Minced Garlic — Cups to Grams
1 cup fresh minced garlic = 136 grams (1 clove = 1 tsp = 3g)
1 cup Minced Garlic = 136 grams
Quick Conversion Table — Minced Garlic
| Cups | Grams | Tablespoons | Teaspoons |
|---|---|---|---|
| ¼ | 34 g | 4 tbsp | 12.1 tsp |
| ⅓ | 45.3 g | 5.33 tbsp | 16.2 tsp |
| ½ | 68 g | 8 tbsp | 24.3 tsp |
| ⅔ | 90.7 g | 10.7 tbsp | 32.4 tsp |
| ¾ | 102 g | 12 tbsp | 36.4 tsp |
| 1 | 136 g | 16 tbsp | 48.6 tsp |
| 1½ | 204 g | 24 tbsp | 72.9 tsp |
| 2 | 272 g | 32 tbsp | 97.1 tsp |
| 3 | 408 g | 48 tbsp | 145.7 tsp |
| 4 | 544 g | 64 tbsp | 194.3 tsp |
The Garlic Clove-to-Teaspoon Standard
The universally used culinary standard — 1 medium garlic clove = 1 teaspoon minced = approximately 3 grams — is calibrated to the average grocery store garlic bulb (Allium sativum, softneck varieties). This is the conversion baked into every recipe database, meal planning app, and culinary curriculum worldwide.
Understanding the variability behind this average helps you adjust: garlic clove size is highly variable. A single standard bulb contains 10–14 cloves ranging from 2g (small inner cloves) to 8g (large outer cloves). Large elephant garlic cloves (Allium ampeloprasum) can weigh 20–30g each. A recipe calling for "3 cloves of garlic" could reasonably involve 6–15 grams of actual garlic depending on clove size — a 2.5× variation. For sensitive applications (aioli, scampi, garlic bread), specify by teaspoons or grams rather than clove count.
| Form | Per Clove Equivalent | Weight |
|---|---|---|
| Fresh minced | 1 tsp | ~3g |
| Garlic powder | ⅛ tsp | ~0.4g |
| Garlic salt | ½ tsp | ~2.4g (mostly salt) |
| Jarred minced (in liquid) | 1 tsp liquid-included | ~5g (garlic + liquid) |
| Roasted garlic paste | ½ tsp | ~2g (more concentrated, softer) |
| Black garlic (fermented) | 1 clove (1:1 substitution) | ~4–5g (denser than fresh) |
Fresh vs Jarred vs Powder: A Flavor Chemistry Comparison
The same garlic plant in different forms delivers fundamentally different flavor profiles due to how each preparation affects garlic's sulfur chemistry:
Fresh minced garlic: Crushing garlic cells ruptures membranes, bringing the enzyme alliinase into contact with its substrate alliin. The reaction produces allicin (the dominant sharp, pungent compound) within seconds of cutting. Allicin's half-life is short — it converts to other compounds over minutes, especially when heated. Fresh garlic in a raw application (aioli, tzatziki, hummus) delivers maximum allicin intensity. Cooked fresh garlic produces a sweeter, milder flavor as allicin converts to polysulfides.
Jarred minced garlic: Commercially produced jarred garlic is blanched and/or acidified (citric acid is standard) to extend shelf life. The acid immediately neutralizes alliinase, preventing allicin formation. Jarred garlic therefore has no sharp pungency from allicin — only the background, less volatile garlic flavor compounds remain. For long-braised dishes where the garlic is cooked for 30+ minutes anyway (killing fresh allicin), jarred garlic is a convenient substitute. For any raw, fresh, or minimally cooked application, jarred garlic is a poor substitute.
Garlic powder: Ground dehydrated garlic — almost completely without alliinase activity (enzymes are deactivated during dehydration). Provides mellow garlic background flavor without sharp pungency. Used at 1/8 teaspoon per clove equivalent. Best in dry rubs, spice blends, and long-cooked sauces where even distribution of mild garlic flavor is desired.
Jarred Garlic Weight: Why It's So Different From Fresh
The 76% weight difference between fresh minced garlic (136g/cup) and jarred garlic (240g/cup) is purely the liquid component. Jarred garlic is packed in a preserving medium — typically citric acid solution (water-based), oil, or a combination. This liquid fills every air gap between garlic pieces. Fresh minced garlic, by contrast, piles loosely with significant air pockets between the small pieces.
This has a critical practical implication: when a recipe calls for "2 tablespoons minced garlic," it means 2 tablespoons of fresh minced garlic (approximately 17g of garlic). Using 2 tablespoons from a jar of garlic-in-liquid gives approximately 17g of garlic-plus-liquid, but only about 9–10g of actual garlic — roughly half the intended garlic. Recipes written for fresh minced garlic should be adjusted when using jarred: use slightly more (1.5–1.7× the volume) to compensate for the liquid dilution, or drain the liquid first and treat as a direct substitute.
Common Questions About Minced Garlic
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1 teaspoon of fresh minced garlic weighs approximately 2.8–3 grams. 1 tablespoon weighs approximately 8.5 grams. This is equivalent to about 1 medium garlic clove per teaspoon. 1 cup of fresh minced garlic = 136 grams (approximately 45 medium cloves).
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⅛ teaspoon (0.4g) of garlic powder = 1 medium garlic clove = 1 teaspoon (3g) fresh minced garlic. Garlic powder is approximately 8× more concentrated by volume than fresh minced. It has a milder, more uniform flavor without the sharp allicin pungency of fresh garlic.
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Fresh minced garlic in an airtight container keeps in the refrigerator for 3–5 days. Covered with a thin layer of olive oil, it may last up to 1 week. Do not store at room temperature due to botulism risk (anaerobic + low-acid environment in oil). For longer storage, freeze in ice cube trays and transfer to freezer bags — frozen minced garlic keeps for 3–6 months with acceptable quality.
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Yes — raw garlic is safe to eat and is used in many classic preparations including aioli, gremolata, and some versions of hummus. Raw garlic has the highest allicin content and most potent flavor. Some people experience digestive irritation from large amounts of raw garlic (more than 2–3 cloves / 6–9g). Crushing or chopping garlic and allowing it to rest 10 minutes before cooking activates alliinase, producing more allicin — even if the garlic is subsequently cooked, more beneficial sulfur compounds form during that rest period.
- USDA FoodData Central — Garlic, raw (NDB 11215)
- FDA — Preventing foodborne illness: Clostridium botulinum
- On Food and Cooking — Harold McGee, Scribner 2004
- The Food Lab — J. Kenji López-Alt, W. W. Norton 2015