How Many Grams in ⅓ Cups of Quinoa?
Precise conversion for baking and cooking.
The exact weight is
57
grams
⅓ cups of quinoa = 57g
· Based on 170g per cup
🔢 Quick Calculator
cups of quinoa =
57g
Quinoa — All Cup-to-Gram Conversions
| Cups | Grams | Ounces |
|---|---|---|
| ⅛ cups | 21g | 0.7 oz |
| ¼ cups | 42g | 1.5 oz |
| ⅓ cups | 57g | 2.0 oz |
| ½ cups | 85g | 3.0 oz |
| ⅔ cups | 113g | 4.0 oz |
| ¾ cups | 128g | 4.5 oz |
| 1 cup | 170g | 6.0 oz |
| 1¼ cups | 212g | 7.5 oz |
| 1½ cups | 255g | 9.0 oz |
| 1¾ cups | 298g | 10.5 oz |
| 2 cups | 340g | 12.0 oz |
| 2½ cups | 425g | 15.0 oz |
| 3 cups | 510g | 18.0 oz |
| 4 cups | 680g | 24.0 oz |
| 5 cups | 850g | 30.0 oz |
💡 Pro Tip: Rinse before cooking to remove bitter saponin coating.
Why Weigh Quinoa in Grams?
When a recipe calls for ⅓ cups of quinoa, using a kitchen scale to measure exactly 57 grams will give you far more consistent results than volume measurement alone. This is because quinoa can be packed, sifted, or scooped differently each time, leading to weight variations of up to 20%.
How to Measure Quinoa by Weight
Place your mixing bowl on a digital kitchen scale and press "tare" to zero it out. Then add quinoa until the scale reads 57g. This method is faster than measuring cups and eliminates the guesswork entirely.
Frequently Asked Questions
⅓ cups of quinoa weighs exactly 57 grams or approximately 2.0 ounces. This is based on a standard US cup measurement of 170 grams per cup.
Yes, the density of quinoa (170g per cup) is consistent across brands. Minor variations of ±5% may occur depending on grind, moisture, and how the ingredient is packed into the cup — which is exactly why weighing with a scale is recommended.
If measuring by cups, whether you sift can change the weight by 10-20%. When measuring by weight (57g), sifting doesn't affect accuracy since you're targeting an exact gram amount regardless of volume.
This conversion uses the US standard cup (236.6ml, commonly rounded to 240ml). If you're using a metric cup (250ml), the weight will be slightly higher. For perfect accuracy, always use a kitchen scale.