Linguine — Cups to Grams
1 cup dry linguine = 115 grams | cooked = 140g/cup | fresh = 170g/cup
1 cup Linguine = 115 grams
Quick Conversion Table — Linguine
| Cups | Grams | Tablespoons | Teaspoons |
|---|---|---|---|
| ¼ | 28.8 g | 4 tbsp | 12 tsp |
| ⅓ | 38.3 g | 5.32 tbsp | 16 tsp |
| ½ | 57.5 g | 7.99 tbsp | 24 tsp |
| ⅔ | 76.7 g | 10.7 tbsp | 32 tsp |
| ¾ | 86.3 g | 12 tbsp | 36 tsp |
| 1 | 115 g | 16 tbsp | 47.9 tsp |
| 1½ | 172.5 g | 24 tbsp | 71.9 tsp |
| 2 | 230 g | 31.9 tbsp | 95.8 tsp |
| 3 | 345 g | 47.9 tbsp | 143.8 tsp |
| 4 | 460 g | 63.9 tbsp | 191.7 tsp |
Linguine Geometry: Why the Flat Shape Changes Measurements
Pasta shape is not just an aesthetic choice — it directly affects density, cooking behavior, and sauce compatibility. Linguine's flat elliptical cross-section creates distinctly different measuring characteristics from round pasta like spaghetti, and understanding the geometry resolves seemingly contradictory measurement experiences.
Standard linguine dimensions: approximately 3mm wide (the broad face) and 1.5mm thick (the narrow edge). Compare this to spaghetti, which has a circular cross-section of 1.8–2.0mm. When broken into pieces and placed in a measuring cup, linguine strands can lie face-to-face with minimal air space between them — essentially flat surfaces stacking against each other. Spaghetti strands, being round, always touch at only one point along their length, leaving more air between them. This geometric difference is why linguine measures 115g/cup while spaghetti measures only 100g/cup from the same spoon-and-level approach.
Fresh linguine is significantly denser (170g/cup) because fresh pasta contains approximately 30–35% moisture, making it heavier than dry pasta per unit volume. Fresh pasta also tends to stick slightly, allowing it to pack more densely than dry strands. When substituting fresh for dry linguine in a recipe, use approximately 67% of the dry weight — if a recipe calls for 100g dry linguine (just under 1 cup), use about 150g fresh linguine (just under 1 cup fresh).
Linguine alle Vongole: The Classic Pairing
Linguine alle vongole (linguine with clams) is one of the most precisely engineered dishes in Italian pasta tradition. Every component ratio is functional, not arbitrary. Understanding the dish's architecture reveals why linguine — at exactly 3mm width — is the right pasta.
The sauce is built on the clam liquor, the natural brine released by the clams as they open in the pan. This liquid is intensely flavored but very thin — essentially seasoned seawater at a salinity of 2–3.5%. To transform it into a sauce that coats pasta, the liquid is emulsified with olive oil by vigorous tossing over high heat, the same technique used in cacio e pepe and aglio e olio. The flat surface of linguine provides critical traction for this emulsion — more surface area than spaghetti, but not so wide as to overwhelm the delicate flavor.
Precise ratios for linguine alle vongole for 2 people (traditional Neapolitan version):
| Component | Amount | Weight/Volume |
|---|---|---|
| Dry linguine | 1.4 cups | 160g |
| Small clams (Vongole veraci, in-shell) | — | 500g |
| Extra-virgin olive oil | 3 tbsp | 40ml |
| Dry white wine | scant ½ cup | 100ml |
| Garlic | 3 cloves | ~15g |
| Fresh flat-leaf parsley (chopped) | ¼ cup packed | 15g |
| Peperoncino (optional) | 1 whole | — |
The two versions — bianco (white, no tomato) and rosso (red, with tomato) — differ primarily in whether halved cherry tomatoes (about 100g) are added to the sauce. The bianco version is considered the purer, more traditional expression and is dominant in Naples. The rosso version is more common in Rome.
Critical technique: cook linguine 2 minutes short of al dente, then finish in the clam pan with the liquor and a splash of pasta water, tossing constantly over high heat for 60–90 seconds. The pasta absorbs the sauce and releases starch that helps bind the emulsion. The final pasta should be barely sauced — not swimming in liquid.
Pesto with Linguine: The Ligurian Combination
Linguine is one of the two traditional pasta shapes for pesto alla genovese (the other being trofie, a twisted Ligurian short pasta). The pairing comes from Liguria, the coastal Italian region around Genoa that produced both the pasta shape and the basil sauce. Linguine's thin flat strands capture the oil-based pesto without the sauce pooling into the pasta's center (as would happen with tube pasta) or sliding off (as happens with smooth round pasta).
Authentic pesto alla genovese proportions for 4 servings with linguine:
| Component | Weight | Volume reference |
|---|---|---|
| Dry linguine | 320g | 2.8 cups |
| Fresh basil (DOP Genovese preferred) | 50g | ~2.5 cups packed leaves |
| Extra-virgin olive oil (Ligurian) | 100ml | 7 tablespoons |
| Pine nuts (toasted) | 30g | 3 tablespoons |
| Parmigiano-Reggiano (grated) | 50g | ½ cup packed |
| Pecorino Sardo (grated) | 20g | 3 tablespoons |
| Garlic | 1 small clove | ~4g |
| Coarse salt | a few grains | — |
Traditional pesto is made cold in a marble mortar (the heat from a blender's blades slightly oxidizes the basil, darkening it). The sauce should never be cooked — add to drained pasta off heat with 2–3 tablespoons of reserved pasta cooking water to loosen. Serve immediately; pesto-dressed pasta does not hold well.
Linguine vs. Spaghetti vs. Fettuccine: A Precise Comparison
The three long-strand pasta shapes are frequently confused or used interchangeably, but the differences in width, shape, and density create meaningfully different cooking outcomes.
| Pasta | Width | Cross-section | Dry g/cup | Best sauces |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spaghettini (#3) | ~1.4mm diameter | Round | ~95g | Light oil, very thin tomato |
| Spaghetti (#5) | ~1.9mm diameter | Round | ~100g | Tomato, carbonara, amatriciana |
| Linguine | 3mm × 1.5mm | Flat ellipse | ~115g | Seafood, pesto, light oil |
| Fettuccine | 6mm × 2mm | Wide flat ribbon | ~110g | Alfredo, cream, ragù |
| Pappardelle | ~20mm × 2mm | Very wide ribbon | ~95g | Slow-cooked ragù, mushroom |
The density paradox: fettuccine (6mm wide) and spaghetti (2mm round) measure similarly per cup (~110g vs. 100g) despite very different sizes, because fettuccine strands curve and overlap when broken into pieces, creating air pockets that offset the larger individual strand mass. Linguine (3mm flat) packs most densely of the long-strand pasta family.
Common Questions About Linguine
-
1 cup of dry linguine weighs approximately 115 grams. This is slightly more than spaghetti (100g/cup) because linguine's flat shape packs more densely. Cooked dry linguine weighs 140g per cup. Fresh linguine weighs about 170g per cup due to its higher moisture content.
-
Dry linguine typically cooks to al dente in 9–11 minutes in vigorously boiling salted water — slightly longer than spaghetti because the flat shape's greater width requires more time for water penetration to the center. Fresh linguine cooks in 2–3 minutes. For dishes where the pasta finishes cooking in a pan sauce (linguine alle vongole, aglio e olio), pull the pasta 2 minutes before the package's al dente time to leave room for in-pan finishing.
-
A 2 oz (57g) dry serving of linguine contains approximately 200 calories (the US standard serving size). Macros: 40g carbohydrates, 7g protein, 0.9g fat, 1.5g fiber. 1 cup cooked linguine (140g) contains approximately 200 calories — identical to the dry 2 oz serving because the added water weight has no caloric value. A full restaurant-style main dish using 4 oz (113g) dry linguine contains approximately 400 calories from the pasta alone, before sauce, oil, cheese, or protein additions.
-
Yes, canned clams produce a respectable version. Use: 2 cans (6.5 oz / 184g each) chopped clams in juice, drain and reserve the juice. The reserved clam juice replaces the fresh clam liquor — use 150–180ml total. Reduce the clam juice briefly in the pan before adding olive oil and garlic, then proceed as for fresh clams. Canned clams are already cooked, so add them at the very end (off heat) to avoid rubbery texture. The result will lack the briny freshness of live clams, but the technique is sound and significantly easier.
-
Whole wheat linguine measures approximately 118–120g per cup dry — slightly more than refined semolina linguine (115g) because the bran particles add density. The difference is small enough (3–5%) that you can use the same cup measurements interchangeably in practice. Whole wheat linguine takes 1–2 minutes longer to cook and absorbs slightly less water, so cooked weight per cup is approximately 130–135g rather than 140g for refined pasta. The bran adds a nuttier flavor that pairs well with pesto and mushroom-based sauces.
- USDA FoodData Central — Pasta, dry, enriched (FDC ID 168901)
- Barilla — Linguine n.13 product specifications and cooking guide
- Accademia Barilla — Regional Pasta Pairings: Ligurian Tradition
- Consorzio del Pesto Genovese — Traditional Pesto DOP Recipe and Proportions
- Artusi, P. — La Scienza in Cucina e l'Arte di Mangiar Bene (1891, facsimile edition)