Fresh Basil — Cups to Grams

1 cup whole fresh basil leaves = 24 grams — torn = 30g/cup, chiffonade = 40g/cup

Variant
Result
24grams

1 cup Fresh Basil = 24 grams

Tablespoons16
Teaspoons48
Ounces0.85

Quick Conversion Table — Fresh Basil

CupsGramsTablespoonsTeaspoons
¼6 g4 tbsp12 tsp
8 g5.33 tbsp16 tsp
½12 g8 tbsp24 tsp
16 g10.7 tbsp32 tsp
¾18 g12 tbsp36 tsp
124 g16 tbsp48 tsp
36 g24 tbsp72 tsp
248 g32 tbsp96 tsp
372 g48 tbsp144 tsp
496 g64 tbsp192 tsp

Understanding Basil Weights by Preparation State

Fresh basil's dramatic weight variation between preparation states (24g whole leaves vs 40g chiffonade per cup) makes the packing and cutting method critical to accurate measurement. The three states reflect different structural approaches, not just cutting patterns:

Whole leaves (24g/cup): Individual basil leaves placed loosely in the measuring cup without stacking. Large Genovese leaves (5–10cm) create substantial air gaps. The measurement is highly variable because leaf size affects packing — large leaves pack in fewer pieces with more air; small-leafed basil (lemon basil, Thai basil) packs more tightly per cup.

Torn (30g/cup): Hand-torn pieces of irregular sizes. Tearing reduces leaf size without the cell compression of knife cutting, producing irregular rough edges that pack slightly more efficiently than whole leaves but still maintain significant air gaps. The preferred preparation for Caprese salad and pizza — the irregular edges and exposed cell structure both enhances flavor and creates textural interest.

Chiffonade (40g/cup): Stack basil leaves, roll into a tight cylinder, and cut crosswise into thin ribbons (2–3mm wide). The rolling/cutting process compresses the leaves significantly and creates a much more uniform, tightly-packed product. Chiffonade weighs 67% more per cup than whole leaves because the ribbons pack like fine-cut pasta rather than like whole leaves. Used for presentations where uniform fine strips are desired — pasta dishes, salads, rice preparations.

MeasureWhole Leaves (g)Torn (g)Chiffonade (g)
1 teaspoon0.5g0.8g
1 tablespoon1.5g1.9g2.5g
¼ cup6g7.5g10g
½ cup12g15g20g
1 cup24g30g40g
1 supermarket bunch/pot~30–50g usable leaves

Classic Pesto: The Exact Recipe and Science

Pesto alla Genovese has a precisely defined composition according to the Consorzio del Pesto Genovese (the Italian body that protects Genoese pesto's DOP status). Understanding the ratios by weight — not just volume — is essential for consistent results:

Authentic Genoese pesto proportions (per batch, serves 4 with pasta):

Basil: 2 cups loosely packed whole leaves (48g) — specifically young Genovese DOP basil if available. Pine nuts (pignoli): 2 tablespoons (20g). Garlic: 2 cloves (approximately 10g). Parmigiano-Reggiano: ½ cup finely grated (50g) — use aged minimum 24 months for proper granular texture. Pecorino Sardo: 2 tablespoons grated (15g) — traditional but optional, adds sheep milk complexity. Ligurian extra-virgin olive oil: ¼ cup (60ml). Coarse sea salt: to taste.

Why the marble mortar matters: The traditional method (marble mortar and pestle, starting with garlic and salt, adding basil in stages) produces a different texture than a food processor — the grinding action breaks cells mechanically without the heat generated by food processor blades. Food processor blades reach 60–70°C at the basil contact point, which oxidizes linalool and turns pesto bitter within hours. The mortar method keeps basil below 25°C. If using a food processor, add ice cubes (or chill the bowl and blade in the freezer for 30 minutes) to minimize heat generation.

Pesto pasta ratio: 2 tablespoons (30ml, approximately 35g) pesto per 80g dry pasta portion. The ½ cup (120ml) batch above serves 4 pasta portions at 2 tablespoons each, with small excess for tossing. Reserve ¼ cup (60ml) pasta cooking water when draining — the starchy water helps emulsify the pesto into a cohesive sauce when tossed with hot pasta.

Basil Varieties and Their Culinary Applications

Over 60 basil varieties exist, but five are widely available and have distinct culinary uses. All weigh approximately 20–28g per cup of whole leaves, with the variation coming from leaf size rather than density differences:

Genovese (Sweet Basil): The standard Italian variety. Large leaves (5–10cm), sweet and slightly clove-forward aroma. 24g/cup. Best for pesto, Caprese, pizza Margherita. Flavor degrades quickly when heated — add at the very end of cooking or after heat is off.

Thai Basil: Smaller leaves (3–5cm), stronger anise/licorice aroma from methyl chavicol. Approximately 25g/cup — similar density to Genovese despite smaller leaves, because smaller leaves pack more tightly. More heat-stable than Genovese: add to wok dishes 1–2 minutes before finishing rather than at the end. Essential in pad krapao, green curry, Vietnamese pho garnish.

Lemon Basil: Small leaves with pronounced citrus aroma from citral. Approximately 22–23g/cup. Used in Indonesian and Southeast Asian cooking, and as a garnish for seafood. The lemon notes complement fish and shellfish where regular basil would clash.

Holy Basil (Krapao): The true ingredient in authentic pad krapao (Thai basil stir-fry), though Thai basil is commonly substituted. Narrower, more jagged leaves with a spicy, peppery clove note. Approximately 22g/cup. Less widely available in Western markets.

Purple Basil: Deep purple leaves, milder flavor than Genovese, primarily decorative. Approximately 25g/cup. Makes striking purple pesto (though the color oxidizes to dark brown within 2 hours without added lemon juice).

Common Questions About Fresh Basil