New here :-)

From: Pete Turnbull <pete_at_dunnington.u-net.com>
Date: Mon Mar 5 15:39:43 2001

On Mar 5, 18:51, Tony Duell wrote:
> > If you think all that's bad, I still haven't figured out the
measurements
> > for cooking...like how many tablespoons in a cup, and how many cups in
a
> > quart and all that nonsense. Who came up with this crap anyway?
>
> I knew the HP49G was useful for something :-). It has all those units in
> the unit management system..
>
> According to that machine :
>
> 1 cup = 16 tablespoons
>
> 1 tablespoon = 3 teaspoons

Except that, traditionally, there are two teaspoons in a dessertspoon and
two dessertspoons in a tablespoon. It doesn't add up :-)

> 1 cup = 8 fluid ounces
>
> 1 quart = 4 cups
>
> 1 cup = 236.5882365 ml

And those are U.S. measures, I think. A cup is half a pint; an imperial
pint is 20 fluid ounces, not 16. An imperial quart = 2 imperial pints =
1.136523 litres (1136 ml); 4 U.S. cups = 946 ml.

A tablespoon is supposedly 15ml (mine aren't but that's another story :-))
So 16 tbsp (1 U.S. cup) would be 240ml. Close enough for cookery, I
suppose.

And of course that only applies to liquid measure. When you're measuring
dry materials, you're supposed to use a rounded (not heaped! that's
different) spoonful -- an allowance for the hypothetical meniscus, of
course.

-- 
Pete						Peter Turnbull
						Network Manager
						Dept. of Computer Science
						University of York
Received on Mon Mar 05 2001 - 15:39:43 GMT

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