Lime Juice — Cups to Grams

1 cup lime juice = 242 grams — 1 medium lime yields approximately 2 tablespoons (30g); need 8 limes per cup

Variant
Result
242grams

1 cup Lime Juice = 242 grams

Tablespoons16
Teaspoons48.4
Ounces8.54

Quick Conversion Table — Lime Juice

CupsGramsTablespoonsTeaspoons
¼60.5 g4.01 tbsp12.1 tsp
80.7 g5.34 tbsp16.1 tsp
½121 g8.01 tbsp24.2 tsp
161.3 g10.7 tbsp32.3 tsp
¾181.5 g12 tbsp36.3 tsp
1242 g16 tbsp48.4 tsp
363 g24 tbsp72.6 tsp
2484 g32.1 tbsp96.8 tsp
3726 g48.1 tbsp145.2 tsp
4968 g64.1 tbsp193.6 tsp

How to Measure Lime Juice Accurately

Lime juice is a liquid and measures highly consistently — there is almost no density variation between proper measurements of the same style. The main concern is yield from fresh limes (highly variable) and the distinction between fresh and bottled.

Maximizing yield from fresh limes: Roll the lime firmly on a countertop with palm pressure for 30 seconds before cutting — this ruptures the juice cells. Microwave for 15 seconds to warm slightly — warmed citrus yields 10–15% more juice than cold. Use a citrus reamer or electric juicer rather than squeezing by hand, which typically extracts only 60–70% of available juice.

MeasureFresh Squeezed (g)Bottled (g)Key Lime (g)
1 teaspoon5g5.1g5g
1 tablespoon (½ lime)15.1g15.25g15g
2 tablespoons (1 lime)30.2g30.5g30g
¼ cup (2 limes)60.5g61g60g
½ cup (4 limes)121g122g120g
1 cup (8 limes)242g244g240g

Why Precision Matters: Lime Juice in Cocktails and Pastry

Lime juice is an acid ingredient — its precise amount affects not just flavor balance but chemical reactions in both drinks and baking. Overusing lime juice makes cocktails sharp and harsh; underusing makes them flat and too sweet. In baking, lime juice quantity directly determines protein coagulation in egg-acid dishes.

Cocktail balance: The margarita's 2:1:1 formula (tequila:sweet:acid) is built on exact ratios of acidity to sweetness to alcohol. Using 1.5 oz lime juice instead of 1 oz (an extra 0.5 oz = 15g) shifts the balance significantly toward sour — the drink becomes harsh and unbalanced. Professional bartenders describe over-acidified cocktails as "back-palate sharp": the sourness lingers unpleasantly. Using 0.5 oz lime (half the standard): the drink is sweet and flat, the tequila overwhelms without the acid's sharpening effect.

Key lime pie chemistry: Key lime pie sets because the high acidity of lime juice (pH 2.1–2.4) denatures egg yolk proteins at a lower temperature than heat alone would require. The condensed milk's casein proteins also coagulate under acidic conditions. The exact amount of lime juice (½ cup / 120g) is critical: less juice = under-set, runny filling; more juice = over-acidified filling that sets rubbery. The 120g figure assumes concentrated sweetened condensed milk (14 oz / 397g) — the sugar-to-acid balance determines whether the filling is pleasantly tart or overwhelmingly sour.

Lime curd: More precision-sensitive than Key lime pie. Standard lime curd: ½ cup (121g) fresh lime juice + ¾ cup (150g) sugar + 4 eggs (200g) + ½ cup (113g) butter. Cook in a double boiler, stirring constantly, until thickened (79–82°C / 175–180°F). The acid-to-sugar ratio must be maintained exactly — if lime juice is over-measured by 10g (¼ cup becomes 70.5g instead of 60.5g), the curd will be noticeably more tart and may require additional sugar to balance.

Margarita Ratios: The Classic 2:1:1 Formula

The margarita is arguably the most precisely measured cocktail in the home bartender's repertoire — the acid-sweet-alcohol balance is more sensitive to variation than most cocktails because all three components are potent and distinctive.

Classic margarita (1 serving):

Shake with ice, strain into a salted-rim glass. This produces approximately 120g of liquid + dilution from shaking (approximately 30g of melted ice water) = approximately 150g total cocktail volume.

Batch margarita (serves 8): ½ cup (121g) fresh lime juice + ½ cup (160g) agave nectar + 1 cup (240g) blanco tequila. Combine in a pitcher, refrigerate, pour over ice. Each serving: approximately 65g without ice, 95g with ice dilution. For large batches: fresh lime juice keeps well for 24 hours refrigerated in the pitcher without significant flavor loss.

Key lime margarita variation: Substitute Key lime juice (240g/cup vs 242g/cup Persian) at 1:1 by volume — the density difference is negligible. Key lime produces a more complex, slightly more floral margarita with a distinctive tropical note absent from Persian lime versions. Use 1 oz (30g) Key lime juice exactly.

Frozen margarita: Blend 1 cup (242g) fresh lime juice + ¼ cup (80g) agave + ½ cup (120g) tequila + 4 cups (approximately 500g) ice. Blend until smooth — yields approximately 6 cups blended, serving 4–6. The weight of the lime juice doesn't change in the frozen version, though the serving consistency is dramatically different.

Lime Juice vs Lemon Juice: Density, Flavor, and Substitution

Fresh lime juice (242g/cup) and fresh lemon juice (244g/cup) are among the closest-matching liquid ingredients in cooking — a 2g per cup difference that is genuinely negligible. Yet they are distinctly different in flavor and cannot be substituted in all applications.

Density comparison: Lime juice and lemon juice are both approximately 88–92% water, with the remainder being citric acid (5–8%), sugars (1–3%), and aromatic compounds. The negligible weight difference (2g per cup) reflects very similar dissolved solid concentrations. For baking chemistry applications (setting curds, denaturing proteins), they function identically at equal weights.

Flavor difference — when it matters: Lime juice contains volatile compounds including cis-limonene, terpinolene, and α-terpineol that produce its distinctive tropical, floral, slightly bitter aroma. Lemon juice contains primarily d-limonene and citral — a brighter, more citrus-universally familiar flavor. Key lime pie absolutely requires Key lime juice — lemon juice produces a pleasant but incorrect pie that lacks the tropical complexity. Margaritas made with lemon juice instead of lime taste like a different drink entirely.

When substitution is fine: Vinaigrettes, ceviche, fish marinades, vegetable dishes, guacamole, and most cooked sauces can use lime or lemon interchangeably at 1:1 by weight — the subtle flavor difference is masked by other ingredients. Both provide the same acidic bite and tartness when used as a background element.

Freezing fresh lime juice: Squeeze limes in bulk when they're cheap (lime prices fluctuate seasonally), pour the juice into ice cube trays at 2 tablespoons (30g / one-lime equivalent) per cube, freeze solid, transfer to a zip-lock freezer bag. Frozen lime juice retains 90% of fresh flavor when used in cooked applications (guacamole, sauces, cocktails are acceptable). For raw applications where fresh lime flavor is critical — lime curd, fresh margaritas, ceviches — use the juice within 1–2 hours of squeezing for best results.

Common Questions About Lime Juice