Convert ounces Brown Sugar to cups Brown Sugar
Instantly convert ounces Brown Sugar (ounces) to cups Brown Sugar (cups) with our free online calculator.
Quick Reference: Brown Sugar
| ounces | cups |
|---|---|
| 10 | 1.44 |
| 25 | 3.61 |
| 50 | 7.22 |
| 100 | 14.44 |
| 200 | 28.87 |
| 500 | 72.18 |
How to Convert ounces Brown Sugar to cups Brown Sugar
Formula
To convert ounces Brown Sugar (ounces) to cups Brown Sugar (cups): Divide ounces by 0.83 (density of Brown Sugar)
About ounces Brown Sugar (ounces)
Ounces of Brown Sugar. Measured by US avoirdupois ounce (= 28.349523125 g exactly per NIST SP 811 — distinct from fluid ounce which is a volume unit). Mass-ounce measurement is preferred in US butcher/bakery/professional contexts where precision matters but the recipe uses imperial customary units. Common US baking ingredient packages list both ounces (mass) + grams: a stick of butter = 4 oz = 113 g; a 'pound' of flour = 16 oz = 454 g. CRITICAL: do NOT confuse with the troy ounce (~31.1 g — used only for precious metals) or the fluid ounce (volume unit = 29.57 mL). Brown sugar is granulated sugar combined with molasses — either retained naturally from incomplete refining ('raw' brown sugar) or added back to fully refined white sugar (US Domino + C&H 'soft' brown sugars). Light brown sugar contains ~3.5% molasses; dark brown sugar ~6.5% molasses per USDA + Sugar Association standards. Density ~0.830 g/mL packed (1 cup packed = 213 g per King Arthur Baking; 1 cup loose ~145 g). The molasses contributes a distinctive caramel-toffee flavor and additional moisture (3-5% water content vs ~0.05% for white sugar). Brown sugar's hygroscopic nature is why it forms hard clumps when exposed to air — store airtight with a terra cotta disc or a slice of apple to maintain softness. Used in chocolate chip cookies (Toll House classic uses both light brown + white sugar), barbecue rubs, banana bread, gingerbread, butterscotch sauce, and as the foundation of glazes for ham + bacon. Density: 0.830 g/mL (used to convert volume measurements to mass).
About cups Brown Sugar (cups)
Cups of Brown Sugar. 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. Brown sugar is granulated sugar combined with molasses — either retained naturally from incomplete refining ('raw' brown sugar) or added back to fully refined white sugar (US Domino + C&H 'soft' brown sugars). Light brown sugar contains ~3.5% molasses; dark brown sugar ~6.5% molasses per USDA + Sugar Association standards. Density ~0.830 g/mL packed (1 cup packed = 213 g per King Arthur Baking; 1 cup loose ~145 g). The molasses contributes a distinctive caramel-toffee flavor and additional moisture (3-5% water content vs ~0.05% for white sugar). Brown sugar's hygroscopic nature is why it forms hard clumps when exposed to air — store airtight with a terra cotta disc or a slice of apple to maintain softness. Used in chocolate chip cookies (Toll House classic uses both light brown + white sugar), barbecue rubs, banana bread, gingerbread, butterscotch sauce, and as the foundation of glazes for ham + bacon. Density: 0.830 g/mL (used to convert volume measurements to mass).