Brown Rice Flour — Cups to Grams

1 cup brown rice flour = 158 grams (1 tbsp = 9.9g, 1 tsp = 3.3g)

Result
158grams

1 cup Brown Rice Flour = 158 grams

Tablespoons16
Teaspoons47.9
Ounces5.57

Quick Conversion Table — Brown Rice Flour

CupsGramsTablespoonsTeaspoons
¼39.5 g3.99 tbsp12 tsp
52.7 g5.32 tbsp16 tsp
½79 g7.98 tbsp23.9 tsp
105.3 g10.6 tbsp31.9 tsp
¾118.5 g12 tbsp35.9 tsp
1158 g16 tbsp47.9 tsp
237 g23.9 tbsp71.8 tsp
2316 g31.9 tbsp95.8 tsp
3474 g47.9 tbsp143.6 tsp
4632 g63.8 tbsp191.5 tsp

Brown vs White Rice Flour: Same Weight, Different Properties

Both brown and white rice flour weigh 158g per cup — an unusual case where two distinct flours with different compositions end up at essentially the same density. The reason: the bran layer that brown rice flour retains is removed in white rice flour, but the resulting white rice granules are slightly more uniformly shaped and pack marginally more densely. The competing effects roughly cancel out, landing both at 158g/cup.

Despite identical weight, they differ significantly in ways that matter for baking:

PropertyBrown Rice FlourWhite Rice Flour
ColorLight tan/beigeBright white
FlavorNutty, slightly earthyNeutral to mildly sweet
Fiber (per 100g)~4g~2g
Fat (per 100g)~3g (bran oils)~0.5g
Water absorptionSlightly higherStandard
Shelf life (room temp)3–6 months12+ months
Texture in bakingSlightly denser crumbMore delicate crumb

For most GF baking applications, brown and white rice flour can substitute 1:1 by weight. The practical differences are in flavor (brown adds nuttiness) and liquid absorption (brown rice flour may need 1–2 extra tablespoons of liquid per cup to achieve the same batter consistency). The nuttier flavor of brown rice flour enhances chocolate, spice, and nut-based baked goods; for delicate vanilla or citrus flavors, white rice flour's neutrality is preferred.

GF Baking with Brown Rice Flour: Getting It Right

The most common problem in GF baking is producing baked goods that are crumbly, gritty, or gummy. Brown rice flour is a competent base flour, but it cannot be used alone without starches and binders for most applications. Here is the science behind each component:

Brown rice flour (40–60% of blend): Provides the bulk of the structure and flavor. Its starch content is the primary structural element, but unlike wheat starch, rice starch forms a shorter, more fragile network that does not have gluten's extensibility. The result: tender but potentially crumbly without binders.

Potato starch or tapioca starch (30–40% of blend): These pure starches gelatinize at lower temperatures and form a more flexible gel network than rice starch. They contribute chew, moisture retention, and help hold the crumb together. Without them, rice flour-only baked goods are very dry and crumbly.

Xanthan gum or psyllium husk (binder, 0.5–1% of total flour weight): Mimics gluten's binding and elasticity. Xanthan gum: ¼ tsp per cup of GF flour blend for cookies; ½ tsp per cup for cakes and quick breads; ¾–1 tsp per cup for yeast breads. Psyllium husk: 1 teaspoon per cup of GF flour — produces a more bread-like elasticity, particularly effective in GF yeast bread and pizza dough.

The batter rest trick: After mixing GF batter made with brown rice flour, cover and rest at room temperature for 30–60 minutes before baking. During this rest, the starch granules absorb liquid and swell, reducing the gritty texture. The rested batter will appear thicker — this is normal and improves the final product's texture. This step is particularly important for GF pancakes and muffins where a smooth, tender texture is desired.

Recommended GF Flour Blends Using Brown Rice Flour

BlendBrown Rice FlourOther ComponentsBest For
King Arthur GF AP2 cups (316g)⅔ cup potato starch + ⅓ cup tapiocaGeneral baking
Light cake blend1 cup (158g)½ cup white rice flour + ¼ cup tapiocaDelicate cakes
Hearty bread blend1.5 cups (237g)½ cup sorghum + ¼ cup tapioca + 1 tsp psylliumGF bread
Pizza dough blend1 cup (158g)½ cup tapioca + ¼ cup potato starch + ½ tsp xanthanGF pizza

For cookie recipes using GF flour, brown rice flour-based blends generally perform better than sorghum-forward blends because of brown rice flour's more neutral flavor and lower protein content. GF shortbread and sugar cookies using a 2:1 brown rice flour:tapioca blend (with ¼ tsp xanthan gum per cup) produce a close approximation to wheat-based shortbread.

Common Questions About Brown Rice Flour