Calamansi — Cups to Grams
1 cup calamansi juice = 245g — whole fruits = 155g (~15 fruits per cup)
1 cup Calamansi = 245 grams
Quick Conversion Table — Calamansi
| Cups | Grams | Tablespoons | Teaspoons |
|---|---|---|---|
| ¼ | 61.3 g | 4.01 tbsp | 12 tsp |
| ⅓ | 81.7 g | 5.34 tbsp | 16 tsp |
| ½ | 122.5 g | 8.01 tbsp | 24 tsp |
| ⅔ | 163.3 g | 10.7 tbsp | 32 tsp |
| ¾ | 183.8 g | 12 tbsp | 36 tsp |
| 1 | 245 g | 16 tbsp | 48 tsp |
| 1½ | 367.5 g | 24 tbsp | 72.1 tsp |
| 2 | 490 g | 32 tbsp | 96.1 tsp |
| 3 | 735 g | 48 tbsp | 144.1 tsp |
| 4 | 980 g | 64.1 tbsp | 192.2 tsp |
Measuring Calamansi: Juice Volume vs. Fruit Count
Calamansi is almost always measured by juice volume or fruit count, not by cup of whole fruits. The cup measurement for whole fruits (155g, ~15 fruits) is useful for purchasing estimates, but in cooking, the juice yield per fruit is the critical figure.
Juice, freshly squeezed (245g/cup): Strained of seeds and coarse pulp. Dense, similar to other citrus juices. 1 cup = 240ml = 16-17 fruits at the standard yield of 15ml per fruit.
Whole fruits (~15 per cup, 155g): Fruits placed loosely in the cup. Useful for purchase planning. 1kg bag = approximately 100 fruits = about 6-7 cups whole = 1.5 liters juice.
| Measure | Juice (g) | Juice (ml) | Fruit count for juice |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 tablespoon | 15.3g | 15ml | ~1 fruit |
| 2 tablespoons | 30.6g | 30ml | ~2 fruits |
| ¼ cup | 61.25g | 60ml | ~4 fruits |
| ½ cup | 122.5g | 120ml | ~8 fruits |
| 1 cup | 245g | 240ml | ~16-17 fruits |
| 1 kg fresh fruits | — | ~1,500ml | ~100 fruits |
Calamansi in Filipino Cuisine: The Essential Souring Citrus
The Philippines has no native lemon or lime tradition comparable to Western cooking — calamansi fills that souring role in Filipino cuisine, appearing in contexts where lime or lemon would appear elsewhere. Its unique flavor (tart like lime, fragrant like mandarin orange) makes it irreplaceable in authentic Filipino cooking, even if 50/50 lime-lemon substitutes work reasonably well.
The most important application is the tableside halved calamansi: at many Filipino meals, whole or halved calamansi are placed at the table alongside fried fish, grilled chicken inasal, or pork sisig. Diners squeeze the fruit directly over their portion — an immediate hit of sour citrus juice that brightens the savory, fatty dish. Two to three calamansi (30-45ml juice) is the standard personal portion at the table.
Key Recipes and Juice Quantities
These are the standard working quantities for the most common calamansi applications in Filipino and Southeast Asian cooking.
Calamansi juice drink (1 serving): 4-6 calamansi (60-90ml juice) + 240ml cold water + 2 teaspoons sugar. Standard Filipino breakfast beverage. Can be made as a concentrate: 1 cup juice (245g, 16-17 fruits) + 100g sugar, dissolved — dilute 1:4 with cold water per serving.
Pork or chicken marinade (4 servings): 8 calamansi (120ml juice) + 4 tablespoons soy sauce + 4 garlic cloves + 1 tsp black pepper. Marinate 2-4 hours. The acid in the juice partially denatures surface proteins, improving seasoning penetration.
Filipino adobo finishing (4 servings): 2-3 calamansi (30-45ml juice) added off heat at the end of cooking. Brightens the vinegar-soy base without cooking away the fresh citrus aromatic.
Pancit garnish: 2 calamansi halved per individual serving, placed on the rim of the bowl — each diner squeezes to taste. This is non-optional in traditional pancit canton and pancit bihon service.
Calamansi curd (for tarts, 1 cup yield): 120ml calamansi juice + 3 egg yolks + 100g sugar + 60g butter — cook in double boiler until thickened (80 degrees C). Fills one 20cm tart shell.
Sourcing: Fresh, Frozen, and Bottled
Fresh calamansi is widely available at Filipino, Chinese, and Southeast Asian grocery stores in North America. In the Philippines and Southeast Asia, they are sold at every market and frequently grown in household gardens. Look for fruits that are fully orange-yellow (fully ripe) rather than green for maximum juice yield and sweetest peel aroma. Green calamansi are underripe and more acidic.
Frozen calamansi juice (in small bottles or bags) is available at Filipino grocery stores and is the best substitute when fresh is unavailable — the juice freezes well and retains most of its aroma. Bottled calamansi concentrate (diluted 1:3 with water) is also available but often contains preservatives and is less fresh-tasting.
Calamansi juice does not juice well with standard citrus juicers because of the small fruit size — use a manual press or squeeze by hand. The thin skin means squeezing by hand yields almost as much juice as a mechanical press.
- USDA FoodData Central — Calamondin, raw
- FAO — Tropical Citrus: Calamansi production and post-harvest
- Philippine Department of Agriculture — Calamansi production statistics
- Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry — Phytochemistry of Citrofortunella microcarpa
- Food Technology Magazine — Southeast Asian souring agents comparison