Gravlax — Cups to Grams
1 cup gravlax sliced thin = 125g — cubed = 165g, 1 ribbon = 28g
1 cup Gravlax = 125 grams
Quick Conversion Table — Gravlax
| Cups | Grams | Tablespoons | Teaspoons |
|---|---|---|---|
| ¼ | 31.3 g | 4.01 tbsp | 12 tsp |
| ⅓ | 41.7 g | 5.35 tbsp | 16 tsp |
| ½ | 62.5 g | 8.01 tbsp | 24 tsp |
| ⅔ | 83.3 g | 10.7 tbsp | 32 tsp |
| ¾ | 93.8 g | 12 tbsp | 36.1 tsp |
| 1 | 125 g | 16 tbsp | 48.1 tsp |
| 1½ | 187.5 g | 24 tbsp | 72.1 tsp |
| 2 | 250 g | 32.1 tbsp | 96.2 tsp |
| 3 | 375 g | 48.1 tbsp | 144.2 tsp |
| 4 | 500 g | 64.1 tbsp | 192.3 tsp |
Measuring Gravlax: Sliced, Cubed, and Ribbons
Gravlax is a cured fish with moderate density when sliced — the silky, moist flesh is denser than air-dried meats like bresaola but less dense than dense ground spices or hard cheeses. The three measurement forms reflect its primary uses.
Sliced thin diagonal (125g/cup): The standard serving form. Diagonal slices 1-2mm thick, cut at a shallow angle to maximize slice width. These slices folded or laid loosely in a measuring cup pack moderately — more efficiently than very thin salami but with some air between folds. This measurement applies to gravlax as served on boards, blinis, rye, or bagels.
Cubed to half-inch (165g/cup): For pasta applications, salads, or sushi-style presentations. The cubes pack efficiently with minimal interstitial air. Use for quantitative recipes calling for a specific cup measure of gravlax as a cooking ingredient rather than a garnish.
One ribbon (28g): A single long diagonal slice folded into a spiral or loose rosette for plating. This is the unit for elegant individual presentations — blinis, amuse-bouche, or canapés each using one ribbon (approximately 28g) as the salmon portion.
| Measure | Sliced thin (g) | Cubed 1/2-inch (g) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 tablespoon | 7.8g | 10.3g |
| ¼ cup | 31.25g | 41.25g |
| ½ cup | 62.5g | 82.5g |
| 1 cup | 125g | 165g |
| 500g fillet | 4 cups sliced | 3 cups cubed |
The Science of the Gravlax Cure: Osmosis and Texture Change
Gravlax is a fascinating example of food preservation chemistry. The 1:1 salt-to-sugar dry cure acts on the salmon through osmosis: the high-solute concentration of the cure on the surface of the flesh creates an osmotic gradient that draws water out of the salmon cells, concentrating the proteins and fats in the remaining flesh. This moisture extraction firms the texture (the flesh goes from raw and fragile to slightly elastic and firmer) and reduces water activity enough to inhibit most bacterial growth — though not eliminate it entirely, which is why gravlax must remain refrigerated at all times.
The sugar in the cure serves two purposes: it counterbalances the harsh saltiness of the salt alone (pure-salt curing produces a saltier, harsher product than balanced cures) and it contributes to the mild sweetness of the finished gravlax. Unlike smoked salmon, no heat or Maillard reaction is involved — the cure is entirely cold and non-oxidative, which is why gravlax retains the vivid orange-pink color of the raw salmon rather than the paler, more cooked appearance of hot-smoked fish.
Fresh dill contributes aromatic compounds (primarily dill ether and limonene) that penetrate the outer layers of the cured flesh over the 36-48 hour cure period. Aquavit (when used) adds caraway-seed volatiles to this aromatic layer. The penetration depth of the aromatics is approximately 3-5mm into the flesh from the surface — deeper penetration is minimal, which is why the flavor is most intense at the exterior.
Choosing Salmon for Gravlax: Freshness and Food Safety
Because gravlax is consumed without any heat treatment, the salmon quality and freshness are critical. The ideal choice is farmed Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) from a reputable source — farmed salmon is consistently fatty (18-20g fat per 100g) with predictable texture, and is considered lower-risk for parasites than wild-caught Pacific salmon because the controlled feed eliminates the fish-to-fish parasite transmission cycle.
Wild salmon, particularly Pacific species (Chinook, Sockeye, Coho), can be used for gravlax but requires prior freezing to eliminate any parasite risk — specifically Anisakis nematodes, which cannot survive at -20 degrees C for 7 days or -35 degrees C for 15 hours. Many premium salmon fillets sold for sashimi or raw applications are already commercially frozen to parasite-safe temperatures. Ask your fishmonger for confirmation.
Quality indicators: the flesh should be bright orange-pink, firm to the touch, and smell clean and oceanic — not fishy or ammonia-scented. The fat lines (white striations of intramuscular fat) should be regular and not excessively wide. A fillet with good fat marbling (center-cut from a large Atlantic salmon) produces the best gravlax — the fat carries the dill and cure flavors better than very lean fillet sections.
Gravlax vs. Smoked Salmon: When to Use Each
Gravlax and cold-smoked salmon are often interchangeable in recipes, but their flavor profiles differ enough to matter in certain applications. The choice comes down to whether you want the clean, dill-fresh, slightly sweet character of gravlax or the deeper, smokier, slightly more complex character of cold-smoked salmon.
Use gravlax when: the dill flavor is a desired component (gravlax-and-dill is a coherent Scandinavian flavor profile); you want a lighter, fresher-tasting dish; you are pairing with aggressive flavors (red onion, capers, pumpernickel) that would compete with heavy smoke; you are serving with lighter wines or sparkling wine.
Use cold-smoked salmon (see our smoked salmon page) when: smoky depth is wanted; you are making a classic New York bagel-and-lox; you prefer a silkier, more delicate texture; the recipe calls explicitly for smoked salmon.
- USDA FoodData Central — Fish, salmon, Atlantic, farmed, raw
- FAO — Smoked, cured and fermented fish
- Norwegian Seafood Council — Traditional gravlaks preparation
- Journal of Food Protection — Anisakis in cold-smoked and cured salmon
- Slow Food Foundation — Traditional Scandinavian cured fish methods