Dried Cherries — Cups to Grams

1 cup dried cherries = 140 grams (1 tbsp = 8.75g)

Result
140grams

1 cup Dried Cherries = 140 grams

Tablespoons16
Teaspoons48.3
Ounces4.94

Quick Conversion Table — Dried Cherries

CupsGramsTablespoonsTeaspoons
¼35 g4 tbsp12.1 tsp
46.7 g5.34 tbsp16.1 tsp
½70 g8 tbsp24.1 tsp
93.3 g10.7 tbsp32.2 tsp
¾105 g12 tbsp36.2 tsp
1140 g16 tbsp48.3 tsp
210 g24 tbsp72.4 tsp
2280 g32 tbsp96.6 tsp
3420 g48 tbsp144.8 tsp
4560 g64 tbsp193.1 tsp

Dried Cherry Weights: Tart vs Sweet vs Infused

Commercial dried cherries come in several forms that cook slightly differently:

Tart dried cherries (Montmorency, Morello): Unsweetened or minimally sweetened, approximately 140g per cup. High natural acidity and anthocyanin content — intensely flavored, deep red-purple color. These are the culinary gold standard for savory sauces, cheese boards, and scones where cherry flavor needs to assertively contrast with sweet or fatty elements.

Sweet dried cherries (Bing, Rainier, dark sweet): Often sweetened with added sugar or juice infusion, approximately 140–150g per cup (slightly heavier if sugar-infused). Milder, more accessible flavor. Better for granola, trail mix, and applications where sharp tartness would be out of place.

Infused dried cherries (cherry-flavored dried cranberries): Many supermarket products labeled "dried cherries" are actually dried cranberries infused with cherry juice or flavor and dyed red. Check the ingredient list — "cranberries" or "Vaccinium macrocarpon" as the first ingredient indicates this. True dried cherries list "cherries" or "Prunus cerasus/avium" first. Both work in recipes but have different flavor profiles.

Baking with Dried Cherries: Ratios and Techniques

ApplicationDried CherriesWeightNotes
Cherry scones (8)½–¾ cup70–105gSoak 10 min first; drain well
Cherry almond muffins (12)¾ cup105gToss in 1 tsp flour before mixing in
Oatmeal cherry cookies (24)¾–1 cup105–140gNo soaking needed; moisture from dough sufficient
Cherry chocolate chip cookies (24)½–¾ cup70–105gTart cherries with dark chocolate = classic pairing
Granola (4 cups)½ cup70gAdd after baking, not before
Trail mix (1 cup)¼–⅓ cup35–47gBalance with nuts and chocolate
Cherry sauce (for duck, pork)½ cup70gSimmer in stock + red wine; yields ⅓ cup sauce

The soaking step for baked goods deserves emphasis. Dried cherries at 18–22% moisture content are significantly drier than the raisins most bakers are used to (raisins at ~18% moisture are frequently pre-soaked in commercial baking, too). When unsoaked dried cherries are folded into quick bread or muffin batter, they behave as moisture sponges — the osmotic gradient between the dry fruit and the wet batter drives water migration toward the cherry, creating a dry, tough ring of batter around each fruit piece.

Soaking in brandy or kirsch (cherry brandy) for 15–30 minutes does double duty: it rehydrates the cherries to approximately 30–35% moisture content, and it infuses them with complementary flavor that survives baking. Drain well before using — excess soaking liquid will add unplanned moisture to the batter.

Dried Cherries in Granola: Adding After, Not During

Granola is baked at 160–175°C for 25–40 minutes. Dried fruit added before baking dries out further, losing most remaining moisture and becoming hard and chewy rather than soft and sweet. Worse, the natural sugars in dried cherries caramelize and potentially burn at these temperatures, creating bitter notes.

The correct method: bake the oat-nut-oil-sweetener mixture to golden, remove from oven, allow to cool for 5–10 minutes, then stir in dried cherries. The residual warmth softens the cherries slightly without cooking them further. This produces granola where the dried cherries have pleasant, soft chew rather than rock-hard, over-dried texture.

For granola clusters (clustered granola vs loose), the egg white binding technique is standard: 1 egg white beaten stiff per 4 cups of granola mix, plus added sugar (honey or maple syrup). Dried fruit should still be added after baking to prevent over-drying. ½ cup (70g) dried cherries per 4-cup batch is the standard ratio — enough for fruit in every bite without making the granola predominantly cherry-flavored.

Common Questions About Dried Cherries