Butterscotch Chips — Cups to Grams

1 cup butterscotch chips = 170 grams — 11 oz Nestle bag = 1.83 cups (311g)

Variant
Result
170grams

1 cup Butterscotch Chips = 170 grams

Tablespoons16
Teaspoons48.6
Ounces6

Quick Conversion Table — Butterscotch Chips

CupsGramsTablespoonsTeaspoons
¼42.5 g4.01 tbsp12.1 tsp
56.7 g5.35 tbsp16.2 tsp
½85 g8.02 tbsp24.3 tsp
113.3 g10.7 tbsp32.4 tsp
¾127.5 g12 tbsp36.4 tsp
1170 g16 tbsp48.6 tsp
255 g24.1 tbsp72.9 tsp
2340 g32.1 tbsp97.1 tsp
3510 g48.1 tbsp145.7 tsp
4680 g64.2 tbsp194.3 tsp

Butterscotch Chips: Composition and Measurement

Butterscotch chips are a compound baking chip — not chocolate, but a confectionery product made to simulate the flavor of butterscotch candy in baked goods. Understanding their composition explains both their measurement characteristics and their behavior in recipes.

Typical composition (Nestle Toll House butterscotch morsels): Sugar, palm kernel oil, butter, non-fat dry milk, salt, soy lecithin, natural and artificial flavors. No cocoa solids, no cocoa butter. The palm kernel oil (which is solid at room temperature) provides structural stability — this is why butterscotch chips maintain their shape at room temperature without the refrigeration required by high-cocoa-butter chocolate.

Density per cup: Standard chips (170g/cup) pack with approximately 20–25% air by volume between chips. Mini chips (180g/cup) pack with approximately 15% air — the smaller size distributes more efficiently. Bulk butterscotch chips from restaurant supply stores often have a more uniform, machine-produced size that packs to 175–178g/cup.

MeasureStandard Chips (g)Mini Chips (g)
1 teaspoon3.5g3.75g
1 tablespoon10.6g11.25g
¼ cup42.5g45g
½ cup85g90g
1 cup170g180g
11 oz bag311g / 1.83 cups

Butterscotch Blondies: The Essential Recipe

Blondies are the natural home for butterscotch chips — the brown sugar base of the batter complements the butterscotch flavor, doubling down on caramel-butter notes without any chocolate interference. The ratio of chips to batter is the key variable:

Standard 9x13 inch pan butterscotch blondie recipe (serves 24):

Melted butter: ¾ cup (170g). Brown sugar: 2 cups (400g). Eggs: 2 large. Vanilla extract: 2 teaspoons (10ml). All-purpose flour: 2 cups (250g). Salt: 1 teaspoon. Butterscotch chips: 1.5 cups (255g) — fold into batter. Optional: scatter additional ½ cup (85g) chips on top before baking.

Chip-to-batter ratio: The recipe above uses 255g chips in a batter that weighs approximately 850g before chips — approximately 30% chips by weight, which is the optimal ratio for butterscotch flavor throughout without over-sweetening. For chip-forward blondies (almost a chip bar), increase to 2 cups (340g) in the batter, which is 40% chips by batter weight.

Baking science: Unlike chocolate chips, butterscotch chips melt completely at 170°C (340°F) and begin to spread into pools in the batter. For intact chip pockets, add chips in the final minute of stirring and don't over-fold. For a more fudgy, butterscotch-throughout texture, allow the chips to melt fully into the batter during baking — bake at 160°C (325°F) for a longer time (35–40 minutes instead of 25–30) to allow thorough melting.

Browning butter first: For next-level butterscotch blondies, brown the butter before melting. Cook butter in a light-colored pan over medium heat until the milk solids turn golden-brown and the butter smells nutty — approximately 5 minutes. The Maillard compounds in browned butter (noisette) complement butterscotch's diacetyl notes, creating a layered caramel complexity that plain melted butter cannot achieve.

Butterscotch Chips in Other Applications

Beyond cookies and blondies, butterscotch chips perform well in several other contexts, each with different weight ratios:

Butterscotch oatmeal cookies: Classic recipe uses 1 cup (170g) butterscotch chips per standard batch. The oats absorb moisture from the baking process and buffer the sweetness — butterscotch chips work better in oatmeal cookies than in standard chocolate chip cookies because the oats' earthy flavor provides a counterpoint to the sweet butterscotch.

Haystack cookies (no-bake): Melt 1.5 cups (255g) butterscotch chips with 1 tablespoon (14g) coconut oil over a double boiler. Stir in 2 cups (100g) crispy chow mein noodles until fully coated. Drop by tablespoon onto parchment paper and refrigerate 30 minutes until set. Makes approximately 24 cookies. The butterscotch-to-noodle ratio is critical: too little chip and the noodles don't bind; too much and the haystacks are overly sweet and brittle when cold.

Butterscotch popcorn: Melt 1 cup (170g) butterscotch chips + 2 tablespoons (28g) butter and drizzle over 8 cups (approximately 64g) popped plain popcorn. Toss and spread on parchment to set. The melted chips harden to a brittle coating at room temperature within 20 minutes. Salt the popcorn before drizzling — the salt-butterscotch combination is what makes this treat compelling.

Butterscotch bark: Melt 2 cups (340g) butterscotch chips, spread on a parchment-lined baking sheet to approximately 5mm thickness, immediately sprinkle with pretzels, sea salt, and toasted pecans. Refrigerate 30 minutes until firm. Break into irregular pieces. The bark sets to a semi-firm texture (never as hard as tempered chocolate bark) that is best stored in the refrigerator in warm weather.

Common Questions About Butterscotch Chips