Egg Whites — Cups to Grams

1 cup egg whites = 240 grams (1 large white = 30g = 2 tbsp · 8 whites = 1 cup)

Result
240grams

1 cup Egg Whites = 240 grams

Tablespoons16
Teaspoons48
Ounces8.47

Quick Conversion Table — Egg Whites

CupsGramsTablespoonsTeaspoons
¼60 g4 tbsp12 tsp
80 g5.33 tbsp16 tsp
½120 g8 tbsp24 tsp
160 g10.7 tbsp32 tsp
¾180 g12 tbsp36 tsp
1240 g16 tbsp48 tsp
360 g24 tbsp72 tsp
2480 g32 tbsp96 tsp
3720 g48 tbsp144 tsp
4960 g64 tbsp192 tsp

How to Measure Egg Whites Accurately

Egg whites, at 240g per cup, have essentially the same density as water — because they are 88–90% water by weight, with the remaining 10–12% being primarily albumin protein (ovalbumin, ovotransferrin, ovomucin, lysozyme). This composition makes egg whites highly predictable for volume measurement: unlike solid ingredients where packing affects density, a cup of liquid egg whites is reliably 240g with minimal variation.

The variability in egg whites comes from egg size, not measurement technique. A large egg white (the standard for most recipes) weighs approximately 28–32g, averaging 30g. Medium whites are 22–26g; jumbo whites can reach 38–42g. This variation explains why "8 egg whites" and "1 cup egg whites" are often treated as equivalent in recipes (8 × 30g = 240g), but could differ if using non-large eggs. For precision baking (angel food cake, delicate meringues), weigh to 240g rather than counting eggs.

Temperature matters significantly for egg whites in baking applications. Cold egg whites (4°C from refrigerator) take longer to whip to volume than room-temperature whites (20–22°C). The reason: at cold temperatures, the protein-protein bonds in albumin are more tightly structured, requiring more mechanical energy to unfold. At room temperature, albumin's native structure is looser, unfolding more readily under whipping and producing a larger, more stable foam. The volume difference can be 25–35% between cold and room-temperature whites. For time-sensitive meringue work, always bring whites to room temperature before whipping.

Fat contamination test: Even a trace of fat (from a poorly cleaned bowl, utensil, or an egg yolk fragment) can reduce meringue volume by 30–50% and prevent stiff peaks from forming. Test your bowl: wipe the inside with a clean paper towel, then try to leave a water film on the interior by wetting it. Fat-contaminated bowls bead water; clean bowls hold a thin water film. If in doubt, wipe the bowl and beaters with a half-lemon or a cloth dampened with white vinegar to dissolve any fat residue.

Why Egg Whites Are Critical in Precision Baking

Egg whites serve structural, leavening, and textural functions in baking that make measurement precision particularly important. In foam-based preparations (meringue, angel food cake, soufflés, mousse), egg whites provide the air-cell structure that determines the final texture. Under-measured whites produce collapse-prone foams; over-measured whites dilute the sugar-to-white ratio in meringue, preventing proper structure formation.

The protein chemistry: ovalbumin constitutes about 54% of egg white protein. When beaten, the mechanical energy unfolds ovalbumin's polypeptide chains, which then aggregate around air bubbles, creating a foam stabilized by protein-protein cross-links. Heat denatures these proteins permanently (baking, poaching), setting the foam structure in place. Sugar, when added to whipping whites, raises the temperature required for denaturation, allowing the foam to be beaten to a greater volume before it sets. This is why meringue containing sugar can be beaten to a more dramatic volume than plain egg whites.

In Swiss and Italian meringues, the sugar-to-white ratio by weight determines the final texture: 1:1.5–2 (white:sugar) produces firm, stable, glossy meringue ideal for buttercream and cake topping. Higher sugar ratios (1:2.5) produce stiff, slow-drying meringue cookies. Lower ratios (1:1) produce soft, soft-peak meringue used for pavlova. These ratios assume large egg whites at 30g each — using a different size shifts the ratio and changes the outcome.

Egg White Applications and Precise Quantities

ApplicationEgg WhitesWeightKey Notes
French meringue cookies4 large120g+ 200–240g superfine sugar
Swiss meringue4 large120g+ 200g sugar, cook to 71°C over double boiler
Italian meringue4 large120g+ 200g sugar cooked to 121°C
Angel food cake (10-inch tube)12 large360g+ 130g cake flour + 300g sugar
Pavlova (8-inch disc)4 large120g+ 200g caster sugar + 1 tsp vinegar
Royal icing (standard batch)3 large90g+ 340g powdered sugar + ½ tsp cream of tartar
Financiers (12 cakes)5 large150g+ brown butter + almond flour
Macarons (60 shells)3 large (aged)90–100gAged whites preferred for reduced moisture

Troubleshooting Egg White Applications

Meringue won't reach stiff peaks. Three causes in order of probability: (1) Fat contamination — any fat prevents protein foam formation. Clean bowl and beaters with vinegar. (2) Cold whites — bring to room temperature. (3) Sugar added too early — in French meringue, wait until whites are foamy and beginning to hold soft peaks before adding sugar. Adding sugar too early prevents full foam development by binding water before the protein network forms.

Meringue weeps (liquid pools under baked meringue). Two causes: undercooked egg white proteins (insufficient heat to fully denature proteins, which then release trapped liquid), or undissolved sugar crystals acting as hygroscopic nucleation points. Prevention: use superfine/caster sugar (dissolves faster than granulated), spread meringue on still-warm filling to start protein denaturation from contact heat, and bake at the minimum temperature required (low and slow for dry meringue cookies: 90°C for 2 hours).

Angel food cake deflated on cooling. Classic problem: cake was cooled right-side up, causing the weight of the cake to compress the delicate protein-air foam before it fully sets. Angel food cakes must be cooled upside-down — inverted onto a bottle or cooling rack with the tube pan elevated — for 1–2 hours until completely cool. The inverted position allows the cake's own weight to pull downward against gravity, maintaining the foam volume as proteins cool and set.

Royal icing is too stiff or too thin. Egg white to sugar ratio determines consistency. For flooding (piping and spreading): royal icing should flow like thick honey. For outlining (stiff piping): should hold sharp peaks. Add water 1 teaspoon at a time to thin; add sifted powdered sugar 1 tablespoon at a time to thicken. Temperature affects consistency — royal icing behaves differently in warm kitchens (looser) than cold (stiffer). Always ice at 18–22°C for predictable results.

Common Questions About Egg Whites