Butter — Cups to Grams

1 cup butter = 227 grams (2 sticks)

Variant
Result
227grams

1 cup Butter = 227 grams

Tablespoons16
Teaspoons48.3
Ounces8.01

Quick Conversion Table — Butter

CupsGramsTablespoonsTeaspoons
¼56.8 g4 tbsp12.1 tsp
75.7 g5.33 tbsp16.1 tsp
½113.5 g7.99 tbsp24.1 tsp
151.3 g10.7 tbsp32.2 tsp
¾170.3 g12 tbsp36.2 tsp
1227 g16 tbsp48.3 tsp
340.5 g24 tbsp72.4 tsp
2454 g32 tbsp96.6 tsp
3681 g48 tbsp144.9 tsp
4908 g63.9 tbsp193.2 tsp

How to Measure Butter Accurately

Butter is the most forgiving baking ingredient to measure because US butter is sold in pre-portioned sticks with tablespoon markings printed on the wrapper. One US stick = ½ cup = 8 tablespoons = 113.5 grams. Two sticks = 1 cup = 227 grams. The wrapper markings are accurate to within 1–2 grams, making them reliable for most baking applications without a scale.

When measuring softened butter by cup, the key is eliminating air pockets. Pack softened butter into the measuring cup in small spoonfuls, pressing each addition down firmly before adding more. Level the top with a straight edge. Air pockets in a supposedly full cup of butter can account for 15–20g of missing fat — which translates to less richness, less browning, and drier texture in finished baked goods.

For melted butter, use a liquid measuring cup and pour to the correct line at eye level. Be aware that when butter melts, it separates into butterfat and a small amount of water/milk solids. For most recipes this is irrelevant, but for clarified butter (ghee) applications, note that 227g of whole butter yields approximately 180g of pure clarified fat after removing water and milk solids.

Pro tip: To quickly bring butter to room temperature (65–68°F / 18–20°C) for creaming, cut it into tablespoon-sized pieces and spread on a plate. It reaches the right temperature in 15–20 minutes at room temperature (68°F / 20°C ambient). If pressed for time, microwave in 5-second bursts at 30% power — you want it soft but not starting to melt at the edges.

Butter in Baking: Why Precision Matters

Butter is not simply fat — it is an emulsion of 80% butterfat, 16–18% water, and 2–4% milk solids. Each of these components plays a distinct role in baking chemistry. The fat tenderizes by coating flour proteins and preventing full gluten development. The water creates steam during baking, which contributes to lift and flakiness in pastries. The milk solids contain proteins and lactose that participate in the Maillard reaction, producing the brown color and complex flavor of browned butter applications.

In creamed preparations — cakes, cookies, muffins — the mechanical process of beating butter with sugar creates millions of tiny air bubbles. These bubbles are stabilized by the fat and expand during baking when filled with CO2 from leaveners. The amount of butter in the recipe directly controls how much air can be incorporated: too little butter and the batter cannot trap enough air, producing dense texture; too much butter and the fat overwhelms the structure, causing the cake to collapse as it cools.

Specific consequences of measurement errors: A butter cake recipe using 113g (½ cup) of butter that actually receives 85g (⅓ cup) will produce a noticeably drier crumb with less spread and less browning on the surface. The same recipe with 141g (⅔ cup) — just 28g over — can cause the cake to be greasy, dense in the center, and prone to sinking because the excess fat coats gluten strands too thoroughly, preventing the structure from setting.

In pastry and pie dough, cold butter in precise amounts creates flakiness through a completely different mechanism: the solid fat pieces steam and create separation between dough layers. Too much butter makes pastry greasy and hard to handle; too little produces a cracker-like, tough crust without the characteristic flaky layers.

Types of Butter and Their Weights

Butter TypeFat %1 Cup WeightBest Used For
Standard American unsalted80%227gAll-purpose baking
Standard American salted80%227gSpreading, sautéing
European-style (cultured)82–84%227gCroissants, brioche, finishing
Clarified butter / ghee99–100%~215gHigh-heat cooking, Indian cuisine
Whipped butter80%~150gSpreading only — not for baking
Plant-based butter sticks78–80%~226gVegan baking (stick style only)

Whipped butter is a critical exception: it has air beaten into it, so a cup of whipped butter weighs only about 150g — using it in baking instead of regular butter means you're getting 34% less fat than the recipe requires. Always use stick butter for baking, not the whipped spread from a tub.

Troubleshooting: When Butter Goes Wrong

Cookies spread too flat and greasy. The most likely cause is butter that was too warm. Butter above 72°F / 22°C is already partially liquid, which means it spreads in the oven before the cookie's egg proteins set the structure. The fix: chill your formed cookie dough for 30 minutes before baking, and check that your butter is 65°F / 18°C (soft enough to leave an indent when pressed, but not shiny or slick).

Cake is dense with a greasy mouthfeel. Too much butter disrupts the fat-to-flour ratio. If your recipe calls for 113g butter and you used 141g (the difference between ½ cup and ⅔ cup), the excess fat prevents the gluten-egg structure from setting properly, producing a dense, heavy crumb that feels greasy rather than tender.

Pie crust is crumbly and hard to roll without cracking. Too little butter, or butter that was worked in too thoroughly. Flaky pastry requires visible pea-sized fat pieces that remain intact. If the butter gets fully incorporated into the flour (which happens when it's too warm), there are no steam-pocket-creating fat layers, and the crust bakes crisp and cracker-like instead of flaky.

Buttercream frosting breaks and looks greasy. If your butter was too warm when added to the meringue base, the fat separates from the emulsion. Chill the mixing bowl in the refrigerator for 5–10 minutes, then beat again — the cooler temperature brings the emulsion back together.

Common Questions About Butter

Butter Conversion Table

CupsGramsOunces
¼ cup (½ stick)57 g2.01 oz
⅓ cup76 g2.68 oz
½ cup (1 stick)114 g4.02 oz
⅔ cup151 g5.33 oz
¾ cup170 g6.00 oz
1 cup (2 sticks)227 g8.01 oz
1½ cups341 g12.02 oz
2 cups454 g16.01 oz
3 cups681 g24.02 oz
4 cups908 g32.03 oz

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