Convert tablespoons Powdered Sugar to ounces Powdered Sugar
Instantly convert tablespoons Powdered Sugar (tablespoons) to ounces Powdered Sugar (ounces) with our free online calculator.
Quick Reference: Powdered Sugar
| tablespoons | ounces |
|---|---|
| 0.25 | 0.07 |
| 0.5 | 0.15 |
| 1 | 0.29 |
| 1.5 | 0.44 |
| 2 | 0.58 |
| 3 | 0.88 |
| 4 | 1.17 |
How to Convert tablespoons Powdered Sugar to ounces Powdered Sugar
Formula
To convert tablespoons Powdered Sugar (tablespoons) to ounces Powdered Sugar (ounces): Multiply tablespoons by 0.56 (density of Powdered Sugar)
About tablespoons Powdered Sugar (tablespoons)
Tablespoons of Powdered Sugar. Measured by US tablespoon (= 15 mL = 3 US teaspoons = 1/16 US cup per FDA 21 CFR 101.9; Australian tablespoon is larger at 20 mL — important when adapting Australian recipes). The tablespoon is the everyday US measure for small ingredient quantities — sauces, dressings, condiments, and recipe additions. 'Generously rounded' vs 'level' tablespoon measurements vary by ~30% by mass, which is why precise baking moves to gram measurement when scale matters. Powdered sugar (confectioners' sugar, icing sugar, 10X sugar) is granulated sugar pulverized to a fine powder + blended with 3% cornstarch to prevent caking. The 'X' grading indicates fineness: 4X = coarse, 6X = standard, 10X = fine (US grocery default, Domino + C&H), 14X = ultra-fine for professional pastry. Density ~0.560 g/mL (1 cup unsifted = 120 g per King Arthur Baking standard; 1 cup sifted = ~110 g). Powdered sugar dissolves instantly without graininess, making it essential for: royal icing (1 lb sugar + 2 egg whites + 1 tsp cream of tartar), buttercream frosting, glazes for donuts + sweet rolls, dusting cakes/cookies/Beignets/zeppole, and sweetening whipped cream without crystals. The cornstarch addition means powdered sugar should NOT be used 1:1 to replace granulated sugar in recipes requiring liquid sugar dissolution. Shelf life: indefinite if kept airtight + dry. Density: 0.560 g/mL (used to convert volume measurements to mass).
About ounces Powdered Sugar (ounces)
Ounces of Powdered 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). Powdered sugar (confectioners' sugar, icing sugar, 10X sugar) is granulated sugar pulverized to a fine powder + blended with 3% cornstarch to prevent caking. The 'X' grading indicates fineness: 4X = coarse, 6X = standard, 10X = fine (US grocery default, Domino + C&H), 14X = ultra-fine for professional pastry. Density ~0.560 g/mL (1 cup unsifted = 120 g per King Arthur Baking standard; 1 cup sifted = ~110 g). Powdered sugar dissolves instantly without graininess, making it essential for: royal icing (1 lb sugar + 2 egg whites + 1 tsp cream of tartar), buttercream frosting, glazes for donuts + sweet rolls, dusting cakes/cookies/Beignets/zeppole, and sweetening whipped cream without crystals. The cornstarch addition means powdered sugar should NOT be used 1:1 to replace granulated sugar in recipes requiring liquid sugar dissolution. Shelf life: indefinite if kept airtight + dry. Density: 0.560 g/mL (used to convert volume measurements to mass).