Fresh Thyme — Cups to Grams
1 cup picked fresh thyme leaves = 48 grams — whole sprigs = 25g/cup, finely chopped = 60g/cup
1 cup Fresh Thyme = 48 grams
Quick Conversion Table — Fresh Thyme
| Cups | Grams | Tablespoons | Teaspoons |
|---|---|---|---|
| ¼ | 12 g | 4 tbsp | 12 tsp |
| ⅓ | 16 g | 5.33 tbsp | 16 tsp |
| ½ | 24 g | 8 tbsp | 24 tsp |
| ⅔ | 32 g | 10.7 tbsp | 32 tsp |
| ¾ | 36 g | 12 tbsp | 36 tsp |
| 1 | 48 g | 16 tbsp | 48 tsp |
| 1½ | 72 g | 24 tbsp | 72 tsp |
| 2 | 96 g | 32 tbsp | 96 tsp |
| 3 | 144 g | 48 tbsp | 144 tsp |
| 4 | 192 g | 64 tbsp | 192 tsp |
Why Thyme Has the Biggest Weight Gap Between Whole and Stripped
Fresh thyme has one of the largest weight disparities between whole-sprig and stripped-leaf measurements of any common herb. A cup of whole thyme sprigs (25g) weighs barely half a cup of stripped leaves (48g) — a 1:1.9 ratio. The reason is architectural: thyme sprigs are predominantly stem by weight.
A typical mature thyme sprig is 10–15cm long. The woody lower 60–70% of the stem is too tough to eat and contains little flavor. The leaf mass (the edible, aromatic portion) makes up only 30–40% of a whole sprig's weight. When whole sprigs fill a cup, most of what you're measuring is air and inedible stem.
Picked leaves loose (48g/cup): Thyme leaves stripped from stems, collected without pressing. The tiny 2–4mm oval leaves still trap considerable air but pack much more efficiently than whole sprigs. This is the standard measurement for most recipe uses.
Whole sprigs (25g/cup): Full sprigs with stems loosely arranged in the cup-measure. Use only when a recipe specifies "sprigs" for a bouquet garni or infusion where stems will be removed later.
Finely chopped (60g/cup): Stripped leaves then minced very fine. Knife work on thyme's tiny leaves is inefficient — most chefs use whole picked leaves even for fine applications. Relevant for compound butters or when thyme must integrate fully into a smooth sauce.
| Measure | Whole Sprigs (g) | Picked Leaves (g) | Chopped (g) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 teaspoon | — | 1g | 1.25g |
| 1 tablespoon | 1.6g | 3g | 3.75g |
| ¼ cup | 6.25g | 12g | 15g |
| ½ cup | 12.5g | 24g | 30g |
| 1 cup | 25g | 48g | 60g |
The Thumb-Slide Technique: Stripping Thyme Efficiently
Thyme's small leaves and numerous stems make it the most tedious fresh herb to prepare in quantity. The thumb-slide technique cuts preparation time by 70–80% compared to plucking leaves individually.
The technique: Hold the sprig tip between thumb and index finger of one hand. With the other hand, grip the stem between thumb and the side of your index finger approximately 2–3cm below the tip. Slide firmly downward (toward the root end) in one smooth stroke. The leaves detach cleanly. Repeat in sections for long sprigs.
For very young, tender thyme sprigs (the bright green, flexible growth at branch tips during spring and summer), the entire stem is edible — skip stripping and add whole to preparations. Mature thyme sprigs (with woody, grayish-brown stems) require stripping; the stems become unpleasantly fibrous when cooked and will still be tough even after a 3-hour braise.
Quantity guide: To strip 2 tablespoons (6g) of thyme leaves, expect to work with 6–8 medium sprigs and approximately 3–4 minutes of preparation time. To strip ¼ cup (12g): approximately 12–16 medium sprigs, 6–8 minutes. This is why many professional kitchens keep thyme in bunches and strip to order rather than pre-stripping large quantities.
Thyme in Classic Preparations: Precise Ratios
Thyme is ubiquitous in French, Mediterranean, and Middle Eastern cooking because its thymol/carvacrol profile complements fat-rich preparations particularly well. These are precise ratios for common applications:
Bouquet garni (classic French): 3–4 thyme sprigs + 2–3 parsley stems + 1 bay leaf, tied in a bundle or wrapped in cheesecloth. For 2 liters (2 quarts) of stock or braise, use 4 sprigs (approximately 4 teaspoons / 4g of leaves if stripped). Remove before serving.
French onion soup: 2 sprigs fresh thyme (or 1/2 teaspoon dried) per 4-serving batch. Thyme is added with the onions during the 45–60 minute caramelization phase and removed or left in through the final broth addition — its bitterness is fully cooked out.
Roast chicken: Place 4–5 large sprigs fresh thyme (approximately 2 tablespoons / 6g leaves) inside the cavity plus 2–3 sprigs under the skin on each breast. The combination of direct contact and steam infusion from the cavity produces maximum thyme penetration into the meat.
Lemon thyme vinaigrette: 1 tablespoon (3g) fresh lemon thyme leaves + 1 tablespoon (15ml) Dijon mustard + 3 tablespoons (45ml) white wine vinegar + 9 tablespoons (135ml) extra-virgin olive oil + salt. Serves 8. Shake vigorously in a jar — thyme's thymol emulsifies slightly with the mustard.
Thyme-infused oil: 10 large sprigs fresh thyme + 250ml (1 cup) olive oil. Gently warm oil to 60°C (140°F), add sprigs, remove from heat, steep 1 hour. Strain and refrigerate. Use within 2 weeks. Do not heat above 80°C (175°F) — thymol degrades rapidly above this temperature.
Fresh Thyme vs Dried Thyme: Density and Flavor Comparison
The existing dried thyme entry in this database lists two forms: leaves (48g/cup) and ground thyme (85g/cup). Comparing these to fresh thyme (48g/cup picked leaves) reveals interesting data about the drying process.
Fresh thyme leaves and dried thyme leaves weigh the same per cup (48g) — this is a coincidence of density. Fresh thyme is approximately 65% water, while dried thyme is under 10% moisture. The matching cup-weight means dried thyme leaves are physically smaller and denser, packing into the same volume but representing approximately 2.8× more dry matter by weight. This is why 1:3 is the correct flavor ratio — you're matching active flavor compounds, not mass.
Ground thyme (85g/cup) is denser still because grinding eliminates all air pockets. Never substitute ground thyme 1:1 for dried thyme leaves — ground thyme is approximately 1.75× denser and proportionally more concentrated in thymol. Use 60% of the volume when substituting ground for leaves.
Common Questions About Fresh Thyme
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Yes, with qualification. Tender young thyme stems (the flexible green growth at branch tips) are fully edible and flavorful — add whole to salads, chopped into vinaigrettes, or cooked in dishes where they'll be incorporated into the finished texture. Mature woody stems (gray-brown, inflexible) should not be eaten but are excellent for infusion: add to stocks, braises, marinades, and infused oils. The woody stems release flavor slowly — they're actually better than leaves for long-cooked preparations because the leaves can become bitter over hours of simmering while the stems contribute a cleaner, more muted thyme character. Add 4–6 woody stems per quart of stock at the beginning; remove before serving.
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Thyme bitterness in finished dishes usually has one of three causes: (1) Too much thyme — thymol has a bitter character at high concentrations; reduce quantity by 30–40% and reassess. (2) Thyme leaves added too early in a high-acid environment (tomato-based sauces, wine-heavy braises) — the acidic environment extracts bitter tannins from the leaves more aggressively than neutral or fat-based preparations; add thyme in the final 10–15 minutes in acidic dishes. (3) Old or dried-out thyme — fresh thyme past its prime concentrates bitter terpenoids as volatile pleasant compounds evaporate. Use fresh thyme within 2 weeks of purchase. Check for yellowing, which indicates the herb is past optimal flavor.
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Za'atar is both a herb (Origanum syriacum, a Middle Eastern oregano relative also called Bible hyssop) and a spice blend. The blend za'atar typically contains: za'atar herb (or a mixture of thyme, oregano, and marjoram), sumac, sesame seeds, and salt. Common thyme (Thymus vulgaris) is closely related to za'atar herb and is used as a substitute in za'atar blends outside the Middle East — but they are not identical plants. The herb za'atar has a slightly more oregano-like, less camphor-forward character than common thyme. Fresh common thyme can substitute for za'atar herb in blends at a 1:1 ratio with a slight flavor shift. The spice blend za'atar cannot be substituted with fresh thyme alone — the sumac (sour), sesame (nutty), and salt components are essential to the blend's character.
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Thyme is one of the most rewarding kitchen herbs to grow because it is drought-tolerant, perennial in most climates (zones 5–9), and produces far more flavorful leaves than commercially grown thyme. Garden thyme stressed by sun and dry conditions concentrates thymol in its essential oil — this is why Mediterranean herbs grown in their native climate are legendarily flavorful. In a pot on a sunny windowsill: plant in well-draining soil, water only when the top inch is dry, never let sit in water (thyme roots rot in wet soil). Harvest by cutting the top 1/3 of stems — never cut into woody older growth. A single established thyme plant can produce ¼ cup (12g) of picked leaves per week during growing season. Flavor-wise, home-grown sun-stressed thyme is noticeably more complex and aromatic than greenhouse supermarket thyme.
- USDA FoodData Central — Thyme, fresh
- Stahl-Biskup, E. & Saez, F. — Thyme: The Genus Thymus (Medicinal and Aromatic Plants)
- Harold McGee, On Food and Cooking — Herb flavor chemistry and heat stability
- Food Chemistry — Thymol and carvacrol composition in Thymus vulgaris varieties