Potato Starch — Cups to Grams
1 cup potato starch = 192 grams (1 tbsp = 12g, 1 tsp = 4g)
1 cup Potato Starch = 192 grams
Quick Conversion Table — Potato Starch
| Cups | Grams | Tablespoons | Teaspoons |
|---|---|---|---|
| ¼ | 48 g | 4 tbsp | 12 tsp |
| ⅓ | 64 g | 5.33 tbsp | 16 tsp |
| ½ | 96 g | 8 tbsp | 24 tsp |
| ⅔ | 128 g | 10.7 tbsp | 32 tsp |
| ¾ | 144 g | 12 tbsp | 36 tsp |
| 1 | 192 g | 16 tbsp | 48 tsp |
| 1½ | 288 g | 24 tbsp | 72 tsp |
| 2 | 384 g | 32 tbsp | 96 tsp |
| 3 | 576 g | 48 tbsp | 144 tsp |
| 4 | 768 g | 64 tbsp | 192 tsp |
Potato Starch vs Cornstarch: The Density Difference Explained
Potato starch and cornstarch look nearly identical — both are pure white, fine powders with no detectable flavor. But their densities are dramatically different, and substituting 1:1 by volume is one of the most common causes of over-thickened sauces and incorrect baked good textures in recipes that call for one and you have only the other.
| Starch | g per Cup | g per Tbsp | Gelatinization Temp | Freeze-Thaw |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Potato starch | 192g | 12g | 140–149°F (60–65°C) | Poor |
| Cornstarch | 128g | 8g | 140–160°F (60–71°C) | Poor |
| Tapioca starch | 120g | 7.5g | 144–150°F (62–66°C) | Excellent |
| Arrowroot | 128g | 8g | 131–140°F (55–60°C) | Moderate |
The reason for potato starch's higher density: potato starch granules are among the largest of any plant starch (15–100 micrometers diameter versus cornstarch's 5–25 micrometers). Larger granules pack more efficiently in a cup measure, leaving less air space. This larger granule size also explains potato starch's lower gelatinization temperature — larger granules swell and thicken at lower heat than the smaller cornstarch granules.
Practical substitution by weight: Match gram weights exactly. If a recipe calls for 2 tablespoons (16g) cornstarch, use 16g potato starch (approximately 1 tablespoon plus ¼ teaspoon by volume). This is simpler than calculating volume ratios and more accurate.
Potato Starch in Gluten-Free Baking
In gluten-free baking, potato starch serves as both a structure-builder and a texture improver. Unlike gluten-free flours (rice flour, sorghum flour, buckwheat flour), which provide flavor and some protein structure, potato starch is neutral-flavored and contributes primarily to the structural network that holds GF baked goods together.
The standard GF flour blend ratio that includes potato starch:
- Rice flour: 40–50% (structure, neutral flavor)
- Potato starch: 25–30% (binding, lightness)
- Tapioca starch: 15–25% (chew, elasticity)
- Optional: xanthan gum (¼ tsp per cup blend) — mimics gluten's elasticity
Potato starch gelatinizes during baking, creating a gel network that holds moisture and prevents the crumbly, dry texture common in poorly-formulated GF baked goods. Too much potato starch (over 35% of flour blend) produces a gummy, dense crumb; the right amount (25–30%) creates a tender, slightly moist crumb that closely approximates wheat flour products.
Passover Baking with Potato Starch
During Passover, potato starch becomes the primary flour substitute for Ashkenazi Jewish bakers who avoid kitniyot (legumes and grains) or follow stricter flour prohibitions. The Passover seder plate cake — usually a sponge-style cake made with potato starch, eggs, and matzo meal — relies on potato starch for its structure.
Classic Passover sponge cake uses potato starch in unusually high proportions compared to standard cakes:
| Ingredient | Amount | Weight | Role |
|---|---|---|---|
| Potato starch | ¾ cup | 144g | Structure and binding |
| Eggs (separated) | 9 large | ~495g | Structure, leavening, moisture |
| Sugar | 1½ cups | 300g | Sweetness, moisture retention |
| Lemon zest and juice | 1 lemon | ~15g juice | Flavor, acid for egg whites |
The high egg ratio (9 eggs for ¾ cup potato starch) compensates for the lack of gluten structure — beaten egg whites provide the airy lift, while beaten yolks provide richness and fat. The cake is essentially an airy, delicate structure held together by egg protein with potato starch as the flour equivalent. It produces a surprisingly light, delicate crumb for a grain-free cake.
Common Questions About Potato Starch
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For a light sauce consistency: 1 teaspoon (4g) potato starch per 1 cup (237ml) liquid. For medium sauce: 1.5 teaspoons (6g) per cup. For thick gravy: 2 teaspoons (8g) per cup. These are lighter than cornstarch ratios — potato starch has higher thickening power per gram. Always mix potato starch with 2× its volume in cold water to form a slurry before adding to hot liquid; adding dry starch directly to hot liquid creates lumps.
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Potato starch breaks down (retrogrades) when held above 175°F (79°C) for extended periods — the starch granules that swelled to thicken the sauce begin to collapse and release water, thinning the sauce. This is called starch breakdown or "thinning back." To prevent it: add potato starch slurry near the end of cooking, bring just to the desired consistency, and reduce heat immediately. Don't hold potato-starch-thickened sauces on high heat. For dishes that require long oven times, use cornstarch or a flour-based roux which are more heat-stable.
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No — potato starch is almost 100% pure digestible carbohydrate (approximately 94g carbohydrate per 100g). It is not compatible with ketogenic diets. For keto-friendly thickening, use xanthan gum (¼ teaspoon replaces 1 tablespoon cornstarch) or glucomannan (konjac) powder. These provide thickening power with minimal carbohydrates. However, note that in the small amounts used for thickening (1–2 teaspoons), potato starch contributes only 4–8g carbohydrate per serving — which may or may not be significant depending on total daily carbohydrate targets.
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Yes — potato starch is widely used in Korean and Japanese fried chicken (Korean fried chicken often uses potato starch or a mix of potato starch and AP flour) for an extra-crunchy, craggly texture. The large starch granules create surface irregularities that become especially crispy when fried. Coat protein in potato starch (dredged, excess shaken off), fry at 350°F (177°C) for the first fry, then 375°F (190°C) for the crisping fry. The result is crunchier and lighter than all-purpose flour coatings.
- USDA FoodData Central — Starch, potato
- On Food and Cooking — Harold McGee: starch gelatinization temperatures
- King Arthur Baking — Gluten-Free Baking Guide
- Journal of Food Science: Potato Starch Properties and Applications (various editions)