Spaghetti — Cups to Grams
1 cup dry spaghetti = 100 grams — cooked spaghetti weighs 140g per cup (1 cup dry yields approximately 2 cups cooked)
1 cup Spaghetti = 100 grams
Quick Conversion Table — Spaghetti
| Cups | Grams | Tablespoons | Teaspoons |
|---|---|---|---|
| ¼ | 25 g | 4 tbsp | 11.9 tsp |
| ⅓ | 33.3 g | 5.33 tbsp | 15.9 tsp |
| ½ | 50 g | 8 tbsp | 23.8 tsp |
| ⅔ | 66.7 g | 10.7 tbsp | 31.8 tsp |
| ¾ | 75 g | 12 tbsp | 35.7 tsp |
| 1 | 100 g | 16 tbsp | 47.6 tsp |
| 1½ | 150 g | 24 tbsp | 71.4 tsp |
| 2 | 200 g | 32 tbsp | 95.2 tsp |
| 3 | 300 g | 48 tbsp | 142.9 tsp |
| 4 | 400 g | 64 tbsp | 190.5 tsp |
Measuring Dry and Cooked Spaghetti
Spaghetti presents a unique measuring challenge: the long thin strands cannot be accurately poured into a measuring cup without breaking them first. Understanding both measurement methods — cup volume and bundle diameter — is essential for consistent results.
Dry spaghetti by cup (100g/cup): Break spaghetti into 1–2 inch pieces, place in a dry measuring cup, and level the top. Do not pack down. This method works well for recipes calling for broken pasta (minestrone, pasta e fagioli, baked casseroles). For standard long-strand dishes, the bundle method below is more practical.
Dry spaghetti by bundle: The most reliable no-scale method for whole strands. Gather a bundle and compare to a US quarter coin (22.25mm diameter) — this equals approximately 57g (2 oz), one standard US serving. A nickel-diameter bundle (21.2mm) gives a slightly lighter serving around 50g.
Cooked spaghetti (140g/cup): Cooked strands nestle together more densely when wet than dry pasta pieces, so the grams-per-cup increases. Use a loose, not packed, measuring cup. Most recipe measurements for pasta dishes specify dry weight — measure before cooking.
| Measure | Dry (g) | Cooked (g) | Servings (2oz each) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 tablespoon | 6.25g | 8.75g | — |
| ¼ cup | 25g | 35g | ~0.4 servings |
| ½ cup | 50g | 70g | ~0.9 servings |
| 1 cup | 100g | 140g | ~1.75 servings |
| 2 cups dry | 200g | ~400g cooked | ~3.5 servings |
| 1 lb box | 454g | ~908g cooked | 8 servings (2oz ea) |
How to Measure Spaghetti Precisely
The most reliable technique for measuring spaghetti depends on whether you're working with whole strands or broken pieces, and whether a kitchen scale is available.
With a kitchen scale (most accurate): Place a plate or bowl on the scale, tare to zero, and add spaghetti directly from the box. Target weight: 57g (2 oz) per person for a home portion, 113g (4 oz) per person for a restaurant-style serving. Scales eliminate the bundle-diameter guesswork entirely and are especially useful when cooking for groups.
Without a scale — bundle diameter method: US quarter coin (22.25mm) = 57g (2 oz) = 1 home serving. For 2 servings, use a bundle about the diameter of a 50-cent piece (~30mm). Many spaghetti boxes have a pre-cut circular hole (typically 30–32mm diameter) for measuring 2–3 servings at once — check your box.
Without a scale — cup method for broken pasta: Break spaghetti into roughly equal pieces over a dry measuring cup. 1 cup (100g) serves 1.75 people at the 2 oz standard. For 4 servings (228g), use approximately 2.25 cups of broken dry spaghetti.
Why Precision Matters: Cooking Ratios and Water Volume
Getting the pasta quantity right affects not just portion size but the cooking process itself. Too much pasta in too little water produces sticky, gummy results; the ratio of water to pasta matters for starch management.
Water ratio: Use at least 4 quarts (3.8 liters) of water per pound (454g / 4.5 cups dry) of spaghetti. Pasta releases significant starch as it cooks — insufficient water volume leads to starchy, sticky pasta and water that foams and boils over. Save 1 cup of pasta water before draining: the starchy liquid emulsifies with olive oil or butter to create silky sauces (the foundation of cacio e pepe and aglio e olio).
Salt concentration: The correct salting level for pasta water is 1–2% salt by weight — approximately 1 tablespoon (17g) of kosher salt per 4 quarts of water. This creates water with a salt concentration similar to lightly salted vegetable broth, which seasons the pasta from within as it absorbs water during cooking.
The 1:2 cup conversion: 1 cup dry spaghetti (100g) yields approximately 2 cups cooked (280g). This ratio is critical for baked pasta dishes, pasta salads, and recipe scaling. If a cold pasta salad recipe calls for 4 cups of cooked spaghetti, start with 2 cups (200g) dry.
Italian Regional Varieties: Naples vs. Genova
The word "spaghetti" (from Italian "spago" meaning "string") encompasses a range of thicknesses with distinct culinary applications across Italy's regions. The thickness directly affects cooking time, sauce adherence, and the appropriate pairing.
Spaghettini (#3, ~1.4mm): The thinnest spaghetti variety, associated with Ligurian (Genovese) cuisine. Traditional with pesto alla genovese — the thin strand catches the oil-based herb sauce better than thicker pasta. Cooks in 5–6 minutes. Density approximately 95g/cup dry.
Spaghetti (#5, ~1.8–2.0mm): The standard diameter sold in most markets worldwide. The workhorse of Neapolitan and Roman cooking — traditional for spaghetti al pomodoro, carbonara, and amatriciana. Cooks in 8–10 minutes. The 100g/cup measurement in this converter applies to this diameter.
Spaghettoni (#8, ~2.2mm): Thicker strands favored in some parts of Campania and Sicily for robust meat sauces and alla bottarga (cured fish roe) dishes. The extra thickness means longer cooking time (11–13 minutes) and slightly denser packing (~108g/cup dry).
Vermicelli (~1.2mm): Even thinner than spaghettini, used primarily in soups (pasta e fagioli) and as a component of couscous-style dishes in Sicily. Approximate density 90g/cup dry. In American usage, "vermicelli" often refers to thin rice noodles rather than wheat pasta — a completely different ingredient.
Troubleshooting Spaghetti Measurement Problems
Common measurement errors with spaghetti and how to correct them:
Problem: Pasta sticks together after cooking. Cause: too little water per gram of pasta, or pasta drained and left sitting without sauce. Solution: use 4+ quarts per pound; toss with sauce immediately after draining, or toss with 1 teaspoon of olive oil if not saucing immediately.
Problem: Recipe turns out too dry after following cup measurements. Cause: recipe may specify cooked weight but you measured dry, or vice versa. Solution: remember 1 cup dry (100g) = ~2 cups cooked (280g). If a recipe says "2 cups cooked spaghetti," start with 1 cup (100g) dry.
Problem: Portion sizes inconsistent between batches. Cause: bundle diameter estimation varies. Solution: invest in a pasta measuring tool (a circular gauge with different hole sizes) or use a kitchen scale. Even a $10 digital scale eliminates all portion variability.
Problem: Box says 8 servings but seems like much less. Cause: box serving size is 2 oz (57g) dry — about ¾ cup broken pieces — which is a modest portion by American standards. Most people eat 3–4 oz (85–113g) as a main dish. A standard 16 oz (454g) box provides 4 generous American servings rather than the labeled 8.
Common Questions About Spaghetti
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1 cup of cooked plain spaghetti (140g) contains approximately 196 calories. Macronutrients: carbohydrates 39g, protein 7g, fat 1g, fiber 2g. Dry spaghetti has higher caloric density per gram (358 cal/100g dry vs 140 cal/100g cooked) because cooking adds water weight without adding calories. For a 100g dry serving (which cooks to ~200g cooked), total calories are approximately 358 — equivalent to what many people incorrectly attribute to a large bowl of cooked pasta.
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Whole wheat spaghetti has a very similar density to regular semolina spaghetti — approximately 100–105g/cup dry — so you can use the same cup measurements interchangeably. The slight density difference (whole wheat bran adds mass) is negligible in practice. Whole wheat spaghetti takes 1–2 minutes longer to cook to al dente due to the bran layer slowing water penetration. It absorbs slightly less water during cooking than refined semolina pasta, yielding a cooked cup weight of approximately 135g rather than 140g.
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Yes — cook spaghetti to just under al dente (1 minute short of package time), drain, toss with 1 teaspoon olive oil, and refrigerate in an airtight container for up to 3 days. The cooked pasta continues absorbing moisture in the refrigerator and gains approximately 10–15g per cup in weight as it sits. To reheat: plunge into boiling salted water for 30–60 seconds, or add directly to a sauce pan with a splash of pasta water. For large batch meal prep, cook 454g (1 box / 4.5 cups dry) at once and portion into 140g cooked servings for easy weeknight meals.
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Gluten-free spaghetti (made from corn, rice, quinoa, or lentil flour) varies more widely in density than wheat pasta because the different starch bases have different densities. Rice-based GF spaghetti: approximately 95–100g/cup dry. Corn-based: approximately 105–110g/cup dry. Lentil or chickpea-based (higher protein): approximately 110–115g/cup dry. Cooked weights also vary — rice-based GF pasta absorbs more water and can become mushy if overcooked; pull it 1–2 minutes before package time and rinse briefly (which is normally discouraged for wheat pasta but helps halt GF pasta cooking). Use this converter's 100g/cup figure as a starting estimate and adjust by brand.
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Traditional Italian method: 1 liter (4.2 cups) of water per 100g of dry pasta — a 10:1 water-to-pasta ratio by weight. This large volume prevents starchy buildup and allows pasta to move freely. For a standard 1-pound (454g) box, use 4–5 liters (4–5 quarts) of water. The "pasta water" left behind should be visibly cloudy with starch — this is valuable for sauce emulsification. A minority technique (Harold McGee's approach) uses just enough cold water to cover pasta in a wide skillet, brought to a boil together — this produces a very starchy, concentrated pasta water excellent for sauces but requires constant stirring to prevent clumping.
- USDA FoodData Central — Pasta, dry, enriched
- Barilla — Pasta Nutrition and Serving Size Guide
- Academia Barilla — Italian Pasta Regionality and Portion Traditions
- Harold McGee, On Food and Cooking — Pasta starch gelatinization and water ratios
- CREA (Italian National Research Institute for Food and Nutrition) — Pasta serving standards