Marzipan — Cups to Grams

1 cup marzipan (packed) = 290g | Crumbled = 240g

Variant
Result
240grams

1 cup Marzipan = 240 grams

Tablespoons13.3
Teaspoons40
Ounces8.47

Quick Conversion Table — Marzipan

CupsGramsTablespoonsTeaspoons
¼60 g3.31 tbsp10 tsp
80 g4.42 tbsp13.3 tsp
½120 g6.63 tbsp20 tsp
160 g8.84 tbsp26.7 tsp
¾180 g9.94 tbsp30 tsp
1240 g13.3 tbsp40 tsp
360 g19.9 tbsp60 tsp
2480 g26.5 tbsp80 tsp
3720 g39.8 tbsp120 tsp
4960 g53 tbsp160 tsp

Marzipan vs Almond Paste: Getting the Distinction Right

The confusion between marzipan and almond paste causes consistent recipe failures, particularly in European baking. These are distinct products with different sugar ratios, textures, and applications — and they are not interchangeable in most recipes.

PropertyMarzipanAlmond Paste
Sugar content50–65% sugar35–50% sugar
Almond content25–45% almonds45–60% almonds
TextureSmooth, plastic, moldableCoarser, more oily, less plastic
FlavorSweet, delicate almondIntense almond, less sweet
g per cup (packed)290g~280g
Best useDecorating, sculpting, covering cakesFilling (croissants, tarts, strudel)

The key substitution rule: almond paste can replace marzipan in filling applications (inside stollen, as a tart filling base) but not in decorating or sculpting applications where marzipan's higher sugar content is needed for firmness and moldability. Marzipan should not replace almond paste in croissants or Danish because the higher sugar content burns at high baking temperatures before the pastry is cooked through.

Marzipan in European Baking: Key Applications

Marzipan is one of the most used confections in European baking, with distinct regional traditions across Germany, Scandinavia, and the UK:

Germany — Stollen: The center log of Dresdner Stollen weighs 100–150g per standard loaf. The marzipan provides a sweet, moist center that contrasts the dried fruit-laden dough and dense butter content. After baking, stollen is brushed with melted butter and dusted with powdered sugar — the marzipan inside becomes firmer and sweeter as the loaf cools and cures.

Germany — Bethmännchen and Marzipankartoffeln: Frankfurt's Bethmännchen uses marzipan shaped around whole almonds. Marzipankartoffeln (marzipan potatoes) are small balls of marzipan rolled in cocoa powder. For 24 Bethmännchen: approximately 200g marzipan (¾ cup packed) plus 24 blanched almonds.

Scandinavia — Princess cake (Prinsesstårta): Swedish layer cake covered in marzipan tinted green. Per 9-inch cake: 350–400g marzipan for the outer layer, rolled to approximately 3mm thickness.

UK — Simnel cake and Christmas cake: Both use marzipan as a top layer applied before royal icing. Simnel cake additionally has a marzipan layer baked inside. Per 8-inch simnel cake: 375g marzipan total (125g inside the cake + 250g for the top layer with decorative balls).

Petit fours: Marzipan is used as a coating for glazed petit fours, rolled thin around a ganache or fruit center, or shaped into miniature fruits for decoration. Per 24 petit fours: approximately 200–250g marzipan for coating or decoration.

Working with Marzipan: Temperature and Texture

Marzipan's workability is highly temperature-dependent. At room temperature (20–22°C), marzipan is pliable and soft — ideal for kneading, rolling, and shaping. As it warms from handling, the almond oils begin to soften further, making it slightly stickier. When cold (refrigerator temperature), marzipan becomes firmer and less plastic, making rolling without cracking more difficult.

For rolling and covering cakes, work at room temperature. Dust the work surface and rolling pin lightly with powdered sugar (not flour — flour changes the texture). Roll between sheets of plastic wrap for the smoothest result, especially if the marzipan is sticky.

If marzipan becomes too soft and sticky: chill for 15–20 minutes in the refrigerator, then continue. If it cracks when rolling (too dry or too cold): knead in a few drops of glucose syrup or corn syrup warmed on your fingertips — this adds moisture and restores plasticity without adding flour.

Coloring marzipan: Use gel food coloring, not liquid. Liquid food coloring introduces water that can make marzipan sticky and alter its consistency. Add gel coloring one drop at a time and knead thoroughly after each addition. For large amounts of deep color, use paste coloring. Wear gloves — gel colorings will stain hands.

Common Questions About Marzipan