Mashed Banana — Cups to Grams
1 cup mashed banana = 225 grams (~2 medium bananas)
1 cup Mashed Banana = 225 grams
Quick Conversion Table — Mashed Banana
| Cups | Grams | Tablespoons | Teaspoons |
|---|---|---|---|
| ¼ | 56.3 g | 3.99 tbsp | 12 tsp |
| ⅓ | 75 g | 5.32 tbsp | 16 tsp |
| ½ | 112.5 g | 7.98 tbsp | 23.9 tsp |
| ⅔ | 150 g | 10.6 tbsp | 31.9 tsp |
| ¾ | 168.8 g | 12 tbsp | 35.9 tsp |
| 1 | 225 g | 16 tbsp | 47.9 tsp |
| 1½ | 337.5 g | 23.9 tbsp | 71.8 tsp |
| 2 | 450 g | 31.9 tbsp | 95.7 tsp |
| 3 | 675 g | 47.9 tbsp | 143.6 tsp |
| 4 | 900 g | 63.8 tbsp | 191.5 tsp |
How Many Bananas Equal 1 Cup Mashed?
The answer depends on banana size, but as a reliable rule: 2 medium bananas yield approximately 1 cup (225g) mashed banana. A medium banana measures 7–8 inches (18–20 cm) and weighs 100–118g peeled. Two of those, mashed, give you 200–236g — centered on the 225g standard.
Banana sizes sold in grocery stores vary considerably. "Medium" from one supplier may weigh 95g peeled; "medium" from another may weigh 120g. For any recipe that specifies "3 bananas," it was likely developed with 95–105g peeled bananas in mind — totaling about 300g, or roughly 1.3 cups mashed. If your bananas are large (over 130g peeled each), three of them gives 390g — significantly more than the recipe expects, and your bake will turn out denser and moister.
For consistent results across banana sizes, weigh your mashed banana in grams. The table below gives the practical equivalences:
| Bananas (medium, ~105g peeled) | Approximate Mashed Weight | Cups (approx.) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 banana | ~105–115g | ~½ cup |
| 2 bananas | ~210–230g | ~1 cup |
| 3 bananas | ~315–345g | ~1.4 cups |
| 4 bananas | ~420–460g | ~1.9 cups |
How Ripeness Affects Density, Flavor, and Sugar Content
Banana ripeness is the single most important variable in banana baking — not because it dramatically changes weight per cup, but because it transforms the flavor and structural properties of the fruit. Understanding this lets you target the exact texture and sweetness you want.
Starch-to-sugar conversion: An unripe (green) banana is 80–90% starch by dry weight and barely sweet. As it ripens through yellow to spotted brown and finally black-peel, enzymes break starch into simple sugars — primarily fructose, glucose, and sucrose. A fully overripe banana contains 3–4× more free sugar than an unripe one. In practical terms: the same 225g of overripe mashed banana will make banana bread noticeably sweeter than 225g from firm yellow bananas, even with identical recipes.
Texture: Overripe bananas mash to a smooth, almost liquid paste; they blend seamlessly into batter. Underripe bananas mash to a coarser, more fibrous texture with chunks that persist through baking. Most professional banana bread recipes specify "very ripe, blackened-peel" bananas specifically for the smooth mash and maximum sweetness.
Moisture content: Overripe bananas have higher free moisture, which can make baked goods slightly more gummy if not balanced by appropriate flour amounts. If substituting very ripe bananas in a recipe written for moderately ripe ones, reduce added liquid (milk, buttermilk) by 1–2 tablespoons per cup of banana to maintain the intended crumb structure.
Mashed Banana as an Egg Substitute
One medium banana (about 100g mashed, roughly ½ cup / 113g measured) is the standard egg substitute ratio used in vegan and egg-free baking. The substitution works because banana provides three of the four functional roles of an egg in baking:
- Binding: Banana pectin acts as a binder, holding batter ingredients together. This is the most reliable function — banana works as well as flax egg or chia egg for binding in quick breads.
- Moisture: Banana contributes significant moisture (bananas are 74–75% water by weight), matching the moisture contribution of a large egg (about 38–40g water in a 55g egg).
- Leavening assist: The trapped gases in mashed banana contribute minor leavening. This is a minor effect compared to baking powder/soda, but it exists.
What banana cannot replace is the protein network formed by egg whites. Egg whites coagulate under heat to provide structure in soufflés, chiffon cakes, and meringues. For these applications, banana substitution fails — the baked good will not hold its structure. Banana egg replacement is best limited to:
- Banana bread and banana muffins (the banana flavor is already expected)
- Pancakes and waffles (adds sweetness; reduce added sugar by 1–2 tablespoons)
- Oatmeal cookies and brownies (produces a chewier, fudgier texture)
- Carrot cake or zucchini bread (banana flavor subtle enough to blend with spices)
The flavor note: banana is not a neutral substitute. It adds detectable banana flavor. If banana doesn't belong in your recipe, use a flax egg (1 tablespoon ground flaxseed + 3 tablespoons water, rested 5 minutes = 1 egg) for a neutral-flavor bind.
Banana Bread Ratios and Recipe Science
Classic banana bread is a quick bread — leavened with baking soda and/or powder rather than yeast, with a tender, moist crumb from a high fat and sugar content. The banana is not just a flavoring agent; it provides moisture, sweetness, and binding that directly affects the loaf's structure.
| Component | Standard Recipe (1 loaf) | Function |
|---|---|---|
| Mashed banana | 225–338g (1–1.5 cups) | Moisture, sweetness, binding, flavor |
| All-purpose flour | 190–250g (1.5–2 cups) | Structure, gluten network |
| Eggs | 2 large (110g) | Structure, protein network, leavening |
| Butter or oil | 85–113g (6–8 tbsp) | Tenderness, moisture, flavor |
| Sugar (brown preferred) | 100–200g (½–1 cup) | Sweetness, moisture retention, browning |
| Baking soda | 3–5g (½–1 tsp) | Leavening (reacts with banana's acids) |
Baking soda (not baking powder) is used in banana bread because bananas are mildly acidic (pH 4.5–5.2 for ripe bananas). Baking soda requires an acid to activate; banana's natural acids provide that reaction, generating carbon dioxide for rise. If you substitute baking powder for baking soda, use 3× the amount (1 teaspoon baking powder for each 1/3 teaspoon baking soda) — but the rise and browning will be slightly different.
The banana-to-flour ratio determines crumb character. At the lower end (225g banana / 250g flour), you get a lighter, more bread-like crumb. At the higher end (338g banana / 190g flour), you get the ultra-moist, almost pudding-like crumb of diner-style banana bread. Both are correct — they're different products targeting different preferences.
Common Questions About Mashed Banana
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1 cup of mashed banana weighs 225 grams. That equals approximately 2 medium ripe bananas (100–118g peeled each). A tablespoon of mashed banana weighs 14.1g; a teaspoon weighs 4.7g. For precision in baking, weigh in grams rather than measuring by cup — scooping variation can add or remove 10–20g per cup.
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Yes, in a 1:1 volume ratio — replace 1 cup oil (218g) with 1 cup mashed banana (225g). The result is denser and moister because banana provides water-based moisture rather than fat-based tenderness. Reduce baking time by 5–10 minutes and test for doneness with a toothpick earlier. Best for muffins, quick breads, and pancakes; less successful for layer cakes that need fat for a delicate crumb.
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Very ripe to overripe — at minimum heavily spotted, ideally with predominantly brown or black peel. The sugar content at this stage is 3–4× that of a yellow banana, producing sweeter, more flavorful banana bread. The soft flesh also mashes to a smooth paste that blends evenly into batter. If you only have firm yellow bananas, oven-ripen them: bake unpeeled at 300°F (150°C) for 15–20 minutes until the skins blacken.
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Freeze ripe bananas whole in their peels or peeled in a freezer bag. Frozen bananas release liquid as they thaw — this extra liquid is part of the banana and should be included when measuring for baking. Thaw completely before mashing, then pour all liquid back into the mash. Frozen-thawed banana typically produces a looser mash than fresh; the final gram weight per cup may be 5–10g higher because the structure has broken down and packs more densely.
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1/3 cup of mashed banana = 75 grams. This is approximately the mashed weight of 1 small banana (about 80–85g peeled). Common recipe amounts: ¼ cup = 56g; ⅓ cup = 75g; ½ cup = 113g; ¾ cup = 169g; 1 cup = 225g; 1½ cups = 338g.
- USDA FoodData Central — Bananas, raw
- King Arthur Baking — Classic Banana Bread recipe weight data
- On Food and Cooking — Harold McGee, Scribner 2004
- The Food Lab — J. Kenji López-Alt, W. W. Norton 2015