Cream of Tartar — Cups to Grams

1 cup cream of tartar = 162 grams (1 tsp = 3.4g)

Result
162grams

1 cup Cream of Tartar = 162 grams

Tablespoons16
Teaspoons47.6
Ounces5.71

Quick Conversion Table — Cream of Tartar

CupsGramsTablespoonsTeaspoons
¼40.5 g4.01 tbsp11.9 tsp
54 g5.35 tbsp15.9 tsp
½81 g8.02 tbsp23.8 tsp
108 g10.7 tbsp31.8 tsp
¾121.5 g12 tbsp35.7 tsp
1162 g16 tbsp47.6 tsp
243 g24.1 tbsp71.5 tsp
2324 g32.1 tbsp95.3 tsp
3486 g48.1 tbsp142.9 tsp
4648 g64.2 tbsp190.6 tsp

How to Measure Cream of Tartar Accurately

Cream of tartar is a fine crystalline powder — potassium bitartrate — with a density of approximately 162g per US cup. Its small, angular crystals pack reasonably uniformly into a measuring spoon, making volume measurements more reliable than for irregular spices. Still, variations of 5–10% are common between a loosely filled versus a gently packed teaspoon.

The correct technique: use a dedicated measuring spoon, scoop the cream of tartar from the container, and level with a straight edge (the back of a knife or offset spatula). Do not tap the spoon or compress the powder. A leveled teaspoon will deliver approximately 3.4 grams — the standard measurement used in tested recipes.

Cream of tartar is mildly hygroscopic, meaning it absorbs moisture from the air over time. In humid kitchens or improperly sealed containers, the powder forms small lumps or clumps. Clumped cream of tartar packs more densely, delivering 10–20% more mass per spoon than the same volume of free-flowing powder. Before measuring, stir or sift if you notice any clumping. Store in an airtight container — not in a jar with an open shaker top — in a cool, dry place.

Pro tip: Cream of tartar has essentially unlimited shelf life in dry, sealed storage. Unlike spices that lose volatile oils, potassium bitartrate is a stable inorganic salt. A container that has been stored properly for several years will perform identically to a fresh one. Test its potency by dissolving ½ teaspoon in ½ cup warm water — it should dissolve completely and taste distinctly sour-tart.

Why Cream of Tartar Stabilizes Egg Whites

Egg white foam stability depends on the protein networks formed when albumin and ovomucin unwind and bond during whipping. This protein network is pH-sensitive: at egg white's natural pH of 7.6–8, the proteins carry a strong negative charge that causes some electrostatic repulsion between protein strands, slightly weakening the foam network. Cream of tartar's low pH (approximately 3.5) acidifies the egg whites to pH 4.5–5, reducing this charge repulsion and allowing tighter, more stable protein bonds.

The practical result is dramatic: egg whites beaten with cream of tartar are more stable against heat, more resistant to overbeating (the foam holds longer before collapsing), and produce a finer, more uniform bubble structure. This is particularly important for baked meringues, angel food cakes, and chiffon cakes where the foam must survive oven temperatures without deflating.

The standard ratio is ⅛ teaspoon (0.43g) per egg white. For a 4-egg-white meringue topping, use ½ teaspoon (1.7g). For a 6-egg-white angel food cake, use ¾ teaspoon (2.55g). Exceeding ¼ teaspoon per white gives diminishing returns and can make the baked product taste slightly sour — the acidification effect is complete at much lower doses.

An important nuance: cream of tartar is less effective in the presence of fat. Any yolk contamination in the whites (or a bowl with residual fat) will prevent proper foam formation regardless of cream of tartar addition. The acid cannot compensate for lipid interference with protein unfolding. Use a scrupulously clean metal or glass bowl and ensure no yolk fragments are present.

Cream of Tartar in Baking: Key Applications and Quantities

ApplicationAmountWeightPurpose
Egg white stabilization⅛ tsp per white0.43g per whiteFoam stability, finer texture
Angel food cake (6 whites)¾ tsp2.55gStability, rise
Swiss meringue buttercream¼ tsp per 4 whites0.85gSmoothness, stability
Snickerdoodle cookies (36)2 tsp6.8gTang, chewiness, leavening
Sugar syrup / candy¼ tsp per cup sugar0.85g per 200g sugarInversion, anti-crystallization
Royal icing1 tsp per 500g sugar3.4gHardening, smooth finish
Cream of tartar + baking soda2:1 ratioreplaces baking powder2 tsp CoT + 1 tsp BS = 3 tsp baking powder

The cream of tartar plus baking soda combination is particularly useful because it creates a single-acting leavener that produces all its CO2 in the presence of moisture (not heat), giving more control in batters that rest before baking. Standard commercial baking powder is double-acting — reacting once with liquid and again with heat. The homemade cream of tartar version behaves like a single-acting powder: bake immediately after mixing.

Sugar Crystallization: The Chemistry Behind Candy Making

When making caramel, toffee, fondant, or simple syrups, sugar crystallization is the enemy of smooth texture. Crystallization occurs when sucrose molecules align into a regular lattice — visible as graininess, cloudiness, or a sudden "seizing" of the syrup from clear liquid to a solid mass. Adding cream of tartar prevents this through acid-catalyzed inversion.

Potassium bitartrate's acidic environment catalyzes the hydrolysis of sucrose (C12H22O11) into its component monosaccharides: glucose and fructose. These two different molecules do not crystallize together — their different shapes prevent co-crystallization, keeping the syrup or candy smooth. The effect is dose-dependent: ¼ teaspoon per cup of sugar is sufficient for most applications.

In practical terms: add cream of tartar when the sugar is dissolving in water, before cooking begins. Do not stir after the syrup boils — stirring introduces nucleation sites for crystallization. With cream of tartar, you have significantly more margin: the inverted sugars resist crystallization even with moderate stirring. This is why cream of tartar is used in professional fondant recipes — it produces a finer-grained, creamier result than syrups prone to coarse crystallization.

Troubleshooting Cream of Tartar in Recipes

Meringue weeps or collapses. If you're using cream of tartar and still getting weeping, the issue is likely undissolved sugar (add sugar too fast) or underbaking, not the cream of tartar ratio. Ensure the cream of tartar is added at the beginning of beating, not partway through. Check that whites are at room temperature — cold whites produce smaller, less stable bubbles.

Snickerdoodles are flat and crispy, not chewy. The cream of tartar-to-baking soda ratio is likely off. Standard is 2:1 (2 tsp cream of tartar to 1 tsp baking soda). Using too much baking soda relative to cream of tartar produces a cookie that spreads and crisps rather than puffing and chewing. Measure both precisely by weight: 6.8g cream of tartar and 6g baking soda.

Cream of tartar is clumped solid. Moisture exposure. If the clumps are small and easily broken with a spoon, the product is still usable — sift or crush before measuring. If the powder has formed a hard cake, it has absorbed significant moisture and its performance may be unpredictable; replace it.

Caramel still crystallizes despite using cream of tartar. Ensure you added enough — ¼ teaspoon minimum per cup of sugar. Also check that all equipment was clean (soap residue can seed crystallization) and that you did not stir the syrup after it came to a boil. Even with cream of tartar, stirring a boiling syrup at the crystallization-prone stage (around 105–115°C) can cause seizing.

Common Questions About Cream of Tartar