, distinctly milky with a slightly buttery note from sheep's milk fat. The characteristic terroir-derived flavor comes from the specific herbs, grasses, and wild plants eaten by Greek sheep. Density: 150g/cup crumbled (firm, dry crumble). Salt: 260–350mg per tablespoon.
Bulgarian White Cheese (Sirene / "Bulgarian Feta"): Made from 100% cow's milk in most commercial production (some traditionally use sheep or goat). Creamier, smoother texture than Greek feta — crumbles in larger, wetter pieces. Milder, less tangy flavor. Weighs approximately 148–152g/cup crumbled — nearly identical to Greek feta. Used identically in recipes; flavor is noticeably milder, which some palates prefer for dishes like omelets and pizza where aggressive feta flavor would dominate.
French Feta (Valbreso): 100% sheep's milk, produced in the Languedoc region of France. Stored in brine similar to Greek feta. The most similar to Greek PDO in sheep's milk character but processed to be slightly creamier and less crumbly — designed for French market preferences. Weight: approximately 150–155g/cup crumbled. Sodium content: similar to Greek feta.
American "feta": Often cow's milk, the least expensive option. Texture is softer and wetter than sheep-milk varieties, and it crumbles with larger, moister pieces. Weight: 145–155g/cup crumbled but with significantly higher moisture — the moister pieces may add unwanted liquid to salads and pastries. Drain thoroughly before use.
Feta in Greek Salad, Spanakopita, and Other Applications
Feta serves distinct roles in its traditional applications — understanding the weight ratios for each ensures proper texture and flavor balance.
Horiatiki (Greek Village Salad, 4 servings): 200g block feta served as a large slab on top of tomatoes, cucumbers, red onion, olives, and green pepper. Drizzle with olive oil and dried oregano. The slab presentation (rather than crumbling) is the traditional method — it allows diners to break off pieces themselves and ensures the feta does not absorb the vegetable juices and become wet.
Spanakopita (12-16 servings, 9×13-inch pan): 500g (3⅓ cups crumbled) feta + 300g cooked, squeezed-dry spinach + 4 large eggs + 2 tablespoons (20g) fresh dill + black pepper. Encase in 12–16 layers of phyllo dough with melted butter between sheets. The egg-to-feta ratio (4 eggs per 500g feta) is critical for the filling to set and cut cleanly — fewer eggs produces a wet, crumbly filling; more eggs makes it rubbery.
Roasted cherry tomatoes with feta: The social media-famous pasta dish: 200g block feta + 500g cherry tomatoes + 4 tablespoons olive oil, roasted at 200°C for 35 minutes. The block feta melts into a creamy sauce with the tomato juices. Crumbled feta cannot be used for this method — it dries out and browns rather than melting. The block form must be used.
Feta in omelets and frittatas: 2 tablespoons (18.8g) crumbled feta per 2-egg omelet — enough for visible, salty pockets of cheese without overwhelming the eggs. For a 6-egg frittata (4 servings): ½ cup (75g) crumbled feta, added in the last 3 minutes of oven cooking (not before) to prevent the cheese from fully melting and losing its texture.
Common Questions About Feta Cheese
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¼ cup of crumbled feta = 37.5 grams. This is the typical amount used in a single salad serving, an omelet, or on a pizza portion. For a salad dressing or dip, ¼ cup (37.5g) crumbled feta blended with 2 tablespoons olive oil and 1 tablespoon lemon juice creates approximately ½ cup of feta dressing. ¼ cup cubed feta = 33.75g; ¼ cup block feta packed = 42.5g.
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Feta can be frozen for up to 3 months. Freeze the block wrapped in brine (freeze brine separately in a small bag) or freeze pre-crumbled in a flat layer on a baking sheet then transfer to a bag. Freezing and thawing causes ice crystals to rupture some cell structure — frozen-thawed feta crumbles more finely and is slightly wetter than fresh. Weight after thawing is essentially identical: 150g crumbled = 150g post-freeze crumbled. Thawed feta is excellent for cooked applications (spanakopita, omelets, frittatas) where texture has already changed, but less ideal for fresh salad use where the original firm crumble is preferred.
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¼ cup (37.5g) of crumbled feta contains approximately 75–80 calories. Macronutrients: fat 6g (mostly saturated from sheep's milk), protein 4g, carbohydrate 1g, calcium 14% DV. Feta is one of the lower-calorie cheeses per tablespoon (approximately 20 calories per tablespoon crumbled vs approximately 35–40 for cheddar or Parmesan) because of its higher moisture content — feta is a fresh/semi-soft cheese with 45–55% moisture, while hard cheeses have 30–35% moisture.
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Restaurant Greek feta is almost always served from a large block stored in brine — it maintains moisture and balanced saltiness because it is never exposed to open air for extended periods. Pre-crumbled supermarket feta (no brine) has dried out partially during processing and storage, creating a slightly sharper, more concentrated salty flavor. Block feta from the supermarket (stored in brine) tastes closer to restaurant feta — buy block, crumble yourself for better texture and flavor. If you have access to a specialty Greek or Mediterranean grocery, look for feta sold from large barrels in house-made brine — this is the closest to the freshest quality available outside Greece.
- USDA FoodData Central — Cheese, feta
- European Commission — Protected Designation of Origin: Feta
- Dairy Science and Technology — McGill University: feta composition and moisture content
- The Complete Cheese Book — Bronwen and Francis Percival: feta varieties and production