pensnest: Chris in silly hat, caption A man walks down the street in that hat, people know he's not afraid of anything (Chris in That Hat)
pensnest ([personal profile] pensnest) wrote2013-11-15 03:11 pm

(no subject)

How does one measure 3/4 cup butter without going mad?

Seriously. I don't use cup measurements often, but butter measured in a cup sounds ridiculous. What do I do?
topaz119: (dinner is served)

[personal profile] topaz119 2013-11-15 03:33 pm (UTC)(link)
3/4 c butter is roughly 6 oz (a stick and a half if your butter comes 4 sticks to the pound. I haven't had enough caffeine yet to do the metric conversion, sorry!)

Or, put a cup of water in a 2-cup (or larger) measuring cup and then drop the butter in until the water level rises to 1 3/4 cup.
anotherslashfan: "We exist - be visible" caption on dark background. letter x is substituted with double moon symbol for bisexuality (Default)

[personal profile] anotherslashfan 2013-11-15 03:36 pm (UTC)(link)
Eyeball it?
Or google for some cup-volume conversion?
I'm from Germany, so we usually use metric measurements, but as far as I know, being precise when measuring - at least when it comes to baking - is overrated anyway. If you have a description of what the texture of your mix should be like, just try and go with that?
anotherslashfan: "We exist - be visible" caption on dark background. letter x is substituted with double moon symbol for bisexuality (Default)

[personal profile] anotherslashfan 2013-11-15 03:46 pm (UTC)(link)
Ahaha, yes, [personal profile] topaz119 made a more useful suggestion ^^ Which I didn't see before my comment was posted...

In any case, I agree that successful baking seems to often rely on one knowing a recipe's "secret". Might not just be precise measurements; sometimes it's timing, temperature, or one mistake you just shouldn't make ^^. Cooking's more forgiving that way.
fleurrochard: A black and white picture of a little girl playing air-guitar and singing (Default)

[personal profile] fleurrochard 2013-11-15 04:14 pm (UTC)(link)
You could use the conversion table on this site. According to it, 3/4 cup of butter are 180 g.
chalcopyrite: white text on black background: "There's always time for tea and there's always room for cake." (words: room for cake)

[personal profile] chalcopyrite 2013-11-15 07:48 pm (UTC)(link)
I feel your pain. (Most of my recipes/cookbooks being American in origin.) One pound of butter is 2 cups, so a) 3/4 c. is 6oz, as Topaz already said, and b) when I get butter (one pound block), I mark it with a knife roughly into quarters, so I have more-or-less half cups ready to go.
chalcopyrite: Two little folded-paper boats in the rain (Default)

[personal profile] chalcopyrite 2013-11-15 10:44 pm (UTC)(link)

The labelling is metric, but butter still comes by the 454 grams. wry g I'm going to have to check the smaller blocks now, though, to see if they're 227g or 250g!

chalcopyrite: a pair of brightly striped flip-flops hanging on a rackety old fence (shoes: flip-flops)

[personal profile] chalcopyrite 2013-11-21 10:19 pm (UTC)(link)
I did not mean to cause midnight butter-measuring crises! But now you know for certain: yay? *g*

I had to check in the supermarket today -- the smaller blocks here are indeed 227g. So the matter of international butter measurements has gotten even more complicated, and Chris' face sums up my feelings completely!

[identity profile] joyfulseeker.livejournal.com 2013-11-15 03:41 pm (UTC)(link)
Butters in the states have gradations marked on the wrapper, and then you just cut down with a knife at the proper marking. Don't know if that'll help in a non-cup-based system! alternately, find the density of butter, convert the 3/4 cup measurement to a mass, and just weigh it out on a scale...

Looks like 3/4 cup is 177 mL, and the density of butter is .911 g/mL. Therefore 3/4 cup is ~162 grams. If this helps?
nopseud: (Default)

[personal profile] nopseud 2013-11-15 06:09 pm (UTC)(link)
I typed '3/4 cup of butter in grams' into Google, and it gave me this butter conversion calculator, on a site which looks useful for all kinds of things.
Edited 2013-11-15 18:10 (UTC)

[identity profile] hsb.livejournal.com 2013-11-15 09:49 pm (UTC)(link)
I once read a full page on a US baking site about how to properly measure flour without it settling and messing up your volume measurement, at the end of which she suggested that to test that you were doing it right, you should weigh your cup of flour and it should be X grams.

The reason most US recipes I like get tranferred to LJ is that I translate all stupid cup measures into weights. Particularly baffled by things like a cup of chopped veg. Why?

H

[identity profile] originalrahrah.livejournal.com 2013-11-15 10:54 pm (UTC)(link)
is it a matter of conversion or convenience? does the butter wrapper have markings? do you have a measuring cup?

(Anonymous) 2013-11-16 04:42 pm (UTC)(link)
OK. I don't know where I saw this but if you put 1/4 cup water into the measuring cup and then put in the chunks of butter until it hits the 1 cup line, you will have 3/4 cup butter. The butter and the water don't mix so just pour off the water and use the butter. It works for me.

[identity profile] solariana.livejournal.com 2013-11-15 11:52 pm (UTC)(link)
Be thankful you didn't have to learn to cook from my mother.

Me: "How much *whatever* should I put in?"
Mom (from the other room): "Oh, about yea (yay) much."
Me: "How much is yea much?"
Mom (holding her hands or fingers so far apart): "You know, about so."

On top of that, she often used the term *yea much*, but at one point it may mean a cup or two or a teaspoon another time, or a pinch yet another time. There is NO consistency to the measuring of *yea much*!

[identity profile] msktrnanny.livejournal.com 2013-11-16 12:34 am (UTC)(link)
I'll trade your annoyance for measuring butter in cups for my absolute consternation at nobs of butter and setting the stove at 2 or 3. :-)

[Give JM a big hug for me tomorrow, would you please?]