Chopped Asparagus — Cups to Grams
1 cup raw chopped asparagus (1-inch pieces) = 134 grams | blanched = 150g | roasted = 118g per cup
1 cup Chopped Asparagus = 134 grams
Quick Conversion Table — Chopped Asparagus
| Cups | Grams | Tablespoons | Teaspoons |
|---|---|---|---|
| ¼ | 33.5 g | 3.99 tbsp | 12 tsp |
| ⅓ | 44.7 g | 5.32 tbsp | 16 tsp |
| ½ | 67 g | 7.98 tbsp | 23.9 tsp |
| ⅔ | 89.3 g | 10.6 tbsp | 31.9 tsp |
| ¾ | 100.5 g | 12 tbsp | 35.9 tsp |
| 1 | 134 g | 16 tbsp | 47.9 tsp |
| 1½ | 201 g | 23.9 tbsp | 71.8 tsp |
| 2 | 268 g | 31.9 tbsp | 95.7 tsp |
| 3 | 402 g | 47.9 tbsp | 143.6 tsp |
| 4 | 536 g | 63.8 tbsp | 191.4 tsp |
Woody-End Trim Loss: What You Actually Get from 1 Pound
Asparagus is sold by weight inclusive of the woody, fibrous bottom portion of each spear — the section that is inedible without pressure-cooking and is almost always discarded. Understanding this trim loss is essential for buying the right quantity.
The standard trim is the bottom 1.5–2 inches of each spear. You can identify exactly where to cut by the snap method: hold a spear at both ends and bend gently — it naturally breaks at the point where the fibrous section transitions to the tender stalk. This break point varies by spear but typically falls 1.5–2 inches from the base. The snap method wastes slightly more than a straight cut (it follows the natural break rather than an optimized line) but guarantees you remove all tough tissue.
Trim loss by spear size: Pencil-thin asparagus has proportionally longer woody sections — sometimes up to 3 inches of trim per spear, representing 25–30% of individual spear length. Jumbo spears have shorter proportional trim — typically 1.5 inches — representing 15–20% of spear length. A mixed bunch averages 20–25% trim loss by weight.
For larger purchases: a 2 lb bag (908g) yields 5.5–6 cups chopped (740–800g). A 1 kg bag (2.2 lbs) yields approximately 6.5–7 cups chopped (870–940g). Always buy 25–30% more asparagus than your chopped recipe calls for to account for trim waste.
| Purchased weight | After trim (est.) | Chopped cups | Chopped grams |
|---|---|---|---|
| ½ lb (227g) | 170–182g | 1.3–1.4 cups | ~187g |
| 1 lb (454g) | 340–364g | ~3 cups | ~402g |
| 1.5 lbs (680g) | 510–544g | 4–4.5 cups | ~536g |
| 2 lbs (908g) | 680–726g | 5.5–6 cups | ~804g |
| 1 kg (2.2 lbs) | 750–800g | ~6.5 cups | ~871g |
Raw vs Cooked Weight: Blanching, Roasting, and Stir-Frying
The 134g/cup baseline applies to raw chopped asparagus cut into 1-inch pieces. Every cooking method changes the weight per cup, and the direction of that change depends on whether moisture is added or removed during cooking.
Blanching (2 minutes in boiling salted water): Water is absorbed into the asparagus cells during blanching, increasing weight to approximately 150g per cup. This is a 12% weight gain. Blanched asparagus is used in pasta primavera, grain bowls, and preparations where you want a tender but still slightly firm texture with vibrant green color. The proper technique is to shock immediately in ice water after blanching to stop cooking and preserve color — the ice water does not add meaningful weight if the asparagus is drained within 30 seconds.
Roasting (400–425°F / 200–220°C): Roasting drives off moisture aggressively. Whole spears lose approximately 12–15% of their raw weight; 1-inch cut pieces lose slightly more (18–20%) because more surface area is exposed. This results in approximately 118g per cup for roasted chopped asparagus — 12% less than raw. Roasted asparagus is denser-tasting and has concentrated flavor because the water content drops, but the cup volume shrinks proportionally with the weight.
Stir-frying at high heat: Stir-fried asparagus loses approximately 8–12% moisture, landing at approximately 120–125g per cup depending on pan temperature and cooking time. Stir-fry applications typically use thin-sliced (on the bias) pieces to maximize surface area and cook evenly in 3–4 minutes.
| Measure | Raw chopped (g) | Blanched (g) | Roasted (g) | Sliced thin (g) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 tsp | 2.8g | 3.1g | 2.5g | 2.5g |
| 1 tbsp | 8.4g | 9.4g | 7.4g | 7.5g |
| ¼ cup | 34g | 38g | 30g | 30g |
| ½ cup | 67g | 75g | 59g | 60g |
| 1 cup | 134g | 150g | 118g | 120g |
| 2 cups | 268g | 300g | 236g | 240g |
| 3 cups | 402g | 450g | 354g | 360g |
Green, White, and Purple Asparagus: Density and Culinary Differences
All three commercially available asparagus varieties — green, white, and purple — have essentially the same density at approximately 134g per cup of 1-inch chopped pieces. The differences that matter for cooking are flavor, texture, and required preparation, not weight.
Green asparagus is the standard variety in most markets. It is grown in sunlight, which triggers chlorophyll production and gives it its characteristic color. The flavor is the most assertive of the three — grassy, slightly bitter, with a vegetal sweetness. No peeling is required for standard-size spears. This is the default reference for all gram conversions on this page.
White asparagus is the same plant grown in darkness or under soil mounds, preventing chlorophyll development entirely. The flavor is milder, more delicate, and slightly sweeter. Crucially, white asparagus must be peeled — its skin remains tough and bitter regardless of size. Use a vegetable peeler to remove a 2–3mm layer from the tip down to the base. This peeling removes approximately 10–15% of the spear weight, meaning you need to purchase approximately 15% more white asparagus than green to achieve the same net chopped weight.
Purple asparagus (cultivars including 'Purple Passion') gets its color from anthocyanins — the same pigments in red cabbage and blueberries. The color is largely lost during cooking (heat denatures the anthocyanins quickly), so purple asparagus is most visually striking raw. The flavor is slightly sweeter and less bitter than green. The density per cup is essentially identical to green.
For recipe purposes: substitute any variety for green asparagus at a 1:1 weight ratio. For white asparagus, buy 15% more by purchased weight to account for peeling loss.
Cooking Ratios: Frittata, Risotto, and Pasta Primavera
Asparagus is used in different quantities depending on its role in the dish. These are the tested, specific ratios for the three most common applications.
Asparagus frittata (serves 4, 10-inch skillet): 1.5 cups raw chopped asparagus (200g), cut to ¾-inch pieces. The asparagus should be pre-sautéed in 1 tablespoon olive oil with 2 garlic cloves for 4–5 minutes until just tender before the egg mixture is added. Do not use raw asparagus directly in a frittata — the water content will steam and prevent the eggs from setting cleanly. 8 large eggs, 3 tablespoons heavy cream, ½ teaspoon salt. For a larger 12-inch skillet (serves 6): increase to 2 cups asparagus (268g) and 12 eggs.
Asparagus risotto (serves 4): 300–350g raw asparagus (2.25–2.6 cups). The classic two-part technique: cut off the tender tips (the top 2 inches), then chop the remaining stalks and simmer them in the stock for 15 minutes to extract asparagus flavor, then strain and discard. Cook the risotto in this asparagus-infused stock. Add the reserved tips in the final 3 minutes of cooking. The tips remain visually intact while the stalks are fully dissolved into the flavor base. Total asparagus-to-rice ratio: 1.5 cups arborio (300g) to 2.5 cups raw asparagus (335g).
Pasta primavera (serves 4, 12 oz / 340g pasta): 2 cups raw chopped asparagus (268g) is the baseline. The standard primavera vegetable mix for 12 oz pasta: 268g asparagus + 149g bell pepper (1 cup diced) + 130g zucchini (1 cup sliced) + 134g frozen peas (1 cup). Blanch the asparagus separately for 2 minutes — it takes longer than peas and zucchini. The total vegetable weight (681g) provides a 2:1 pasta-to-vegetable ratio by weight, which creates a balanced rather than vegetable-overwhelmed dish.
Asparagus Chopped Conversion Table
| Amount | Raw chopped (g) | Blanched (g) | Roasted (g) | Oz (raw) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 tsp | 2.8g | 3.1g | 2.5g | 0.10 oz |
| 1 tbsp | 8.4g | 9.4g | 7.4g | 0.30 oz |
| ¼ cup | 34g | 38g | 30g | 1.18 oz |
| ⅓ cup | 45g | 50g | 39g | 1.57 oz |
| ½ cup | 67g | 75g | 59g | 2.36 oz |
| ⅔ cup | 89g | 100g | 79g | 3.15 oz |
| ¾ cup | 101g | 113g | 89g | 3.54 oz |
| 1 cup | 134g | 150g | 118g | 4.73 oz |
| 2 cups | 268g | 300g | 236g | 9.45 oz |
| 3 cups (1 lb bunch) | 402g | 450g | 354g | 14.18 oz |
Common Questions About Chopped Asparagus
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Raw chopped (1-inch): 134g per cup. Blanched: 150g per cup. Roasted: 118g per cup. Sliced thin (bias-cut): 120g per cup. 1 tablespoon raw = 8.4g; 1 teaspoon = 2.8g.
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Approximately 20–25% weight loss from woody-end removal. 1 lb (454g) purchased = 340–364g usable stalks = about 3 cups chopped raw. Buy 25–30% more asparagus than your recipe's chopped quantity requires.
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Purple: yes, 1:1 by weight. White: buy 15% more to account for mandatory peeling. All three varieties have the same density once trimmed and cut — approximately 134g per cup of 1-inch raw pieces.
Related Cooking Converters
- USDA FoodData Central — Asparagus, raw (FDC ID 168386)
- USDA FoodData Central — Asparagus, cooked, boiled, drained
- King Arthur Baking — Ingredient Weight Chart
- The Food Lab — J. Kenji Lopez-Alt, W.W. Norton, 2015
- On Food and Cooking — Harold McGee, Scribner, 2004