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Convert teaspoons Applesauce to grams Applesauce

Instantly convert teaspoons Applesauce (teaspoons) to grams Applesauce (grams) with our free online calculator.

Reviewed by Christopher FloiedUpdated
ApplesauceDensity: 1.05 g/ml
5.18

Quick Reference: Applesauce

teaspoonsgrams
0.251.29
0.52.59
15.18
1.57.76
210.35
315.53
420.70

How to Convert teaspoons Applesauce to grams Applesauce

Formula

To convert teaspoons Applesauce (teaspoons) to grams Applesauce (grams): Multiply teaspoons by 1.05 (density of Applesauce)

About teaspoons Applesauce (teaspoons)

Teaspoons of Applesauce. Measured by US teaspoon (= 5 mL = 1/3 US tablespoon = 1/48 US cup per FDA 21 CFR 101.9). The teaspoon is the standard US measure for small dry ingredients (salt, sugar, baking powder, spices) + small liquid amounts (vanilla extract, lemon juice). Common multiples: 1/4 tsp (1.25 mL), 1/2 tsp (2.5 mL), 1 tsp (5 mL). 'Heaping teaspoon' is informally ~50% more than level (can vary widely). Most US measuring-spoon sets include 1/4, 1/2, 1, and 1 tablespoon (= 3 tsp) increments. Applesauce is the cooked + mashed (or pureed smooth) preparation of apples (Malus domestica) — typically a blend of varieties for balanced sweetness + tartness. Density ~1.050 g/mL (slightly denser than water due to dissolved sugars + pectin). 1 US cup applesauce = 245 g per Mott's/Musselman's standards. 'Sweetened' applesauce contains added high-fructose corn syrup or sugar; 'unsweetened' or 'natural' has only apple-derived sugars (~10-13% natural fructose + glucose). Major US apple varieties used: McIntosh (mainstay for traditional applesauce — soft + sweet-tart), Gala (sweet + light color), Fuji (very sweet), Honeycrisp (crisp + balanced — increasingly popular for premium varieties), Granny Smith (tart + green — for 'baking-style' tarter applesauce). Major US brands: Mott's (Keurig Dr Pepper), Musselman's, Tree Top, Vermont Village (premium 'cold-fill' organic), GoGo Squeez (kids' pouches). Used in: low-fat baking substitute (replaces oil 1:1 in muffins + quick breads), kids' lunch/snack pouches, pork chop accompaniment (traditional German), latkes accompaniment, pancake topping. Babies' first food (BMA Stage 1 — 6+ months per AAP). Density: 1.050 g/mL (used to convert volume measurements to mass).

About grams Applesauce (grams)

Grams of Applesauce. 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. Applesauce is the cooked + mashed (or pureed smooth) preparation of apples (Malus domestica) — typically a blend of varieties for balanced sweetness + tartness. Density ~1.050 g/mL (slightly denser than water due to dissolved sugars + pectin). 1 US cup applesauce = 245 g per Mott's/Musselman's standards. 'Sweetened' applesauce contains added high-fructose corn syrup or sugar; 'unsweetened' or 'natural' has only apple-derived sugars (~10-13% natural fructose + glucose). Major US apple varieties used: McIntosh (mainstay for traditional applesauce — soft + sweet-tart), Gala (sweet + light color), Fuji (very sweet), Honeycrisp (crisp + balanced — increasingly popular for premium varieties), Granny Smith (tart + green — for 'baking-style' tarter applesauce). Major US brands: Mott's (Keurig Dr Pepper), Musselman's, Tree Top, Vermont Village (premium 'cold-fill' organic), GoGo Squeez (kids' pouches). Used in: low-fat baking substitute (replaces oil 1:1 in muffins + quick breads), kids' lunch/snack pouches, pork chop accompaniment (traditional German), latkes accompaniment, pancake topping. Babies' first food (BMA Stage 1 — 6+ months per AAP). Density: 1.050 g/mL (used to convert volume measurements to mass).

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