Thai Basil — Cups to Grams
1 cup Thai basil loose leaves = 16g — packed = 24g
1 cup Thai Basil = 16 grams
Quick Conversion Table — Thai Basil
| Cups | Grams | Tablespoons | Teaspoons |
|---|---|---|---|
| ¼ | 4 g | 4 tbsp | 13.3 tsp |
| ⅓ | 5.33 g | 5.33 tbsp | 17.8 tsp |
| ½ | 8 g | 8 tbsp | 26.7 tsp |
| ⅔ | 10.7 g | 10.7 tbsp | 35.7 tsp |
| ¾ | 12 g | 12 tbsp | 40 tsp |
| 1 | 16 g | 16 tbsp | 53.3 tsp |
| 1½ | 24 g | 24 tbsp | 80 tsp |
| 2 | 32 g | 32 tbsp | 106.7 tsp |
| 3 | 48 g | 48 tbsp | 160 tsp |
| 4 | 64 g | 64 tbsp | 213.3 tsp |
Thai Basil Weight: Loose vs Packed
Thai basil is, like all fresh leafy herbs, extremely light per volume. At 16 grams per loosely filled cup, it ranks among the lightest common fresh herbs alongside cilantro (16g/cup) and Italian basil (24g/cup for torn). The packing state matters significantly — packed leaves are 50% heavier than loosely arranged leaves in the same cup volume.
For most cooking applications (stir-fries, curry finishes, garnishes), Thai basil is added in tablespoon quantities and the precise gram weight matters less than the volume. For large-batch preparations like curry pastes or herb oils, weigh the basil rather than measuring by volume for consistency.
| Measure | Loose (g) | Packed (g) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 tablespoon | 1g | 1.5g |
| 1/4 cup | 4g | 6g |
| 1/2 cup | 8g | 12g |
| 1 cup | 16g | 24g |
| 1 standard bunch | ~40–50g | ~2.5–3 cups loose |
Thai Basil vs Italian Basil vs Holy Basil
The basil family spans hundreds of cultivars, but three dominate culinary use globally. Understanding their differences is essential for correct recipe interpretation and substitution.
Thai basil (Ocimum basilicum var. thyrsiflora): Anise-licorice flavor from estragole (methyl chavicol, approximately 74–88% of essential oil). Purple stems. Narrow, pointed leaves with slightly serrated edges. Firmer texture than Italian basil — withstands high heat stir-frying for 1–2 minutes. Flavor holds under heat better than Italian varieties. Used extensively in Thai, Vietnamese, Indonesian, and Taiwanese cooking.
Italian sweet basil (Ocimum basilicum): Clove-sweet flavor from linalool (35–55% of essential oil) and eugenol (5–15%). Green stems. Large, broad, smooth leaves. Very tender — wilts in seconds under high heat and turns bitter when cooked. Best added raw or at the very end of cooking. Primary herb in pesto, caprese salads, and Italian tomato sauces added after cooking.
Holy basil (Ocimum tenuiflorum, also known as tulsi): Peppery, clove-like flavor with cinnamon and slight medicinal notes from eugenol (up to 70% of essential oil) and methyleugenol. Serrated leaf edges. Used for pad krapow (Thai basil minced pork/chicken stir-fry), Thai green and red curry pastes, and Ayurvedic medicine. Very difficult to source fresh outside South and Southeast Asia.
Classic Southeast Asian Applications
Thai basil appears in dozens of Southeast Asian dishes. The quantities and timing of addition vary considerably by application — understanding these helps use the herb correctly.
Thai green or red curry (4 servings): Add 1/2 cup (8g) loosely packed Thai basil leaves to the finished curry in the last 30 seconds of cooking, stirring once to wilt. The curry should not cook further after the basil is added — sustained heat turns the leaves brown and bitter.
Vietnamese pho garnish: The herb plate for 1–2 servings includes approximately 1/2 cup (8g) Thai basil sprigs. Diners tear individual leaves and drop them into the hot broth at the table just before eating.
Thai stir-fry applications: Unlike Italian basil, Thai basil can be wok-fried at high heat. Add 1/2 cup (8g) leaves to the wok in the last 60–90 seconds of cooking, tossing continuously. The heat wilts but does not destroy the leaves' flavor.
Herb-marinated proteins: Combine 1/4 cup (4g) Thai basil with 2 tablespoons fish sauce, 1 tablespoon lime juice, 2 teaspoons sugar, and 1 minced chili. Use as a marinade for 500g chicken or shrimp. Marinate 20–30 minutes before grilling or pan-searing. The basil's essential oils penetrate the protein surface more effectively than in raw salads.
Nutritional Notes and Flavor Chemistry
Thai basil is used in quantities too small for the per-serving nutritional data to be practically significant. However, the flavor chemistry is notable: estragole, the primary essential oil compound responsible for the anise note, is concentrated in the leaves and is released both by crushing (mechanical damage) and by heat. Heat-released estragole integrates more deeply into a dish's flavor profile than the raw herb's surface oil, which explains why briefly wok-fried Thai basil produces a more penetrating anise flavor than the same quantity used as a cold garnish.
Estragole has been studied for potential genotoxicity at very high doses in animal models, but the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) concluded in 2012 that exposure from food at typical culinary levels presents negligible risk to humans.
- USDA FoodData Central — Basil, fresh
- European Food Safety Authority — Estragole in food: occurrence and safety assessment (2012)
- FAO — Southeast Asian herb and spice traditions
- Saveur — The Three Basils of Southeast Asia
- Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry — Essential oil composition of Ocimum basilicum var. thyrsiflora