Coconut Sugar — Cups to Grams
1 cup coconut sugar = 192 grams
1 cup Coconut Sugar = 192 grams
Quick Conversion Table — Coconut Sugar
| Cups | Grams | Tablespoons | Teaspoons |
|---|---|---|---|
| ¼ | 48 g | 4 tbsp | 12 tsp |
| ⅓ | 64 g | 5.33 tbsp | 16 tsp |
| ½ | 96 g | 8 tbsp | 24 tsp |
| ⅔ | 128 g | 10.7 tbsp | 32 tsp |
| ¾ | 144 g | 12 tbsp | 36 tsp |
| 1 | 192 g | 16 tbsp | 48 tsp |
| 1½ | 288 g | 24 tbsp | 72 tsp |
| 2 | 384 g | 32 tbsp | 96 tsp |
| 3 | 576 g | 48 tbsp | 144 tsp |
| 4 | 768 g | 64 tbsp | 192 tsp |
How to Measure Coconut Sugar Accurately
Coconut sugar is easier to measure accurately than most baking ingredients because its crystal structure is relatively consistent. At 192 grams per cup, it measures close to white granulated sugar (200g per cup) — the 8-gram difference reflects coconut sugar's slightly coarser, more irregular crystals, which create marginally more air space in the measuring cup.
Unlike brown sugar, coconut sugar is not typically measured packed — it does not have the moist, compressible texture of brown sugar. Spoon coconut sugar into the measuring cup and level the top for a consistent 192g. Scooping directly from the bag produces a similar result because, unlike flour, coconut sugar's dense crystals do not compress significantly under the scooping pressure. The variation between scooped and spooned coconut sugar is typically less than 5 grams per cup.
Humidity can cause coconut sugar to clump, particularly if stored in a humid environment. Clumped coconut sugar may pack into measuring cups unevenly, creating measurement errors. If clumping is present, break up the clumps with a fork before measuring, or add a few grains of rice to the storage container to absorb moisture. For large-batch baking (holiday cookies, granola by the pound), weighing is more reliable than volume measurement regardless of clumping.
Coconut Sugar vs White Sugar: Precision in Baking
Coconut sugar has become a popular refined sugar alternative, and its 1:1 substitution claim (use the same volume of coconut sugar as white sugar) is largely accurate for most baking. However, understanding the specific ways they differ allows you to make adjustments that produce better results, not just acceptable ones.
The 8-gram-per-cup weight difference (192g coconut vs 200g white) is small but consistent. In a recipe calling for 1 cup of white sugar (200g), substituting 1 cup of coconut sugar adds only 192g of sweetener — 96% of the intended amount. In most recipes, this 4% difference is imperceptible. In very sweet recipes (cheesecake, caramel sauce) where the precise sugar level affects texture (crystallization, viscosity), the 8g difference can be measurable.
Solubility is a more meaningful difference. White sugar dissolves readily in water, butter, and eggs. Coconut sugar is less soluble — its coarser crystals melt slower, meaning some crystals may still be present in cookie dough after creaming, producing a slightly grainy mouthfeel in thin, crispy cookies. In thick, chewy cookies and brownies, where the dough is baked at temperatures that fully melt the crystals, solubility does not matter. In custards and light buttercreams where undissolved sugar granules are unacceptable, dissolve coconut sugar in the recipe's liquid component before combining with other ingredients.
Caramel flavor is the most immediately noticeable difference. Coconut sugar has distinct butterscotch and caramel notes from the natural compounds in coconut palm sap. In chocolate chip cookies, this caramel background complements the chocolate beautifully. In vanilla-forward recipes (sugar cookies, snickerdoodles, vanilla cake), the caramel notes may compete with the vanilla — whether this is desirable depends on personal preference. In spiced baked goods (gingerbread, snickerdoodles with cinnamon), the caramel flavor of coconut sugar is a genuine improvement over white sugar.
Coconut Sugar vs Other Sugars: Weight, Glycemic Index, and Flavor
| Sugar Type | 1 Cup Weight | Glycemic Index | Sucrose % | Flavor Profile |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| White granulated | 200g | 65–70 | 99.9% | Clean, neutral sweet |
| Coconut sugar | 192g | 35–54 | 70–80% | Caramel, butterscotch |
| Brown sugar (packed) | 220g | 64 | 97% | Molasses, caramel |
| Raw honey | 340g | 58 | ~80% (fructose+glucose) | Floral, complex |
| Maple syrup | 322g | 54 | ~65% (mainly sucrose) | Maple, woody |
The glycemic index of coconut sugar is a subject of ongoing scientific discussion. The frequently cited GI of 35 comes from a single 2003 study (Trinidad et al.) conducted on Filipino subjects. Subsequent studies have found GI values ranging from 35 to 54, with considerable individual variation. The lower GI compared to white sugar is attributed to inulin, a prebiotic fiber in coconut sap that appears at 1–3% of the sugar's dry weight — a small but consistent presence.
In practical terms: coconut sugar contains slightly more residual nutrients than white sugar (trace amounts of potassium, iron, zinc, and B vitamins from the evaporated sap) and has a marginally lower GI. It is not, however, a low-sugar food — at 90%+ simple carbohydrates by weight, it raises blood glucose meaningfully and should be treated as a sweetener, not a health food. The advantage over white sugar is primarily the flavor complexity and the slight GI reduction, both of which are real but modest.
Troubleshooting: When Coconut Sugar Baking Goes Wrong
Cookies are burning on the bottom but look underdone on top. Coconut sugar's natural compounds cause faster Maillard browning at lower temperatures. The bottom, which contacts the hot pan, burns before the top has time to set. Fix: reduce oven temperature by 25°F (15°C), use a light-colored (not dark) baking sheet, and place the oven rack in the upper third of the oven. Check cookies 5 minutes earlier than the recipe specifies.
Cookies have a slightly gritty texture. Coconut sugar's coarser crystals are not fully dissolving during creaming or baking. Fix: run coconut sugar through a spice grinder or food processor for 10–15 seconds to produce a finer grind before using — this dramatically improves solubility and eliminates grittiness. Alternatively, dissolve the coconut sugar in the recipe's liquid (melted butter, oil, or egg yolks beaten together) before combining with dry ingredients.
Cake or muffins are darker than expected. The caramel compounds in coconut sugar brown the batter faster. This is visual but not a flavor problem in most cases — the browning adds depth. If appearance matters (a white cake, for instance), coconut sugar is not a suitable substitute. For golden cakes and muffins, tent with aluminum foil after 20 minutes of baking to prevent excessive browning while allowing the interior to finish cooking.
Caramel made with coconut sugar is grainy or crystallized. Coconut sugar has more tendency to recrystallize than white sugar during caramelization because of its impurities. Add 1 tablespoon of corn syrup or glucose per cup of coconut sugar when making caramel — the glucose interferes with crystal formation and produces a smoother, more stable caramel. Do not stir once the sugar begins to melt; instead swirl the pan gently.
Common Questions About Coconut Sugar
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1 cup of coconut sugar weighs 192 grams — 8 grams less than white granulated sugar (200g) because coconut sugar's coarser crystals create slightly more air space in the cup. 1 tablespoon = 12g; 1 teaspoon = 4g. For 1:1 white sugar substitution in recipes, the 8g-per-cup difference is negligible in most applications.
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Yes, with two caveats: (1) Reduce oven temperature by 25°F (15°C) — coconut sugar browns faster due to its natural compounds. (2) Cream butter and coconut sugar for 1–2 minutes longer than usual — coarser crystals need more time to incorporate. Results are very good in cookies, muffins, brownies, and quick breads. For delicate white cakes, custards, and meringues, coconut sugar's caramel flavor and color may be undesirable.
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Studies report coconut sugar's glycemic index at approximately 35–54, compared to white sugar at 65–70. The lower GI is attributed to inulin (1–3% of the dry weight), a prebiotic fiber that slightly slows sugar absorption. However, coconut sugar is still 90%+ simple carbohydrates by weight and raises blood glucose meaningfully — it is a better-flavored alternative to white sugar, not a diabetic-friendly sweetener.
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Coconut sugar contains natural amino acids and reducing sugars from the coconut palm sap that participate more readily in Maillard browning reactions. Cookies made with coconut sugar can reach deep golden-brown 3–5 minutes earlier than the same recipe with white sugar. Fix: reduce oven temperature by 25°F (15°C) and begin checking doneness 5 minutes before the recipe's stated time. A light-colored baking sheet also helps reduce bottom browning.
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Yes. Coconut sugar is less soluble and more hygroscopic than white sugar, resulting in cookies that: spread slightly less (denser), have a chewier center, and less crispy edges. The caramel flavor is more prominent than in white sugar cookies. These differences are features, not flaws, in most cookies — especially chocolate chip, oatmeal, and spiced varieties. For very thin, crispy cookies where spread and crunch are the goal, white sugar produces more reliable results.
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Coconut sugar has a mild caramel and butterscotch flavor with earthy, slightly mineral notes — it does not taste like coconut. It is made by collecting sap from coconut palm flower buds, then heating the sap to evaporate water until it crystallizes. The natural sugars, minerals, and amino acids in the sap concentrate during drying to produce the distinctive flavor. Coconut sugar from Southeast Asia (Philippines, Indonesia) is most common in Western markets.
- Trinidad et al., 'Glycemic index of commonly consumed carbohydrate foods in the Philippines' — Journal of Functional Foods, 2010
- USDA FoodData Central — Sugars, granulated
- King Arthur Baking — Sugar Substitutes Guide