Candied Ginger — Cups to Grams

1 cup chopped candied ginger = 155 grams (1 tbsp = 9.7g, 1 tsp = 3.2g) — sugar coating adds ~15% weight vs plain ginger root

Variant
Result
155grams

1 cup Candied Ginger = 155 grams

Tablespoons16
Teaspoons48.4
Ounces5.47

Quick Conversion Table — Candied Ginger

CupsGramsTablespoonsTeaspoons
¼38.8 g4 tbsp12.1 tsp
51.7 g5.33 tbsp16.2 tsp
½77.5 g7.99 tbsp24.2 tsp
103.3 g10.6 tbsp32.3 tsp
¾116.3 g12 tbsp36.3 tsp
1155 g16 tbsp48.4 tsp
232.5 g24 tbsp72.7 tsp
2310 g32 tbsp96.9 tsp
3465 g47.9 tbsp145.3 tsp
4620 g63.9 tbsp193.8 tsp

What Candied Ginger Actually Is (and Why It Weighs What It Does)

Candied ginger — also sold as crystallized ginger — is fresh ginger root that has been peeled, sliced or diced, slow-cooked in a sugar syrup until the ginger fibers are saturated with dissolved sugar, then drained and coated with granulated sugar crystals. The process takes the approximately 80% water content of fresh ginger root and replaces much of it with sugar, fundamentally changing the ingredient's density, texture, and flavor profile.

The weight difference between candied ginger cut sizes comes directly from how efficiently each shape packs into a measuring cup. The key sizes and their density logic:

Cutg/cupg/tbspPacking reason
Whole pieces140g8.75gLarge irregular shapes leave more air gaps
Chopped (5mm)155g9.7gMedium pieces settle moderately
Diced (3mm)170g10.6gSmaller cubes pack more tightly
Minced fine185g11.6gVery small pieces fill air gaps efficiently

The 45g range between whole pieces and minced fine (140g vs 185g per cup) is large enough to meaningfully affect the flavor and sweetness contribution to a recipe. A recipe calling for "1 cup candied ginger" without specifying cut size leaves a potential 32% weight ambiguity. For baking precision, always specify (or check) the cut size and ideally weigh rather than measure by volume.

The sugar coating contribution: Approximately 15% of the weight of commercially candied ginger is the external sugar crystal coating — the granulated sugar that is applied after the syrup cooking and drying stage. This means a 155g cup of chopped candied ginger contains roughly 132g of cooked ginger root and 23g of applied sugar. This sugar contributes sweetness beyond the ginger flavor and should be accounted for when adjusting recipe sugar levels.

Measuring tip: Candied ginger is sticky and can clump in humid conditions. Separate any stuck pieces before measuring. Level off the cup with a straight edge rather than pressing down — packing increases the weight by 20-30% compared to a loose fill. When precision matters, always weigh on a kitchen scale.

Baking Applications: Gingerbread, Scones, and Shortbread

Candied ginger is one of the most versatile baking additions because it simultaneously contributes ginger flavor, textural interest, and sweetness in a single ingredient. Understanding the standard quantities for common applications prevents both the under-gingered baked good and the mouth-numbing over-spiced disaster.

Gingerbread and ginger cookies: Standard gingerbread dough for 24 cookies uses a combination of ground ginger (2 teaspoons / 6g for base heat and aroma) plus chopped candied ginger (1/4 cup / 39g) folded in for visible pieces and textural contrast. The candied ginger should be added after the dry ingredients are combined but before the final fold — overmixing with candied ginger causes it to break down into the dough and lose its distinct chewy pockets. The result should be small golden-brown pieces visible in each cookie cross-section.

Ginger scones: A classic 8-scone batch uses 1/3 cup chopped candied ginger (approximately 52g), folded in during the final wet-dry combination. Scone technique requires minimal mixing — 10-12 folds maximum. The rough, uneven texture of scone dough actually works well with candied ginger: the irregular pieces distribute naturally without being broken down by overworking. Some bakers dust the candied ginger pieces with a teaspoon of flour before adding to prevent them from all sinking to the bottom of the scone during baking.

Shortbread: Shortbread (butter-flour-sugar dough) uses 1/4 to 1/2 cup candied ginger per standard 9-inch square pan batch (approximately 39-78g). Minced fine candied ginger (185g/cup) is preferred for shortbread because the dense, buttery texture of shortbread works better with smaller ginger pieces that integrate throughout rather than create large pockets. Press-in-pan shortbread benefits from the fine mince; rolled and cut shortbread can handle 3mm diced pieces.

Standard baking quantities by application:

ApplicationCandied ginger amountWeightCut recommended
Ginger cookies (24 ct)1/4 cup39gChopped 5mm
Ginger scones (8 ct)1/3 cup52gChopped 5mm
Shortbread (9-inch pan)1/4–1/2 cup39–78gMinced fine
Ginger banana bread (1 loaf)1/3 cup52gDiced 3mm
Muffins (12 ct)1/4 cup39gDiced 3mm
Granola (4 cups)1/4 cup39gChopped 5mm, add after baking
No-bake energy balls (24 ct)2 tbsp19gMinced fine

Candied Ginger vs Fresh Ginger: Density and Flavor Differences

Fresh ginger root (grated) weighs approximately 96 grams per cup — substantially less than chopped candied ginger at 155 grams per cup. The 61% weight difference reflects the dramatic transformation that occurs during the candying process, but the density numbers alone do not tell the full flavor story.

What changes during candying:

Substitution math: If a recipe calls for 1 tablespoon fresh grated ginger (6g) and you want to substitute candied: use 1 tablespoon finely minced candied ginger (approximately 12g) and reduce the recipe sugar by 1 teaspoon. The gingerol-to-zingerone conversion means you will get a slightly milder, rounder heat — not the same, but an acceptable alternative in most sweet applications.

Candied Ginger vs Ground Ginger: Completely Different Products

Ground ginger and candied ginger cannot substitute for each other in any meaningful way. They are physically different materials (powder vs chewy pieces), have different flavor profiles, and contribute different things to baked goods. The confusion arises because both are derived from ginger root, but the processing pathways diverge dramatically.

Ground ginger: Made by drying fresh ginger root at low heat (which converts gingerol to shogaols, producing a sharper, more pungent heat) and then grinding to a fine powder. Ground ginger weighs approximately 89-96g per cup (light and airy compared to candied ginger). It integrates invisibly into dough and batters, providing heat and aroma throughout without any textural contribution. One teaspoon (3.2g) of ground ginger provides the same heat impact as approximately 1 tablespoon of fresh grated ginger.

Candied ginger: Made by cooking fresh ginger in sugar syrup and coating with sugar crystals. It weighs 140-185g per cup (dense and heavy). It contributes distinct chewy pieces with visible texture, sweetness, and a gentler rounded heat profile. It cannot distribute evenly through a batter the way ground ginger does.

In gingerbread recipes that call for both, the ground ginger provides the base heat and aroma that permeates the entire cookie or cake, while the candied ginger provides textural contrast and concentrated pockets of sweet-spicy flavor. They are working together, not substituting for each other. Removing either one changes the character of the final product in a way the other cannot compensate for.

Common Questions About Candied Ginger