Fish Sauce — Cups to Grams

1 cup fish sauce = 285 grams (dense due to 20–30% dissolved salt and fermentation compounds)

Result
285grams

1 cup Fish Sauce = 285 grams

Tablespoons16
Teaspoons48.3
Ounces10.1

Quick Conversion Table — Fish Sauce

CupsGramsTablespoonsTeaspoons
¼71.3 g4.01 tbsp12.1 tsp
95 g5.34 tbsp16.1 tsp
½142.5 g8.01 tbsp24.2 tsp
190 g10.7 tbsp32.2 tsp
¾213.8 g12 tbsp36.2 tsp
1285 g16 tbsp48.3 tsp
427.5 g24 tbsp72.5 tsp
2570 g32 tbsp96.6 tsp
3855 g48 tbsp144.9 tsp
41,140 g64 tbsp193.2 tsp

Why Fish Sauce Is the Densest Common Liquid Condiment

Fish sauce is produced by packing whole small fish — almost exclusively anchovies of the Engraulidae family — with salt in a weight ratio of approximately 3:1 fish:salt, then fermenting the mixture in large vats for 12–24 months. The salt draw osmotically extracts liquid from the fish flesh; protease enzymes (endogenous in the fish and from halophilic bacteria) hydrolyze proteins into free amino acids. The resulting liquid that drains from the fermentation vessel is fish sauce.

The salt concentration remaining in the liquid is extraordinary: 20–30% sodium chloride by weight in most commercial products. This dissolved salt is the primary reason fish sauce weighs 285g per cup vs 237g for water — a 20% density premium. The amino acids, sugars from glycolysis, and hundreds of volatile fermentation compounds add further dissolved mass.

Condimentg/CupNa/TbspPrimary dense compound
Fish sauce285g~1200mgSalt (20–30%), amino acids
Soy sauce (regular)255g~960mgSalt (14–18%), amino acids
Oyster sauce300g~500mgSugar, starch thickener
Water (reference)237gPure H₂O

Thai vs Vietnamese vs Filipino: Flavor and Sodium Differences

While all three traditions produce fish sauce from fermented salted anchovies, regional variations in fish species, salt ratios, fermentation duration, and post-processing create meaningfully different products.

Thai nam pla: The most internationally available fish sauce. Made from Stolephorus anchovies, fermented 12–18 months. Brands like Tiparos (red boat), Golden Boy, and Squid Brand dominate US markets. Sodium: approximately 1350–1450mg per tablespoon. Flavor: straightforwardly salty-umami with a sharp, direct fermented fish note. Used generously in stir-fries, curries, dipping sauces, and marinades throughout Thai cuisine.

Vietnamese nuoc mam: Regional variation centered on Phu Quoc island (a GI-protected product) and Phan Thiet. Made from the Ca Com anchovy (Engraulis japonicus), often with a higher fish:salt ratio and longer fermentation, producing a more complex, slightly sweeter result. Red Boat 40°N (single-origin, Phu Quoc) is the premium option for cooking; Three Crabs is the everyday Vietnamese brand. Sodium: Red Boat 40°N has approximately 1490mg per tablespoon — among the highest available.

Filipino patis: Often made from a wider range of fish species (bangus/milkfish, bonito, anchovies) and typically fermented for shorter periods. Patis has a milder, slightly rounder flavor and lower sodium (800–1000mg/tablespoon in many brands). Often used as a table condiment alongside food rather than exclusively as a cooking ingredient.

Nuoc Cham: The 1:1:1 Ratio

Nuoc cham is Vietnam's most important dipping sauce — present at virtually every table meal, from bánh mì accompaniment to spring roll dipping. The foundational ratio is equal parts fish sauce, fresh lime juice, and sugar, diluted with water.

Standard nuoc cham (serves 4–6):

Dissolve sugar in warm water first, then add remaining ingredients. The ratio of fish sauce to water (1:4 by volume) is why nuoc cham is drinkable in intensity — the raw fish sauce is approximately 6× too salty to eat directly. Total yield: approximately 200ml / 220g of sauce.

Regional variations: Northern Vietnamese nuoc cham tends to be less sweet and more acidic; Southern Vietnamese versions add more sugar and are more dilute. For a stronger dipping sauce for grilled meats (thit nuong), use 1:1 fish sauce:lime juice without the water dilution.

Pad Thai Ratios and Application

Pad thai's defining flavor balance — sweet, savory, sour — comes from precise ratios of fish sauce, tamarind, and palm sugar. Understanding each component's weight makes scaling straightforward.

Pad thai sauce (per 2 servings, 200g dry noodles):

Mix the sauce before cooking. In a very hot wok (200°C+), add noodles with the sauce and toss rapidly for 1–2 minutes. The fish sauce hits the wok and immediately caramelizes the exterior of the noodles while the moisture evaporates — this is why the wok must be screaming hot.

For 4 servings, double all amounts: 4 tablespoons fish sauce (71.2g) is the practical limit for 4 servings before the dish becomes too salty. If you find pad thai at your favorite restaurant too salty, the fish sauce may have been measured without adjusting for the specific brand's sodium level.

Fish Sauce Substitutes

Fish sauce is irreplaceable for its specific combination of marine umami (glutamate + inosinate), fermented depth, and extreme salinity. However, several combinations approximate its function:

SubstitutePer 1 Tbsp Fish SauceWeightBest For
Soy sauce + anchovy paste1 tbsp soy + ½ tsp anchovy paste~18gClosest in umami; not marine
Worcestershire sauce1 tbsp (direct 1:1)17gAlready contains anchovies; good sub
Vegan: soy + nori powder1 tbsp soy + ¼ tsp nori~16gMarine umami without fish
Coconut aminos + salt1.5 tbsp aminos + 1/8 tsp salt~25gGF/soy-free, milder result
Miso + warm water1 tsp white miso + 2 tsp water~15gFermented umami, no fish

Common Questions About Fish Sauce