Fresh Figs — Cups to Grams
1 cup whole fresh figs = 150 grams | chopped = 170g | halved = 165g per cup | 4–5 medium figs = 1 cup
1 cup Fresh Figs = 150 grams
Quick Conversion Table — Fresh Figs
| Cups | Grams | Tablespoons | Teaspoons |
|---|---|---|---|
| ¼ | 37.5 g | 3.99 tbsp | 12.1 tsp |
| ⅓ | 50 g | 5.32 tbsp | 16.1 tsp |
| ½ | 75 g | 7.98 tbsp | 24.2 tsp |
| ⅔ | 100 g | 10.6 tbsp | 32.3 tsp |
| ¾ | 112.5 g | 12 tbsp | 36.3 tsp |
| 1 | 150 g | 16 tbsp | 48.4 tsp |
| 1½ | 225 g | 23.9 tbsp | 72.6 tsp |
| 2 | 300 g | 31.9 tbsp | 96.8 tsp |
| 3 | 450 g | 47.9 tbsp | 145.2 tsp |
| 4 | 600 g | 63.8 tbsp | 193.5 tsp |
Fresh Figs vs Dried Figs: The Density Paradox Explained
Fresh figs (150–170g per cup) and dried figs (approximately 149–160g per cup chopped) weigh almost identically per cup — yet they are fundamentally different ingredients in terms of moisture, sweetness concentration, and culinary behavior. This coincidence of similar cup weights despite radically different composition is one of the most misleading comparisons in kitchen measurement.
Why the weights are similar despite the huge moisture difference: Fresh whole figs are spherical — they pack with approximately 64% efficiency, leaving 36% of the cup as air. Dried figs are much smaller (75–80% of their water has evaporated), irregular in shape, and sticky — they pack with approximately 85–90% efficiency. The smaller, denser dried figs pack into the cup with almost no air gaps. The higher packing efficiency of dried figs compensates for their lower individual weight.
Dry matter content comparison: 1 cup of fresh chopped figs (170g, approximately 75% water): approximately 43g of dry matter (sugars, fiber, minerals). 1 cup of chopped dried figs (155g, approximately 15% water): approximately 132g of dry matter — 3.1 times more dry matter per cup. This difference matters profoundly in baking. A recipe calling for "1 cup dried figs" substituted with "1 cup fresh figs" will be dramatically less sweet, less structured, and will add significant excess moisture to the batter or dough.
Correct substitution ratio: To replace 1 cup of dried figs with fresh figs in baking: use 3 cups of fresh figs AND reduce other liquids by approximately 100–120g (½ cup). For most home baking applications, this substitution is not practical — it is better to simply omit and reformulate than attempt a direct swap.
| Measure | Fresh whole (g) | Fresh chopped (g) | Fresh halved (g) | Calimyrna (g) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 tsp | 3.1g | 3.5g | 3.4g | 3.3g |
| 1 tbsp | 9.4g | 10.6g | 10.3g | 10g |
| ¼ cup | 38g | 43g | 41g | 40g |
| ½ cup | 75g | 85g | 83g | 80g |
| 1 cup | 150g | 170g | 165g | 160g |
| 2 cups | 300g | 340g | 330g | 320g |
| 1 pint basket | ~340g | ~390g | ~375g | — |
Mission, Calimyrna, and Brown Turkey: Choosing the Right Fig
The three figs most commonly found fresh in North American and European markets differ meaningfully in flavor intensity, size, and best culinary application. For conversion purposes, the differences in density per cup are small (150–165g for whole), but the flavor differences are significant.
Black Mission figs are the gold standard for intensity. The deep purple-black skin encloses brilliant pink-crimson flesh with a jammy, intensely sweet flavor and complex notes — honey, berry, caramel — that make them the most sought-after for fresh applications. Mission figs are small to medium (15–35g), which means more fit per cup (7–10 small whole figs) at 150g/cup. Two crops per year: the brief first crop (breba crop) in June–July is smaller and milder; the main crop in August–October is more abundant and more intensely flavored. Use Mission figs for: fresh eating, cheese boards, fig jam, galettes, and any preparation where the fig flavor should be the dominant note.
Calimyrna figs are a California-grown variety of the Smyrna fig (originally from Turkey). Large, golden-green skin with pale amber flesh. Flavor is milder and nuttier than Mission — honey and almond notes with less jamminess. At 40–60g per fig, Calimyrna weighs approximately 160g per cup whole. The milder flavor makes them better suited for preparations where fig plays a supporting role: baked with goat cheese, used in fruit salads, or served alongside savory dishes where a forceful Mission flavor would be overpowering.
Brown Turkey figs have the most approachable, neutral flavor — lower sugar content, mild sweetness, and a broadly compatible taste profile. They are the most reliable fresh fig for cooking because the flavor does not compete aggressively with other ingredients. Used extensively in the food service industry for cooked preparations. Approximately 155g per cup whole (medium-large size, 30–50g each).
Adriatic (White) figs are occasionally available and have pale green-yellow skin with bright pink interior. Very sweet, with a distinct strawberry-honey flavor. Less common fresh; more often used for dried fig production. Approximately 155g per cup whole.
Cheese Boards, Galettes, and Crostini: Exact Quantities
Fresh figs appear most frequently in three contexts: on cheese boards as a fresh accompaniment, in baked galettes or tarts, and on toasted bread with cheese (crostini or bruschetta). Each application uses a different quantity and preparation.
Cheese and fig board (serves 6–8 people): 300–350g fresh whole or halved figs (approximately 2 cups whole). The visual standard for a composed cheese board is 4–6 whole or halved figs arranged as a focal point. For a substantial board, increase to 350–400g. Serve at room temperature — refrigerator-cold figs have muted flavor. Pair Mission figs with aged blue cheese (gorgonzola, roquefort) or sharp cheddar. Calimyrna with fresh goat cheese or brie. Brown Turkey with gruyère or manchego. One pint basket of figs (approximately 340g) is the standard retail unit — enough for one board for 6 people.
Fig and ricotta galette (free-form, serves 6–8): 300–350g fresh figs (about 2 cups halved or 8–12 medium figs, halved). Roll galette dough to a 12-inch circle. Spread 150g whole-milk ricotta over the center, leaving a 2-inch border. Arrange fig halves cut-side up in a single overlapping layer. Drizzle with 1 tablespoon honey. Fold edges over, brush with egg wash, bake at 375°F for 30–35 minutes. The critical quantity limit is 350g of figs — beyond this, juice released during baking pools in the center and the crust base becomes soggy. Toss cut figs with 1 teaspoon cornstarch and 1 teaspoon sugar before arranging to absorb excess juice.
Fig crostini (20 pieces): 150–200g fresh figs (approximately 1 cup chopped or 5–7 medium figs, depending on whether the figs are placed halved or chopped). Topping per piece: 1 teaspoon fig (9.4g) + 1 tablespoon (15g) ricotta or goat cheese + ½ teaspoon honey + optional walnut or pistachio. For a more generous appetizer application, use whole halved figs (one half per crostini) — this requires approximately 200g (10 medium figs) for 20 pieces.
Common Questions About Fresh Figs
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Whole small (Mission): 150g. Chopped: 170g. Halved: 165g. Calimyrna (larger): 160g. 1 pint basket ≈ 340g ≈ 2.25 cups whole. Stem trim is negligible (1–3% loss).
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Not 1:1. Dried figs have 3× more dry matter per cup than fresh. To substitute in baking: use 3 cups fresh figs per 1 cup dried AND reduce other liquid by ½ cup. For most recipes, this substitution is impractical — reformulate instead.
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Brown Turkey for neutral applications where you don't want fig to dominate. Mission for intense jam-like flavor in galettes and tarts. Calimyrna for subtle nuttiness paired with mild cheeses. All three behave similarly by weight — the difference is flavor intensity.
Related Converters
- USDA FoodData Central — Figs, raw (FDC ID 169910)
- USDA FoodData Central — Figs, dried, uncooked
- California Fig Advisory Board — Variety information and seasonal data
- The Flavor Bible — Karen Page and Andrew Dornenburg, Little Brown, 2008
- On Food and Cooking — Harold McGee, Scribner, 2004