Mizithra — Cups to Grams

1 cup fresh mizithra crumbled = 110g — aged grated = 120g

Variant
Result
110grams

1 cup Mizithra Cheese = 110 grams

Tablespoons15.9
Teaspoons47.8
Ounces3.88

Quick Conversion Table — Mizithra Cheese

CupsGramsTablespoonsTeaspoons
¼27.5 g3.99 tbsp12 tsp
36.7 g5.32 tbsp16 tsp
½55 g7.97 tbsp23.9 tsp
73.3 g10.6 tbsp31.9 tsp
¾82.5 g12 tbsp35.9 tsp
1110 g15.9 tbsp47.8 tsp
165 g23.9 tbsp71.7 tsp
2220 g31.9 tbsp95.7 tsp
3330 g47.8 tbsp143.5 tsp
4440 g63.8 tbsp191.3 tsp

Fresh vs. Aged Mizithra: Two Completely Different Cheeses

The most important thing to understand about mizithra is that the name covers two dramatically different products. Fresh mizithra and aged mizithra share a production origin but diverge completely in texture, flavor, salt content, and culinary application. Using the wrong form in a recipe will produce completely different results.

Fresh mizithra (myzithra, anthotyros): Soft, white, slightly crumbly — similar to a drier, sheep-milk ricotta. Mildly sweet, clean dairy flavor, essentially unsalted. Used in pastry fillings (similar to ricotta in Italian cooking), eaten fresh with honey and walnuts, and incorporated into Greek cheesecakes and sweet pies. Approximately 110 grams per cup crumbled.

Aged mizithra (xeromyzithra or dry myzithra): Firm to hard, pale yellow to ivory, very dry. Aggressively salty and sharp — a grating cheese used like Parmesan or ricotta salata. Grated over pasta, salads, and grilled meats. The Old Spaghetti Factory's famous spaghetti dish uses aged mizithra. Approximately 120 grams per cup grated.

MeasureFresh crumbled (g)Aged grated (g)
1 tablespoon6.9g7.5g
quarter cup27.5g30g
half cup55g60g
1 cup110g120g
Pasta serving (30-40g)0.25-0.33 cup grated

Origins and Production of Mizithra

Mizithra is one of Greece's oldest cheeses — references to myzithra appear in ancient Greek texts, and production has been continuous in the Greek islands and mainland for at least 2,000 years. The cheese is a whey cheese: it is made from the whey that remains after producing hard cheeses like graviera or kefalotiri, rather than from fresh whole milk. The whey is heated to 85 to 90 degrees C to denature any remaining proteins (primarily albumin and globulin), which coagulate and rise to the surface. Additional sheep or goat milk may be added to improve yield and richness. The curds are scooped out, drained in cloth bags, and either consumed fresh (within a few days) or pressed, salted, and aged.

The aging process for dry mizithra involves generous surface salting (approximately 3 to 5% salt by weight of the fresh cheese), pressing in molds, and air-drying in cool, ventilated spaces for a minimum of 4 to 6 weeks. Traditional Cretan mizithra is aged in wicker baskets that leave a distinctive woven impression on the rind. The aging removes moisture aggressively — a 1-kilogram fresh mizithra yields approximately 600 to 700 grams of aged mizithra after full drying.

Anthotyros and xinomyzithra: Two related Greek cheeses often confused with mizithra. Anthotyros is virtually identical to fresh mizithra — some producers use the names interchangeably. Xinomyzithra (from Crete) is an aged, slightly fermented variant with a distinctive tangy-sour quality from bacterial fermentation during aging — sharper and more complex than standard aged mizithra.

Spaghetti with Browned Butter and Mizithra

This dish became widely known in North America through the Old Spaghetti Factory chain, which has served it since the 1970s. Despite its American-chain-restaurant origin, the combination of browned butter and sharp salty grating cheese over pasta has deep roots in European culinary tradition — similar to the Italian combination of pasta, browned butter, and aged cheeses used in Alpine and northern Italian cooking.

Per serving: 80 to 100 grams dry spaghetti, cooked al dente. 60 grams unsalted butter, browned to nutty amber in a light-colored skillet over medium heat (4 to 5 minutes — watch carefully, butter browns quickly after the foam subsides). 30 to 40 grams aged mizithra, finely grated (one-quarter to one-third cup). Toss hot drained spaghetti with the browned butter, sprinkle mizithra over the top, and toss again briefly. The heat from the pasta slightly softens the aged cheese without fully melting it — the texture should be particulate and coating, not smooth and saucy.

The key is the quality of both components. Use real butter (not margarine), brown it properly to the nutty, caramelized-milk-solids stage (not just melted), and use genuine aged mizithra grated freshly (not a blend or substitute). The sharpness and salt of the mizithra is essential — it must cut through the richness of browned butter. Using fresh (sweet, unsalted) mizithra in this dish would produce an entirely bland result.

Fresh Mizithra in Greek Cooking

Fresh mizithra plays a range of roles in traditional Greek cuisine, from breakfast through dessert. A classic Greek breakfast in sheep-farming regions: thick slices of fresh mizithra drizzled with thyme honey and a handful of walnuts, eaten with crusty bread. This breakfast is found throughout the Cyclades, Crete, and Epirus. The combination of mild, creamy cheese, floral honey, and the slight bitterness of raw walnuts is simple and satisfying.

In pastry: fresh mizithra fills tiropita (cheese pies), boureki (Cretan summer pies with zucchini and potato), and various stuffed pastries. It can be used in spanakopita filling alongside feta — the fresh mizithra adds creaminess and sweetens the overall filling, which feta alone makes very salty. Typical ratio for spanakopita filling: 200g feta crumbled + 100g fresh mizithra + 600g cooked spinach (squeezed dry) + 2 eggs + dill. The mizithra contributes about 0.9 cups crumbled to this filling.

For Greek cheesecake (mizithropita): 500 grams fresh mizithra + 3 eggs + 3 tablespoons sugar + lemon zest + vanilla + a few tablespoons semolina to absorb moisture, baked at 180 degrees C in a tart pan for 35 to 40 minutes. The result is denser and more savory than American-style cheesecake, with a clean, slightly grainy dairy character.