Whipped Cream — Cups to Grams
1 cup whipped cream = 60 grams (liquid heavy cream = 238g/cup)
1 cup Whipped Cream = 60 grams
Quick Conversion Table — Whipped Cream
| Cups | Grams | Tablespoons | Teaspoons |
|---|---|---|---|
| ¼ | 15 g | 4 tbsp | 12 tsp |
| ⅓ | 20 g | 5.33 tbsp | 16 tsp |
| ½ | 30 g | 8 tbsp | 24 tsp |
| ⅔ | 40 g | 10.7 tbsp | 32 tsp |
| ¾ | 45 g | 12 tbsp | 36 tsp |
| 1 | 60 g | 16 tbsp | 48 tsp |
| 1½ | 90 g | 24 tbsp | 72 tsp |
| 2 | 120 g | 32 tbsp | 96 tsp |
| 3 | 180 g | 48 tbsp | 144 tsp |
| 4 | 240 g | 64 tbsp | 192 tsp |
How to Measure Whipped Cream Accurately
Whipped cream is one of the most unusual ingredients to measure because of the inverse relationship between volume and weight. The act of whipping doesn't add mass — it incorporates air. A cup of liquid heavy cream (238g) becomes 3.5–4 cups of whipped cream (still 238g of dairy, but now spread across 4× the volume) at stiff peaks. This means 1 cup of whipped cream contains only the dairy from ¼ cup of liquid cream.
For recipe purposes, this creates two completely different measurement scenarios. When a recipe says "1 cup heavy cream, whipped to stiff peaks" — it means start with 1 cup liquid cream and whip it, yielding approximately 3.5–4 cups of whipped cream. When a recipe says "1 cup whipped cream" — it means measure 1 cup of the already-whipped product (60g). These are radically different quantities.
To measure whipped cream by cup: use a large spoon to gently transfer whipped cream into the measuring cup without pressing or deflating the foam, then level with a sweep of a spatula. Pressing collapses the air structure and dramatically changes the weight. A "pressed" cup of whipped cream can weigh 90–100g vs the correct 60g.
The Science of Whipping: Why Volume Increases 4×
Heavy cream (35%+ fat) contains fat globules suspended in a water phase. When cream is agitated by a whisk or beaters, several things happen simultaneously: air is incorporated as bubbles, and the mechanical action damages the membrane of fat globules, causing partially liquid fat to smear around the air bubbles and between globules. This creates a three-dimensional foam network where fat-coated air bubbles are held in place by the interconnected fat matrix.
The critical fat content threshold is approximately 30%: below this, cream won't whip to stiff peaks because there isn't enough fat to form the stabilizing matrix. Heavy cream (35–40% fat) whips reliably. Whipping cream (30–35% fat) whips but produces a less stable foam. Half-and-half (10–18% fat) won't whip. The higher the fat content, the more stable the foam.
Over-whipping reverses the process. If you continue agitating after stiff peaks, the fat globule network becomes over-consolidated, the water phase separates (this is the buttermilk), and the fat clumps together into butter. The transformation from whipped cream to butter takes only 30–60 seconds of additional beating past stiff peaks in a stand mixer. There is no recovery — once butter forms, it cannot be converted back to whipped cream.
For mousse recipes, whipped cream is folded into a base (chocolate ganache, fruit purée, egg custard) to create a light, airy texture. The folding technique preserves the air structure — aggressive stirring shears the bubbles and you lose the volume. A properly folded chocolate mousse at 1:1 cream-to-chocolate weight ratio (500g whipped cream to 500g chocolate base) produces a mousse with approximately 55% overrun (volume increase from air incorporation).
Whipped Cream Stabilization Methods
| Stabilizer | Amount per Cup Cream | Stability Duration | Texture Effect |
|---|---|---|---|
| None (plain) | — | 1–2 hours refrigerated | Lightest, most delicate |
| Icing sugar | 2 tbsp (16g) | 2–4 hours | Slightly firmer, sweeter |
| Cream of tartar | ¼ tsp (0.75g) | 4–6 hours | Slightly tangy |
| Cornstarch | 1 tbsp (8g) | 8–12 hours | Slightly denser, holds piping |
| Gelatin | 1 tsp (3g) bloomed | 48+ hours | Firmer; best for piped decoration |
| Mascarpone | 2 tbsp (30g) | 24+ hours | Richer, denser; excellent flavor |
Stabilized whipped cream is essential for any dessert that must hold its shape for several hours: a cream-topped meringue pie served at room temperature, a layer cake that will sit before cutting, or piped rosettes on a celebration cake. The gelatin method is the most reliable for structural stability — the gelatin forms additional cross-links between the fat globules and air bubbles, preventing the foam from collapsing as the fat softens at room temperature.
The mascarpone method produces the most luxurious result: whip 240g of cold heavy cream to soft peaks, add 30g mascarpone (2 tablespoons), and continue whipping to stiff peaks. The high-fat mascarpone integrates into the cream's fat matrix and makes it significantly more stable while adding richness and a subtle tangy flavor. This combination holds piped shapes for 24+ hours under refrigeration.
Troubleshooting Whipped Cream
Cream won't whip to stiff peaks. Most commonly the cream has less than 30% fat (check the label — light cream or half-and-half won't whip), the bowl/beaters aren't cold enough, or the cream is too warm. Chill everything for 15 minutes and try again. If using ultra-pasteurized (UHT) cream, note it takes longer to whip (5–7 minutes) and produces a slightly less stable foam than standard pasteurized cream.
Cream over-whipped and turned grainy. You've started to make butter. At the first sign of graininess, add 1–2 tablespoons of liquid cold cream and fold very gently — this can sometimes rescue nearly-over-whipped cream back to stiff peaks. If it's gone past the point of rescue (clearly separated into yellow fat clumps and liquid), press on: you're making butter. Add ¼ teaspoon salt and continue processing.
Whipped cream deflates after folding into mousse. The base was too warm (above 22°C), or the folding was too vigorous. Cool the mousse base to below 22°C before folding in whipped cream. Use gentle, deliberate folds rather than fast stirring. Expected 10–15% volume loss from proper folding; losing 30%+ indicates the technique or temperature needs correction.
Stabilized whipped cream weeps liquid. The stabilizer wasn't properly incorporated — gelatin that wasn't fully bloomed and melted will not distribute evenly. Blooming gelatin (sprinkling over cold water and waiting 5 minutes for hydration) before melting is non-optional. Incompletely bloomed gelatin creates soft spots in the whipped cream that collapse and release liquid.
Common Questions About Whipped Cream
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1 cup of whipped cream (already whipped to stiff peaks) weighs approximately 60 grams. The liquid heavy cream before whipping weighs 238 grams per cup. Whipping increases volume 3.5–4× without adding weight — air replaces space. Never substitute cups of whipped cream for cups of liquid cream in a recipe.
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Approximately ½ cup (120ml / 116g) of liquid heavy cream whips to 1 cup of whipped cream at stiff peaks. Heavy cream doubles to triples in volume at soft peaks; at stiff peaks it can reach 3.5–4× original volume. To make 2 cups of whipped cream for a dessert topping, start with 1 cup (238g) of liquid cream.
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Whipped cream is 65–75% air by volume. The fat globules in heavy cream surround and trap air bubbles during whipping, creating a foam. The cup is physically filled with air-fat foam, not liquid — so the weight is only 60g despite filling the same 240ml volume. It's the same reason a cup of popped popcorn weighs almost nothing versus a cup of unpopped kernels.
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For 48+ hour stability: bloom 1 teaspoon (3g) of unflavored gelatin in 1 tablespoon cold water for 5 minutes, then melt gently and cool to 30°C. Drizzle into cream that's already at soft peaks while beating. This sets a gelatin network between the fat globules that resists collapse even at room temperature. For 8–12 hours: whip with 1 tablespoon (8g) of cornstarch per cup of cream.
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First, lighten the base by stirring in ¼ of the whipped cream fully (this reduces the density difference). Then fold in the remaining cream with a large spatula using a cut-sweep-fold motion — cut through center, sweep along bottom, fold over top. Rotate bowl 90° and repeat. Keep movements deliberate and slow. Expected volume loss is 10–15%; losing more indicates the base was too warm or mixing was too vigorous.
- USDA FoodData Central — Cream, fluid, heavy whipping
- King Arthur Baking — Ingredient Weight Chart
- On Food and Cooking — Harold McGee, Scribner 2004
- J. Kenji López-Alt, The Food Lab — McGraw Hill, 2015