Morbier Cheese — Cups to Grams

1 cup cubed Morbier = 135g — shredded = 95g, sliced = 120g

Variant
Result
135grams

1 cup Morbier Cheese = 135 grams

Tablespoons16.1
Teaspoons48.2
Ounces4.76

Quick Conversion Table — Morbier Cheese

CupsGramsTablespoonsTeaspoons
¼33.8 g4.02 tbsp12.1 tsp
45 g5.36 tbsp16.1 tsp
½67.5 g8.04 tbsp24.1 tsp
90 g10.7 tbsp32.1 tsp
¾101.3 g12.1 tbsp36.2 tsp
1135 g16.1 tbsp48.2 tsp
202.5 g24.1 tbsp72.3 tsp
2270 g32.1 tbsp96.4 tsp
3405 g48.2 tbsp144.6 tsp
4540 g64.3 tbsp192.9 tsp

Measuring Morbier: Cubed, Shredded, and Sliced

Morbier's semi-soft texture produces a wide range of densities depending on preparation form. Shredded Morbier is notably lighter than cubed — the strands trap air at nearly twice the rate of cubed pieces due to the cheese's relatively soft, pliable texture.

Cubed, half-inch (135g/cup): The standard form for cheese boards, raclette service, and gratins. The ash line runs through cubed pieces visually — it does not affect density or flavor. A 250g wedge = 1.85 cups cubed.

Shredded (95g/cup): Morbier shreds easily on a box grater — the soft semi-soft texture creates long, soft strands that trap considerable air. Measure immediately after shredding. Used for pizza toppings and gratins requiring even, fast melt. A 250g wedge yields approximately 2.6 cups shredded.

Sliced (120g/cup): Thin slices 1-2mm, as served on a cheese board. The ash line makes every slice visually distinctive. Useful for sandwiches, cold platters, and melted-over-bread applications.

MeasureCubed half-inch (g)Shredded (g)Sliced (g)
1 tablespoon8.4g5.9g7.5g
¼ cup33.75g23.75g30g
½ cup67.5g47.5g60g
1 cup135g95g120g
250g wedge~1.85 cups~2.6 cups~2.1 cups

History: The Ash Line and the Two-Milking Tradition

Morbier originates in the Jura mountains of Franche-Comte, where it was traditionally made by farmstead cheesemakers who could not access enough milk in a single milking to fill a standard Comte-sized mold. The practical solution — and the origin of Morbier's most distinctive feature — was to use what was left over from Comte production.

After the morning milking, cheesemakers pressed the leftover curds (the bottom portion of a Comte wheel) into the mold, then covered the surface with a layer of soot and vegetable ash from the fireplace to protect the fresh curd surface and prevent a skin from forming. The evening's curds — from the second milking — were pressed on top, completing the wheel. The ash was not decorative but functional: it sealed the morning curd, preserved it, and gave Morbier its visual identity.

Modern production: Today's PDO Morbier is made in a single continuous process in dedicated creameries. The ash layer — food-grade vegetable ash, completely edible and essentially tasteless — is added as a formal separator to honor the historical tradition, even though the dual-milking rationale no longer applies. The PDO was granted in 2000.

Cooking with Morbier: Melt Applications and Ratios

Morbier's semi-soft, high-moisture character makes it excellent for raclette-style service and gratins. It melts more smoothly than Gruyere (less elastic) and more richly than mild Havarti (more complex flavor). The ash line disappears visually once the cheese melts.

Raclette-style service (4 people): 600-800g (4.5-5.9 cups cubed) Morbier, served melted over 800g boiled or roasted potatoes, cornichons, and charcuterie. Each serving: 150-200g Morbier melted per person. A raclette machine or broiler set to 220 degrees C melts 150g Morbier slices in approximately 3-4 minutes.

Franche-Comte-style fondue (4 servings): 200g (1.5 cups cubed) Morbier + 200g (1.8 cups grated) Comte + 200ml dry Jura white wine + 1 tbsp cornstarch dissolved in 2 tbsp kirsch. Rub fondue pot with cut garlic. Melt over medium heat, stirring constantly in a figure-8 pattern. The Morbier contributes creaminess; the Comte contributes elasticity and nuttiness.

Morbier gratin (4 servings): 250g (1.85 cups cubed or 2.6 cups shredded) Morbier over 800g sliced par-cooked potatoes or fennel. Dot cheese over top, bake at 190 degrees C for 18-20 minutes until bubbling and lightly golden. For an all-Morbier gratin, use shredded for even coverage.

Substitute Cheeses by Flavor and Function

SubstituteCubed g/cupBest for
Raclette (Swiss)140gRaclette service, fondue blends
Young Emmental (Swiss)135gFondue, gratins
Fontina Val d'Aosta140gGratins, pasta sauces
Havarti (plain)140gSandwiches, mild gratins
Comte (young)135gAll applications — closest PDO neighbor