Convert grams Salt to cups Salt
Instantly convert grams Salt (grams) to cups Salt (cups) with our free online calculator.
Quick Reference: Salt
| grams | cups |
|---|---|
| 10 | 0.03 |
| 25 | 0.09 |
| 50 | 0.17 |
| 100 | 0.35 |
| 200 | 0.69 |
| 500 | 1.74 |
How to Convert grams Salt to cups Salt
Formula
To convert grams Salt (grams) to cups Salt (cups): Divide grams by 1.217 (density of Salt)
About grams Salt (grams)
Grams of Salt. Measured by mass in grams (g) — the metric base mass unit used in scientific + international + professional baking contexts. Mass measurement is more accurate than volume measurement because it eliminates packing-density variation (1 cup of flour can vary 10-20% by mass depending on aerated-vs-packed scoop technique). Most modern baking + pastry recipes from professional pastry chefs (Sébastien Bruno, Pierre Hermé, Stella Parks 'BraveTart', Cook's Illustrated) specify gram measurements. A small digital kitchen scale (~$15-30) provides 1-g resolution. Table salt is sodium chloride (NaCl, 97-99% purity per FDA 21 CFR 184.1810 standards) — the most universal seasoning across all cuisines. Density ~1.217 g/mL granular (1 teaspoon table salt = 6 grams; 1 cup = 273 g). Common varieties: iodized table salt (Morton, Diamond Crystal — iodized US grocery default, 45 ppm KI added to combat iodine deficiency per CDC), kosher salt (Diamond Crystal Kosher — coarser flakes, no anti-caking agents, the chef's preferred salt; 1 teaspoon = 2.8 g, much lighter than table salt by volume — major recipe-tweaking implication!), sea salt (Maldon flake salt, fleur de sel, gros sel — texture + finishing use), Himalayan pink salt (mined from Punjab/Pakistan, trace minerals + iron oxide create the pink color), and specialty kala namak (Indian black salt — sulfur compounds give it a hard-boiled-egg flavor used in vegan recipes). Volume measurements should NEVER be cross-substituted between salt types without recalibration (kosher salt is ~50% less dense than table salt). Density: 1.217 g/mL (used to convert volume measurements to mass).
About cups Salt (cups)
Cups of Salt. Measured by US cup (= 240 mL = 16 US tablespoons = 48 US teaspoons per FDA 21 CFR 101.9). The cup is the dominant US baking + cooking volume unit, but actual density varies significantly by how the ingredient is packed (scooped vs spooned-and-leveled — a 1-cup scoop of flour can range from 110 g to 150+ g depending on technique, which is why precise bakers use mass measurement in grams). Always level with a flat edge (the back of a knife) for accurate volumetric measurement. Table salt is sodium chloride (NaCl, 97-99% purity per FDA 21 CFR 184.1810 standards) — the most universal seasoning across all cuisines. Density ~1.217 g/mL granular (1 teaspoon table salt = 6 grams; 1 cup = 273 g). Common varieties: iodized table salt (Morton, Diamond Crystal — iodized US grocery default, 45 ppm KI added to combat iodine deficiency per CDC), kosher salt (Diamond Crystal Kosher — coarser flakes, no anti-caking agents, the chef's preferred salt; 1 teaspoon = 2.8 g, much lighter than table salt by volume — major recipe-tweaking implication!), sea salt (Maldon flake salt, fleur de sel, gros sel — texture + finishing use), Himalayan pink salt (mined from Punjab/Pakistan, trace minerals + iron oxide create the pink color), and specialty kala namak (Indian black salt — sulfur compounds give it a hard-boiled-egg flavor used in vegan recipes). Volume measurements should NEVER be cross-substituted between salt types without recalibration (kosher salt is ~50% less dense than table salt). Density: 1.217 g/mL (used to convert volume measurements to mass).