Queso Oaxaca — Cups to Grams

1 cup loosely shredded Queso Oaxaca = 110g — packed = 226g, melted = 260g

Variant
Result
110grams

1 cup Queso Oaxaca = 110 grams

Tablespoons15.9
Teaspoons47.8
Ounces3.88

Quick Conversion Table — Queso Oaxaca

CupsGramsTablespoonsTeaspoons
¼27.5 g3.99 tbsp12 tsp
36.7 g5.32 tbsp16 tsp
½55 g7.97 tbsp23.9 tsp
73.3 g10.6 tbsp31.9 tsp
¾82.5 g12 tbsp35.9 tsp
1110 g15.9 tbsp47.8 tsp
165 g23.9 tbsp71.7 tsp
2220 g31.9 tbsp95.7 tsp
3330 g47.8 tbsp143.5 tsp
4440 g63.8 tbsp191.3 tsp

Why Measuring Queso Oaxaca by Volume Is Tricky

Queso Oaxaca is a pasta filata (stretched-curd) string cheese that must be pulled apart into thin strands before use — and this preparation method makes cup measurement highly variable. Loosely pulled strands trap large amounts of air, yielding only 110g per cup. Packed strands measure 226g per cup — more than double. This 2:1 weight ratio for the same volume is more extreme than almost any other ingredient, including brown sugar versus granulated sugar. Always measure Queso Oaxaca loosely and always specify the form in a recipe. When precision matters, weigh on a kitchen scale.

MeasureLoosely shredded (g)Packed shredded (g)Melted poured (g)
1 tablespoon6.9g14.1g16.3g
¼ cup27.5g56.5g65g
½ cup55g113g130g
1 cup110g226g260g
400g ball3.6 cups loose1.77 cups packed1.54 cups melted

Queso Oaxaca: A Pasta Filata Cheese from Southern Mexico

Queso Oaxaca originates from the Valles Centrales region of Oaxaca, Mexico, and belongs to the same pasta filata family as Italian mozzarella, provolone, and scamorza. The defining production step — heating fresh curd to approximately 80–85°C, then stretching and kneading it into an elastic, fibrous sheet — creates the characteristic string-pull texture that distinguishes stretched-curd cheeses from all others.

The cheese is traditionally wound into a tight coil or ball weighing 200g to 1 kg for retail sale. When pulled apart, the strands separate cleanly along the fiber lines created during stretching. This fibrous structure also gives Queso Oaxaca its superior melt behavior: the aligned protein fibers relax uniformly when heated, producing a smooth, stretchy melt with minimal oil separation — properties that make it one of Mexico's most prized quesadilla and tlayuda cheeses.

Pro tip: Shred Queso Oaxaca by pulling it apart with your hands into thin strands, then roughly chop those strands to 1–2 inch lengths before adding to quesadillas or enchiladas. This produces more even melting than leaving the strands in long coils.

Quesadilla and Recipe Portion Math

Queso Oaxaca's most common application is quesadillas — and getting the cheese quantity right determines whether the result is perfectly melted or under/over-cheesed. The standard professional kitchen ratio is 60–80g of shredded Queso Oaxaca per large flour tortilla (25–30cm). For a crispy result, 70g is the optimum: fully melted, minimal overflow, consistent coverage edge to edge.

For common recipe quantities: 2 quesadillas: 140–160g (approximately 1.25–1.5 cups loosely shredded). 4 quesadillas: 280–320g (approximately 2.5–3 cups). 8 quesadillas for a party: 560–640g (approximately 5–6 cups). A standard 400g commercial ball provides enough for 5–6 large quesadillas. For enchiladas: 40–50g per enchilada inside the roll, plus an additional 15–20g per enchilada sprinkled on top before baking. For tlayudas (Oaxacan flatbread): 100–120g per tlayuda, spread across a larger surface area than a quesadilla.

Chiles rellenos: 50–70g of Queso Oaxaca per stuffed pepper — the cheese needs to fit inside the pepper cavity and melt without escaping. Use firmly hand-formed strands and pack lightly.

Melt Behavior and Cooking Temperatures

Queso Oaxaca melts at a lower temperature than many cheeses and is more forgiving of heat variations. Melting begins at approximately 50°C (122°F), with full, stretchy melt achieved at 55–65°C (131–149°F). Above 75–80°C (167–176°F), prolonged exposure causes fat to separate from the protein matrix, resulting in greasiness and a grainy texture. This is why high-heat broiling for extended periods can compromise quesadilla cheese quality.

For skillet quesadillas: medium heat (approximately 160–175°C surface temperature). For baked applications (enchiladas, chiles rellenos): oven temperature of 175–190°C with a 12–18 minute bake time allows the cheese to melt completely without overcooking. For pizza-style applications: higher heat (230°C+) is possible when the cheese is shredded finely and the cooking time is short (8–10 minutes).

ApplicationQueso Oaxaca per servingGramsApprox. cups loose
Quesadilla (1 large)1 tortilla70g~½ cup + 1 tbsp
Enchilada (1 rolled)inside + top55–70g~½ cup
Chile relleno (1 pepper)stuffing60g~½ cup
Tlayuda (1 flatbread)full coverage110g~1 cup
Queso fundido (4 servings)dip400g~3.6 cups

Substitutes for Queso Oaxaca

Queso Oaxaca is increasingly available in US, Canadian, and European supermarkets, but when it is unavailable, several cheeses substitute effectively. Low-moisture mozzarella (shredded block, not fresh balls) is the closest substitute in texture, melt behavior, and density — substitute 1:1 by weight. The flavor is slightly blander. Asadero, another Mexican stretched-curd cheese produced primarily in Chihuahua state, is nearly identical to Queso Oaxaca in production and behavior — substitute 1:1 perfectly. Queso Chihuahua (Menonita) is slightly creamier but melts similarly — good for baked dishes. Monterey Jack substitutes well in cooked applications — mild flavor, excellent melt at slightly lower temperatures. String cheese (individually wrapped mozzarella sticks) can be pulled and shredded as an emergency substitute — identical production method, slightly saltier.

Pro tip: Do not substitute aged, hard-rind cheeses (cheddar, Parmesan, cotija) for Queso Oaxaca in melting applications — they have completely different melt behavior, far higher salt content, and incompatible flavor profiles for traditional Mexican dishes.