Milk — Cups to Grams
1 cup whole milk = 244 grams
1 cup Milk = 244 grams
Quick Conversion Table — Milk
| Cups | Grams | Tablespoons | Teaspoons |
|---|---|---|---|
| ¼ | 61 g | 4 tbsp | 12 tsp |
| ⅓ | 81.3 g | 5.33 tbsp | 15.9 tsp |
| ½ | 122 g | 8 tbsp | 23.9 tsp |
| ⅔ | 162.7 g | 10.7 tbsp | 31.9 tsp |
| ¾ | 183 g | 12 tbsp | 35.9 tsp |
| 1 | 244 g | 16 tbsp | 47.8 tsp |
| 1½ | 366 g | 24 tbsp | 71.8 tsp |
| 2 | 488 g | 32 tbsp | 95.7 tsp |
| 3 | 732 g | 48 tbsp | 143.5 tsp |
| 4 | 976 g | 64 tbsp | 191.4 tsp |
How to Measure Milk Accurately
Milk is a liquid and requires a liquid measuring cup — the clear glass or plastic pitchers with measurement markings on the side, not the dry measuring cups used for flour. Pour milk to the correct marking and read the measurement at eye level with the cup on a flat surface. Reading from above creates parallax error and makes the milk appear to be at a higher line than it actually is, resulting in too little milk poured.
The difference between all standard milk types is minimal: whole milk, 2% milk, and skim milk all measure 244–245 grams per cup. This is because they're essentially the same liquid with different fat percentages — fat is only slightly less dense than the water-protein solution, so removing it changes the density by less than 0.5%. For all practical baking purposes, any dairy milk type can substitute at the same weight.
For precise applications — custards, puddings, ice cream bases — measuring by weight is more reliable. A scale eliminates the parallax reading problem and is faster than filling and reading a liquid measuring cup. Pour milk directly into the recipe pot or mixing bowl until the scale reads your target weight. 1 tablespoon of whole milk = 15.25g, which is useful for small adjustments.
Milk in Baking: Why Precision Matters
Milk serves three distinct functions in baking, and understanding each helps explain why precise measurement matters. First, it provides liquid to hydrate starches and proteins and to dissolve leavening agents. Second, its proteins — primarily casein (80%) and whey (20%) — contribute to browning via the Maillard reaction and help set the structure of the baked good. Third, its fat and lactose add flavor, richness, and a degree of tenderization by lubricating gluten strands.
The most impactful of these roles is liquid hydration. Baking recipes are balanced formulas where the liquid-to-flour ratio determines batter viscosity, which in turn controls gluten development and gas retention. A cake recipe calling for 244g (1 cup) of milk that accidentally receives 195g (about ¾ cup) will produce a noticeably thicker batter — the gluten develops more, the crumb becomes tougher, and the cake may dome and crack at the top as steam pressure builds in the over-structured batter.
Too much milk produces the opposite problem: an overly hydrated batter that doesn't set properly, producing a sunken center, gummy texture near the bottom of the pan, and poor structural integrity. The balance of liquid to flour to egg to fat is precise, and milk measurement accuracy directly affects where the recipe falls on the tenderness-structure spectrum.
In yeast bread, milk proteins improve crumb structure through two mechanisms. Casein binds to gluten proteins and strengthens the network. Whey proteins, once denatured by heat during baking, contribute to crust softness — bread made with milk has a noticeably softer crust than bread made with water, which is why milk is standard in sandwich loaves but uncommon in crusty artisan breads.
Lactose, milk's natural sugar, does not ferment with commercial bread yeast (which lacks the enzyme lactase). This means lactose remains in the dough and participates in Maillard browning during baking — giving milk bread its characteristic golden crust color. A bread made with 244g of milk develops a noticeably darker, richer crust color than an equivalent water-based bread baked at the same temperature.
Types of Milk and Their Weights Per Cup
| Milk Type | Fat % | 1 Cup Weight | Protein per Cup |
|---|---|---|---|
| Whole milk | 3.5% | 244g | 8g |
| 2% reduced-fat milk | 2% | 244g | 8g |
| 1% low-fat milk | 1% | 245g | 8g |
| Skim (nonfat) milk | 0% | 245g | 8g |
| Oat milk (unsweetened) | 1.5% | 242g | 3g |
| Soy milk (unsweetened) | 2% | 243g | 7g |
| Almond milk (unsweetened) | 1% | 240g | 1g |
| Full-fat coconut milk | 17% | 226g | 2g |
| Evaporated milk | 6.5% | 252g | 17g |
| Buttermilk | 1–3.5% | 245g | 8g |
Soy milk is the closest plant-based substitute for dairy milk in baking due to its protein content (7g per cup, vs 8g for dairy). Oat milk works well for moisture but has significantly less protein, meaning less Maillard browning. Almond milk's extremely low protein content (1g per cup) means almond-milk baked goods brown less and have slightly less structural integrity than dairy equivalents. Full-fat coconut milk, at 226g per cup, is less dense because its high fat content is lighter than water.
Troubleshooting: When Milk Goes Wrong
Cake has a gummy, dense layer at the bottom. Usually caused by excess liquid — too much milk relative to flour and eggs. The bottom of the cake doesn't receive enough heat to fully gelatinize the starch, and the excess moisture pools there as the cake bakes. Check your milk measurement: even 30g (2 tablespoons) extra per cup of flour can cause this in delicate cake batters.
Bread crust is too soft and tears when sliced. Paradoxically, this can be caused by too much milk — the high protein content of milk forms a soft, pliable crust. If you prefer a firmer crust, replace some or all of the milk with water. The reverse: bread crust that's too hard often indicates not enough milk, or baking at too high a temperature that dries out the crust before the interior fully cooks.
Custard or pudding has visible lumps. Milk proteins (casein) curdle when heated too rapidly or when combined with acidic ingredients without careful temperature control. When making custard, heat milk to 180°F / 82°C maximum and temper hot milk into egg yolks slowly — add milk gradually while whisking constantly, raising the egg temperature gradually so proteins don't instantly coagulate.
Pancakes don't bubble properly and are rubbery. Over-acidified batter from too much buttermilk or milk that has begun to sour exhausts the baking soda's reaction before the batter hits the pan. Fresh milk at the correct measurement produces CO2 bubbles evenly during cooking; sour or excess milk throws off the acid-base balance. Use fresh milk at room temperature for the most consistent leavening reaction.
Common Questions About Milk
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1 cup of whole milk weighs 244 grams. 2% milk is also 244g per cup; skim milk is 245g; almond milk is approximately 240g. The differences are minimal because all milk types are primarily water (87–91% by weight). Evaporated milk is the outlier at 252g per cup due to its concentrated solids.
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Milk's density is 1.03 g/mL versus water's 1.0 g/mL. This 3% density increase comes from dissolved proteins (3.2%), lactose (4.8%), and minerals (0.7%). Fat is actually slightly less dense than water, but the other solutes overcompensate, making milk heavier overall. A cup of whole milk (244g) is about 7 grams heavier than a cup of water (237g).
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Yes, at 1:1 by volume for most applications. Soy milk is the best substitute — its protein content (7g per cup) is closest to dairy's 8g, giving similar browning and structure. Oat milk works well for moisture but browns less. Almond milk (1g protein per cup) produces noticeably less browning. Use full-fat versions of any plant milk for richness — the thin, watery versions contain less fat and produce drier, less flavorful results.
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Yes, significantly. Whole milk (3.5% fat) produces more tender crumb, richer flavor, and more golden browning than skim milk. The fat carries fat-soluble flavor compounds that skim milk lacks, and it lubricates gluten strands, reducing toughness. For cakes and muffins, skim milk works but produces slightly drier, less rich results. For custards, ice cream, and caramel sauces, whole milk or higher-fat dairy is essential — the fat is required for smooth, creamy emulsification.
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Add 1 tablespoon (15g) of white vinegar or lemon juice to 1 cup (244g) of whole milk. Stir and let sit for 5 minutes — the acid causes the milk proteins to slightly curdle, mimicking buttermilk's texture and pH (4.5–5.0). This substitute works identically to store buttermilk in pancakes, quick breads, and cakes because its function is activating baking soda and tenderizing gluten — both effects of acidity, not specific to buttermilk bacteria.
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Scalded milk (heated to 180°F / 82°C) denatures whey proteins, particularly glutathione, which would otherwise weaken gluten in yeast breads. Bread made with unscalded milk sometimes has a slightly softer gluten network. However, modern pasteurized and homogenized milk is already heat-treated, making scalding largely unnecessary. It survives mainly in older recipes and is only worth doing for yeasted enriched breads like brioche where strong gluten structure is critical.
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Evaporated milk has had 60% of its water removed by vacuum evaporation, concentrating its protein, fat, and lactose to roughly twice the levels of regular milk. At 252g per cup, it's slightly denser. In fudge, caramel, and custards, evaporated milk produces a creamier, richer result because there's less free water to cook off, and the concentrated lactose browns more readily. In pie fillings and ice cream bases, it adds body and richness that regular milk alone cannot achieve.
Milk Conversion Table
| Cups | Grams | Ounces |
|---|---|---|
| ¼ cup | 61 g | 2.15 oz |
| ⅓ cup | 81 g | 2.86 oz |
| ½ cup | 122 g | 4.30 oz |
| ⅔ cup | 163 g | 5.75 oz |
| ¾ cup | 183 g | 6.45 oz |
| 1 cup | 244 g | 8.61 oz |
| 1½ cups | 366 g | 12.91 oz |
| 2 cups | 488 g | 17.21 oz |
| 3 cups | 732 g | 25.82 oz |
| 4 cups | 976 g | 34.43 oz |
Related Converters
- USDA FoodData Central
- Harold McGee, On Food and Cooking — Scribner, 2004
- Shirley O. Corriher, BakeWise — Scribner, 2008